January 19, 2010

Lookout Poison Checklist

The home regions given below are the most common site of accidental poisonings. Follow this checklist to learn how to correct situations that may lead to poisonings.

KITCHEN:

All harmful products in the cupboards must have child-resistant caps. Products like wood polishes, drain cleaners and some Kitchen cleaners should have safety packaging to keep little children from accidentally opening the packages.

Check all slightly harmful products in their original storage place. There may be two dangers if products hasn't stored in their original storage place. Labels on the original box often give first aid information if someone should break up the product. And if products are stored in containers like drinking glasses or pop bottles, someone may think it is food and drink it.

Check all harmful products stored away from eating foods? If harmful products are placed next to food, someone may accidentally get a food and a mix up poison and ingest the poison.

Must check all slightly harmful products have been put up high and out of reach to your baby. The best way to prevent poisoning is making sure that it's impossible to find. And best poison protection is that to lock all cabinets that hold dangerous products.

BATHROOM :

Do you know that medicines can be poison if it used improperly? Many children are poisoned each year by overdoses of aspirin and other medicine. If aspirin can poison, just think of how many other poisons might be in your medicine cabinet. Think on it.

So aspirins and other harmful products always keep away from child-resistant. Aspirins and most prescription drugs come with child-resistant caps. Whenever you buy any medicine always check to see child-resistant cap on it and that they are properly secured. Check your prescriptions before leaving the pharmacy to make sure the medicines are in child-resistant packaging. These caps have been shown to save the lives of your baby/children.

Check Have you thrown out all out-of-date medicine? As medicines get older, the chemicals inside them can change. So what was once a good medicine may now be a dangerous poison? Flush all old drugs down the toilet. Rinse the container well, then discard it.

Check all medicines in their original containers with the original labels. Prescription medicines may or may not list factor. The prescription number on the label will, however, allow rapid identification by the pharmacist of the ingredients should they not be listed. The original label and container are very important for what you're taking, because all aspirin looks a lot like poisonous roach tablets.

Check your vitamins or vitamin/mineral supplements contain iron; are they in child-resistant packaging? Most people think of vitamins and minerals as foods and, therefore, non-toxic, but a few iron pills can kill a child.

Did you know that many things in your store room area that can be consumed are dreadful poisons? Death may occur when people consume such everyday substances as charcoal lighter, paint thinner and remover, antifreeze and turpentine.
So please note down and check:

  • Do all these poisons have child-resistant caps?
  • Are they stored in the strongbox?
  • Are the original labels on the Box?
  • Make sure that no poisons are stored in drinking glasses or pop bottles?
  • Check all these harmful products locked up and out of sight and reach?

This is a level of poison protection by making sure that, whenever you buy slightly harmful products, they must have child-resistant cap and are kept out of sight and reach.

January 16, 2010

Baby Home Safety

Baby Home Safety is a programmed where parents can create a safe and secure environment for their baby. Using our detailed study on child safety consultations and a complete range of child safety products.
We provide the right information services how to care your baby and how to help to prevent your baby from damages
Also we conduct workshops and seminars on child safety events. We provide a useful forum where parents can come together and share their concerns, and learn more about how to baby safety at home.

Baby Home Safety

Protect your baby from household poisoning


Keep all the things out of their reach that may be poisoning to your baby. Use baby-resistant wrapping to help prevent poisonings with medicines and household chemicals. Each year poison control centers report nearly one million children under the age of five are exposed to potentially poisonous medicines and household chemicals.

Medicines (especially iron pills and food supplements containing iron),old toys, household substances, insect sprays, kerosene, lighter fluid, some furniture polishes, turpentine, points, solvents, and products containing lye and acids are most frequently the cause of accidental poisoning among children.
Never leave a bottle of aspirin or other pills where children can reach it kept back it to a safe place immediately after using.

MEDICINES ...

Keep medicines out of reach - and out of sight - of all children.

HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS

Read labels before using any household product and follow the directions carefully. Store these products so that children cannot reach them.

Always check child-resistant wrapping.

KEEP ALL PRODUCTS IN ORIGINAL CONTAINERS

never transfer products to a bottle without a child-resistant closure.

Never place kerosene, anti-freeze, paints, or solvents in cups, glasses, milk or soft-drink bottles, or other utensils customarily used for food or drinks.


DESTROY OLD MEDICATIONS

Discharge contents down drain or toilet, and clean container before discarding. Do not put container with its contents into trash.

KEEP FOODS AND HOUSEHOLD PRODUCTS SEPARATED

Cleaning fluids, detergents, soap powders, insecticides, and other everyday household products should be stored away from food and medications. Death could be the result of a mistaken identity.


LEARN CURIOSITY OF GROWING CHILDREN...

Attractive things like pills bottles and containers of all kinds keep away from child. These produce their natural curiosity. If a child is in the crawling stage, arrange to keep household products in places other than below the kitchen sink unless the cabinet is locked or secured with child safety latches.

If the child is walking stage, be sure that bottles and boxes containing medicines or household products are put away before answering the telephone or doorbell or other work.

If he/she is able to climb, find a shelf that is completely beyond his ability to reach, or better yet to lock these products in a cabinet or closet.

After using a product, always re-secure the child resistant finish.

Please note to reduce the risk of poisoning:

  • Always keep household products and medicines out of reach and out of sight of your children, preferably in a locked cabinet or closet. Even if you must leave the room for only an instant, put the container in a safe place.
  • Always turn the light on when giving or taking medicine to be sure you have the right medicine and the correct quantify or count of the dosage.
  • Always store medicines and nutritional supplements (especially iron pills) separately from other household products and keep these stuff in their original containers never use cups or soft-drink bottles.
  • Read the label before using and be sure that all products are properly labeled.
  • Refer to medicines by their proper names. They are not candies.
  • Clean out your medicine cabinet periodically. Get relieve of old medicines by flushing them down the drain or toilet.
  • Always use child resistant household products. Ask for safety packaging for prescription medicines. Re-secure safety feature carefully after using Safety packaging gives extra protection to your children.