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workhealthlife
 
Your Employee and Family Assistance Program is a support service that can help you take the first step toward change.
 
Woman walking on the beach, leaving footsteps in the sand.

Take the first step towards change

We're an Employee and Family Assistance Program (EFAP) that provides you and your family with immediate and confidential support to help resolve work, health, and life challenges to improve your life. Let us help you find solutions so you can reach your goals at any age or stage of life. We help millions of people worldwide live healthy, happy, and productive lives.

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    Safety tips for parents of infants

    Bookmark Article

    Accidents in the home are one of the most common causes of accidental death for Canadian children.child holding onto the bed

    Although you don’t want to become paranoid as a parent, you should ensure that all items purchased for your baby meet safety standards. You should also do a safety check in your home before your baby is born. Ensure that all required changes are made and all dangerous items are removed before baby arrives.

    General safety

    Begin by walking around your house. Check for hazards or unsafe places that a baby could get into. Also consider the following safety precautions, if you haven’t already:

    • Put locks and safety guards on all windows and balcony doors.

    • Put safety gates at both ends of all stairways.

    • Ensure all electrical wires and cords are either taped down or placed well clear of a baby’s reach.

    • Keep kitchen counter edges clear of kettles or other appliances with cords that could be pulled down.

    • Put safety covers on all electrical outlets.

    • Get a device from your hardware store to tie up all blind and curtain cords.

    • Ensure all medications, household cleaners and other potentially toxic substances, including garden pesticides and fertilizers, are kept in locked cupboards or cabinets.

    • Turn the water heater down to 120 degrees or less, to avoid accidental scalding.

    • Remove all furniture that has sharp or hard edges close to floor level.

    • Remove glass furniture or glass ornaments that could break and cut a small child.

    • Remove any house plants that could be poisonous.

    • Tightly seal trunks, chests or other boxes with heavy lids that could snap shut on a small child.

    Safe habits

    Once you’ve arrived home with your new baby, you’ll want to begin a new routine involving safe habits, as you go about your day:

    • When cooking, always turn pot handles away from the edge of the stove so they can’t be pulled down and avoid using tablecloths that can be pulled down, potentially causing items to fall and spill.

    • When housecleaning, avoid putting very hot water in buckets for floor cleaning and ensure that all cleaning materials are kept safely out of baby’s reach while you clean.

    • Don’t let candles burn close to fabrics or paper materials, such as curtains, blinds, newspapers or party decorations and keep candles well out of young children’s reach and don’t leave them burning when you leave the room.

    • Ensure that your baby never has access to small items or foods that could cause choking. Examples can include beads, buttons, coins, nuts, small raw vegetable pieces and popcorn and keep all plastic bags safely out of baby’s reach.

    • Never leave a baby unattended in a high chair, alone in a stroller while you are shopping, or alone in a vehicle—for any reason.

    • Never leave a baby or toddler alone for even a moment in a bath, wading pool or close to a swimming pool.

    • To reduce the risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome, put baby to sleep on his or her back on a firm flat surface and keep your baby warm, not hot, when sleeping.

    • Create a smoke-free environment before and after birth.

    Specific areas of safety

    You may think that baby furniture and baby supplies are made with a child’s best interest in mind. However, there can always be risk of injury. Consider the following safety precautions regarding your baby items:

    Cribs

    • Check for a label that says when the crib was made; cribs made after 1986 are most safe to use.
    • Check regularly to ensure that the frame is solid and that all screws are tight.
    • Make sure the mattress is tight against all four sides of the crib.
    • Place the crib well away from windows, curtains, blind cords, lamps, electrical plugs and extension outlets.
    • When in the crib, don’t let baby wear a necklace or a pacifier on a cord around its neck.

    Sleepwear

    • Don’t let babies or small children wear loose-fitting or baggy sleepwear, or clothes that could easily catch fire.
    • If making sleepwear yourself, choose a fabric like polyester, which doesn’t burn as quickly as cotton.

    Pacifiers/Soothers

    • Never tie a pacifier around a child’s neck or attach it with a cord.
    • Examine pacifiers frequently to ensure that the nipple is firmly attached to the shield.
    • Throw the pacifier away as soon as it becomes cracked, torn, discoloured or shows other signs of wear.

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