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First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton Joins CPSC to Release Child Care Safety Checklist April 12, 1999
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SourceUnited States Consumer Product Safety CommissionForumsHealth, Safety, Nutrition and KidsRelated ArticlesA Consumer Guide to Product Safety RecallsCPSC Hotline Information For Immediate Release; |
WASHINGTON, D.C. - First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton joined U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) Chairman Ann Brown today to kick off a national campaign to alert parents and caregivers to safety hazards in child care settings. Among the findings in a 1998 CPSC study of 220 child care settings across the United States, two-thirds had at least one safety hazard. CPSC visited four types of licensed child care settings, including federal, non-profit, for-profit and in-home. "Some hazards are obvious, like playground surfacing that has worn thin," said Brown. "Other hazards are hidden dangers that may not be obvious. Even the best parents and child care providers may not be aware of these hidden hazards." Many child care settings provide safe environments for young children. Yet, CPSC knows of at least 56 children who have died in child care settings since 1990. In 1997, about 31,000 children, 4 years old and younger, were treated in U.S. hospital emergency rooms for injuries at child care and school settings. The CPSC study looked at eight product areas with potential safety hazards in child care settings selected at random. Following are the results:
To help remedy the situation, CPSC has prepared a Child Care Safety Checklist for child care providers and parents to use. The checklist will help caregivers become informed about hidden hazards by giving them a list of things to look for to make their homes and child care settings safer for children. Parents can use the checklist when choosing child care settings and ensuring that the child care provider is vigilant in monitoring product recall announcements and removing dangerous items. "The Child Care Safety Checklist will provide parents and child care providers with the information they need to ensure that children are safe in all child care settings," said First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton. "This effort is part of the Administration's commitment to making child care better, safer and more affordable for America's working families." "The safety of the children in our centers has always been of paramount importance," said David J. Barram, Administrator of the U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), which administers 112 Federal childcare centers nationwide. "To do our job even better, by Mother's Day 1999 we will have computers online in all of our centers. Then, at a moment's notice, we can pass along safety alerts from CPSC. Those computers also can be used to provide a network for all GSA childcare centers to share best practices, ideas and information to improve all aspects of Federal childcare." CPSC is sending the checklist to many groups nationwide, including the National Child Care Information Center, National Association for the Education of Young Children, Head Start, state licensing authorities and other providers and organizations that work with them. To get your free copy of the checklist, send a postcard to Child Care Safety Checklist, CPSC, Washington, DC 20207, or access CPSC's website at http://www.cpsc.gov. "We want to get a checklist in the hands of every caregiver," said Brown. "Child care providers should use this checklist to go through their facility and make it a safer place for the children in their care." To get all CPSC recall information sent directly to you or your facility by fax, send a fax with your name and fax number to (301) 504-0399. The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission protects the public from unreasonable risks of injury or death from 15,000 types of consumer products under the agency's jurisdiction. To report a dangerous product or a product-related injury, call CPSC's hotline at (800) 638-2772 or CPSC's teletypewriter at (800) 638-8270, or visit CPSC's web site at http://www.cpsc.gov/talk.html. For information on CPSC's fax-on-demand service, call the above numbers or visit the web site at http://cpsc.gov/about/who.html. To order a press release through fax-on-demand, call (301) 504-0051 from the handset of your fax machine and enter the release number. Consumers can obtain this release and recall information at CPSC's web site at http://www.cpsc.gov. |