The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Study: Open waters pose risks for teens

Expert: Families need to pay close attention to swimming safety.

- By Helena Oliviero holiviero@ajc.com

Red-and-white checkered tablecloth­s, the sound of burgers sizzling, and long warm nights. As we head into Memorial Day weekend, the unofficial start of summer, we are drawn to cooling off in pools, oceans, lakes.

Unfortunat­ely, the risk of drowning rises with warmer weather.

Drowning is one of the leading causes of death in the United States. A new report by Safe Kids Worldwide and Nationwide’s Make Safe Happen program estimates 1,000 children drown every year, with 70 percent of the drownings taking place from May through August.

As we kick off summer, the message from water safety experts is not to stay out of water, but to learn the lifesaving skill of swimming, and to take steps for vigilant supervisio­n and an understand­ing of risks associated with swimming in pools and open water.

The study, called “The 2018 Open Safety Water Report,”

reveals children are more likely to drown in an open water (such as lakes, rivers and oceans) than a pool, particular­ly as children get older. For younger children ages 1-4, the majority of drownings (57 percent) occur in pools. By the time children are 15, however, the risk of drowning in an ocean, lake or another open water is far greater. Nine percent of drownings involving teenagers ages 15-19 occur in pools, compared to 73 percent in open water, according to this study based on analyzing data on drownings from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Center for Fatality Review and Prevention.

In Georgia, between 2007 and 2016, there were 434 drownings in children and teens 19 years and younger — an average of 43 per year, according to an analysis of CDC data and provided by the researcher­s of this new report. The 434 figure includes 182 pool drownings, 169 open water drownings and 34 bathtub drownings.

Dr. Marcee White, a Washington, D.C., pediatrici­an and medical adviser for Safe Kids Worldwide, said swimming and playing in water is fun and great exercise, but families need to pay close attention to swimming safety — especially in open water. Along with decreased visibility, open bodies of water can have unpredicta­ble and strong currents, and sudden dropoffs, and even experience­d swimmers may strug- gle in the colder water of lakes and rivers.

A responsibl­e adult should always be watching children whenever they’re in water, she said. They should not take their eyes off children in the water, not even for a minute. Secondly, very young children should stay within arm’s length of an adult when in and around the water. And for young children — as well as weak swimmers and nonswimmer­s — a Coast Guard-ap- proved life jacket offers a lot of protection, she said. (See box for additional tips for swimming in pools and open water.)

Boys are at greatest risk of drowning: 8 in 10 open water drowning victims are males. African-American chil- dren are also twice as likely to drown in open water than their white counterpar­ts, according to the study.

The racial disparity also exists w ith swimm i ng pools. Black children ages 5-19 drown in swimming pools at a rate more than five times that of white children, according to the CDC.

“No one ever thinks it’s going to happen to their chil- dren,” said Nadyne Siegel Brown, owner of SwimKids of Georgia. SwimKids, based in Cumming, offers aquatics survival classes and swim lessons. A key component of their program is learning how to roll on your back and float.

“There has to be layers of protection like an onion because it can happen to the most vigilant parent,” she added.

Brown urged parents to put together a safety plan before they head to water — regardless of whether they are heading to a neighborho­od pool, swimming hole or the Atlantic.

And for parents who don’t know how to swim themselves, it’s never too late to learn this lifesaving skill. Two years ago, Brown expanded her swim school to offer lessons for adults. She asks every parent if they can swim, and if the answer is no, she tells them, “I don’t know what it’s going to take to get you signed up to take swim lessons, but we are going to do whatever we can to make it happen.”

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / APOINTER@AJC.COM ?? Amanda Corr (left) and Brandon Russell, both of Acworth, paddle down the Chatahooch­ee River near Powers Island in Sandy Springs on Friday. Among drowning victims ages 15 to 19, 73 percent of deaths happen in open water while nine percent occur in...
ALYSSA POINTER / APOINTER@AJC.COM Amanda Corr (left) and Brandon Russell, both of Acworth, paddle down the Chatahooch­ee River near Powers Island in Sandy Springs on Friday. Among drowning victims ages 15 to 19, 73 percent of deaths happen in open water while nine percent occur in...
 ?? PHIL SKINNER / PSKINNER@AJC.COM ?? Divers search a swimming area at a park for an apparent drowning victim. Along with decreased visibility, open bodies of water can have unpredicta­ble and strong currents, and sudden dropoffs, and even experience­d swimmers may struggle in the colder...
PHIL SKINNER / PSKINNER@AJC.COM Divers search a swimming area at a park for an apparent drowning victim. Along with decreased visibility, open bodies of water can have unpredicta­ble and strong currents, and sudden dropoffs, and even experience­d swimmers may struggle in the colder...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States