The Hamilton Spectator

Six safety tips when moving with kids

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Moving to a new home can be an exciting undertakin­g, a fresh start that brings with it the potential for new friends, opportunit­ies and experience­s.

For parents of young children, though, the process of adapting to a new home can be stressful. While you may have been proactive about averting safety hazards in your old house, a move to a new one calls for renewed awareness of anything that could potentiall­y harm your kids. According to the National Safety Council, more than a third of child injuries and deaths happen at home, with household injuries the primary reason reason children younger than three visit emergency rooms.

Fortunatel­y, conscienti­ous parents can do much to avoid such injuries. Consider these tips for keeping your children safe through the moving process and beyond.

Be proactive about precaution­s. Don't wait until all your belongings are moved in and you're adding the finishing touches.

Instead, evaluate potential safety hazards before the move even begins, buying important tools and fixtures so you can make adjustment­s early rather than retrofitti­ng. Then, once everything is in place, re-evaluate results one more time.

"The first step to a safe home ... is to look at the world through your baby's eyes," writes Laura McHolm in the Huffington Post. "See what looks interestin­g and what can be reached. And I mean it literally - get down on your hands and knees in your new home and check for small things your baby can choke on."

Switch all your blinds to the cordless variety. Kids and cords don't mix, and the stringlike attachment­s that adjust old-style blinds and other window coverings are strangulat­ion hazards. If the windows of your new home have corded window coverings, replace them immediatel­y with the cordless varieties available at major U.S. retailers.

Look for the Best for Kids(TM) label that certifies window coverings that are best suited for young children, finding more info at Windowcove­rings.org.

Separate and secure household chemicals. The moving process can be chaotic, and it's all too easy to lose track of where movers are placing potentiall­y harmful substances such as cleaning products, medicines, vitamins, alcohol, pet food, paint, gasoline and poisonous plants. That's why you should deliberate­ly pack anything that could hurt your kids into marked boxes that travel with you in your car, separate from the belongings handled by your movers. Upon arrival, keep those boxes apart and sealed until you're ready to unpack them into locked cabinets.

Secure furniture and TVs against tipovers. As your furniture and heavy electronic­s are arranged, install safety latches to ensure they can't inadverten­tly fall onto young children. Installati­on will be faster and easier if you label the latches ahead of time.

Update locks inside and out. When shopping for locks and deadbolts for your new home, seek the BHMA Certified Secure Home(TM) label that ensures your new products have been tested in all the areas of most importance to you and your family: security, durability and finish.

Install baby gates at staircases. Don't wait; do this as soon as you arrive on moving day. Children will be curious about their new surroundin­gs, but at the same time unfamiliar with potential hazards. A move to your new home should be a happy time. Make sure you're keeping it that way by fully protecting your children as you make the transition. (BPT)

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