Swimming Safety Tips; This is Healthy and Safe Swimming Week

Modified: May 27, 2016 5:01pm

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05/27/2016

Photo of two small girls in a pool

PRESS RELEASE

From the Office of the Commissioner of Health, Dr. Gale R. Burstein

Date May 27, 2016                              

CONTACT: Mary C. St. Mary/Mary.StMary@Erie.Gov

Phone: 716.858.4941/ Mobile: 716.253.3925

Swimming Safety Tips

THIS IS HEALTHY & SAFE SWIMMING WEEK

ERIE COUNTY, NY— Each year, Healthy and Safe Swimming Week focuses on simple steps swimmers and pool operators can take to help ensure a healthy and safe swimming experience for everyone. It focuses on preventing drowning, avoiding injuries from pool chemicals, and preventing outbreaks of illnesses. It highlights swimmer hygiene and the need for swimmers to take an active role in helping to protect themselves and prevent the spread of germs.

“The goal of Healthy and Safe Swimming Week is to maximize the health benefits of water-based physical activity while minimizing the risk of recreational water–associated illness and injury,” stated Dr. Gale Burstein, Erie County Commissioner of Health (“ECDOH”). “With the anticipated warm weather over Memorial Day weekend, many families will be seeking relief from the heat in local pools and waterways. Healthy swimming depends, in part, on what we swimmers keep out of the treated water we swim in this summer and year-round. We all share the water we swim in, and we each need to do our part to keep ourselves, our families, and our friends healthy.” 

To protect your health and the health of your family and friends, here are a few simple and effective steps all of us can take each time we swim:

•           Stay out of the water if you have diarrhea.

•           Shower before you get in the water.

•           Don’t substitute the pool for the toilet

•           Don’t swallow the water.

Every hour—everyone out!

•           Take kids on bathroom breaks.

•           Check diapers, and change them in a bathroom or diaper changing area—not poolside—to keep germs away from the pool.

Parents and caregivers of children of all ages need to take the necessary precautions to ensure summer swimming fun remains safe.

“The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (“CPSC”) estimates that each year, nearly 300 children younger than five years drown in swimming pools and spas and an additional 4,000 children that age present to hospital emergency departments for non-fatal submersion injuries. An unknown number of these hospitalizations result in permanent disability, including brain damage. These deaths and injuries are entirely preventable,” said Dr. Burstein.

Follow these water safety steps to help keep everyone safe:

Stay Close, Be Alert and Watch

  1. 1.        Never leave a child unattended in or near a pool or spa and always watch your children closely around all bodies of water.
  2. 2.        Designate a Water Watcher to supervise children in the pool or spa. This person should not be reading, texting, using a smart phone or be otherwise distracted. Adults can take turns being a Water Watcher.
  3. 3.        Teach children basic water safety tips.
  4. 4.        If a child is missing, look for him or her in the pool or spa first.
  5. 5.        Keep children away from pool drains, pipes and other openings to avoid entrapments.
  6. 6.        Ensure any pool and spa you use has drain covers that comply with federal standards (if you do not know, ask your pool service provider whether your covers are in compliance)
  7. 7.        Learn how to swim and teach your child how to swim.
  8. 8.        Learn how to perform CPR on children and adults, and update those skills regularly.
  9. 9.        Install a four-foot or taller fence around the perimeter of the pool and spa and use self-closing and self-latching gates; ask your neighbors to do the same at their pools.
  10. 10.          Install and use a lockable safety cover on your spa.
  11. 11.          Have lifesaving equipment such as life rings, floats or a reaching pole available and easily accessible.

“Adding a few extra safety steps in and around pools and spas can make all the difference,” concluded Burstein. These steps will help you minimize risk of illness while maximizing the health benefits and swimming enjoyment. Healthy swimming is not just about the steps the pool operators and pool inspectors take—so let’s all do our part to help keep ourselves, our families, and our friends healthy this summer and year round.

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For More Information:

Centers for Disease Control and Protection (“CDC”) – Healthy and Safe Swimming Week

CDC - Pool Chemical Safety

CDC – Healthy Swimming Brochure