Heatstroke Safety
Sometimes babies are so peaceful and quiet in the backseat that we can forget they are even there. It can be tempting to leave a sleeping baby in the car while we quickly run into the store. Leaving a child alone in a car, however, can lead to serious injury or death from heatstroke, even in cooler temperatures.
Hard Facts
- On average, every 10 days a child dies from heatstroke in a vehicle. In more than half of these deaths, the caregiver forgot the child was in the car.
- A car can heat up 19 degrees in just 10 minutes. Cracking a window doesn't help.
- Young children are particularly at risk, as their bodies heat up 3 to 5 times faster than an adult's.
Top Tips for Preventing Heatstroke
Reduce the number of deaths from heatstroke by remembering to ACT.
- Avoid heatstroke-related injury and death by never leaving a child alone in a car, not even for a minute. And make sure to keep your car locked when you're not inside so kids don't get in on their own.
- Create reminders. Keep a stuffed animal or other memento in your child's car seat when it's empty, and move it to the front seat as a visual reminder when your child is in the back seat. Or place and secure your phone, briefcase or purse in the backseat when traveling with your child.
- Take action. If you see a child alone in a car, call 911. Emergency personnel want you to call. They are trained to respond to these situations
Park. Look. Lock.