Home Safety Check
After a serious burn call 911 or call your doctor as soon as possible
Child Safe Kitchen
- Always keep an eye on your child when you are cooking.
- Cook food on the back burners whenever you can. Stoves are safer with knobs on the stove top, not the front.
- Take the tablecloth off your table so your child can’t pull hot food or drinks down onto themself.
- Put hot food or liquid in the middle of the table or counter, or in a place where your child can’t reach it.
- Don’t hold your child while carrying a cup of hot liquid.
- Keep your child away from hot microwaved food, straight out of the oven.
- Keep your child away from in-use appliances, such as the dishwasher, or dryer which may be hot.
- Keep electric cords out of your child’s reach.
- Make sure to keep your child off the countertop so he or she cannot reach hot things.
- Never bathe your child under running water. Hot water surges cause scalds.
Child Safe Bathroom
- Always stay with your child when he or she is in the bathtub.
- Turn your water heater down to 120° F or lower.
- Check the temperature of the bath water before placing your child in the bath. The temperature should not be higher than 100°F. Use a tub thermometer to check the temperature of the bath water.
- Face your child away from the faucet when he or she is in the tub. Keep your child close to the back of the bathtub. Place a blue sticker on the cold water faucet and a red sticker on the hot water faucet.
- Put anti-scald handles on the faucets in your bathtub and sink if you cannot lower the water temperature to 120° F.
Child Safe Way to Fill a Bathtub
- Put your whole hand in the water, spread your fingers wide, and move your hand back and forth for several seconds.
- If the water feels even a little bit hot, then it is too hot.
- Add more cold water and test again.
- Lukewarm water (around 100°F) is safe for your child.
- Always turn off hot water first when using the shower.
Child Safe Bedroom
- Can my child reach something hot from the crib?
- Move your child’s crib away from radiators and hot pipes.
- Keep irons and hot styling tools (curling irons, flat irons, etc.), ashtrays and cigarettes out of your child’s reach.
What should I do if my child gets burned?
- Move your child away from what caused the burn.
- Remove clothes, diapers and shoes to make sure no other body part is burned.
- Cool the burn with cool running water for up to 30 minutes.
- Cover the burned area with a clean, dry sheet. (Source: American Burn Association
- Call 911 or your doctor as soon as possible after a serious burn.