Researchers at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center looked at two groups of families with newborns. One set of families had properly installed and maintained safety devices in their homes, including stairway gates, cabinet locks, electrical outlet covers, smoke alarms, carbon monoxide detectors, safe storage for knives and other sharp items, and hot water heaters set below 120 degrees F.
A report on the findings was published in the April issue of Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine.
Each year in the United States, about 2,800 children die from preventable injuries in the home, and millions more are treated in hospital emergency rooms, according to the researchers.







Jun 17, 2011 @ 14:12:45
Hi,
Yeah, my wife and I read a study similar to the one you mention and we decided to pretty much cover all of our bases. It’s one thing to hear it from people, but it’s another thing to see hard facts that support it. However, the process of babyproofing can take a real toll on a person who isn’t handy, such as myself. I blogged about my experience. Check it out: http://simplemanssurvivalguide.blogspot.com/2011/06/baby-safety-weekend.html