Every year, thousands of Americans are injured or killed in boating and swimming accidents. You can protect yourself and your family from such accidents by following these guidelines.
Boating safety
- Check weather and water conditions before leaving shore.
- Do not drink and boat. Alcohol is a factor in many boating accidents. Choose a designated boat driver who will not drink.
- Insist that everyone wear a Coast Guard-approved personal flotation device or life jacket while on board.
- Always tell someone where you’ll be boating, when you expect to be back, and what your boat looks like.
- Keep Coast Guard-approved visual distress devices, such as pyrotechnic red flares, orange distress flags, or lights on board.
- Do not carry more passengers than the maximum listed on the boat’s capacity plate.
Home-pool safety
Here’s how to keep your family safe:
- Enclose your pool with a fence, wall, or other barrier at least four feet tall. Install self-latching gates that open outward.
- Do not assume your child can swim. Many youngsters forget how to swim when panicked.
- Keep a portable phone in the pool area and program emergency contacts on its speed dial.
- Keep a close eye on children and nonswimmers who are using inflatable toys, inner tubes, and mattresses. They could slide off them and drown.
- Closely supervise children when they are diving or jumping in the pool. Head and back injuries are likely to occur during these activities.
- Keep the pool’s deck area clear of tripping hazards like toys, dishes, and hoses.
- Review safety measures and rules with guests before they swim.
Safety musts for children
- Never leave a young child alone in a bathtub, wading pool, swimming pool, lake, or river. If you must answer the phone or get a towel, take the child with you.
- Be aware of backyard pools in your neighborhood or apartment building. Your child could wander off and fall in.
- Enroll children in swimming lessons taught by qualified instructors. But remember, the lessons won’t make children “drown-proof.”
- Teach your older children that they risk drowning when they overestimate their swimming ability or underestimate water depth.
Safety musts for adults
- Take swimming lessons from a qualified instructor if you’re not a strong, competent swimmer.
- Don’t swim if you’ve been drinking alcohol.
- Don’t swim alone or allow others to do so.
- Stay out of the water during thunderstorms and other severe weather. During lightning storms, seek shelter away from metal objects, open areas, and large, lone trees.
- Don’t exceed your swimming ability. Know your limits and stick to them.
- Check the water level before diving into a pool, ocean, pond, reservoir, or lake. Always dive with your arms extended firmly over your head and your hands together.
- Don’t dive into unknown bodies of water, like lakes, rivers, quarries, or irrigation ditches. Jump feet first to avoid hitting your head (and breaking your neck or back) on a shallow bottom, hidden rock, or other obstruction.