Playground Safety Tips
Playground Safety Is Everybody's Responsibility
Outdoor playgrounds can be exciting places where children explore their
environment while developing motor and social skills; however, they
also can pose serious safety hazards. With the exception of those in
California, no mandatory state or federal standards currently exist
regarding the manufacture or installation of playground equipment or
surfaces.
However, the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) has established
a voluntary industry standard for public playground safety (F 1487-93),
and the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has established
voluntary guidelines. This brochure discusses common playground hazards
and recommends actions that parents and others can take to increase
playground safety.
What Makes a Playground Unsafe?
Each year hospital emergency rooms treat an estimated 200,000 children
who have been injured in playground accidents. About 60 percent of these
injuries are caused by children falling from playground equipment onto
a hard and unyielding surface such as asphalt, concrete, or even the
ground. Most playground injuries are caused by preventable hazards.
These hazards include:
Inadequate fall zones under and spaces between playground equipment.
The area under and around equipment should be covered with a minimum
of 12 inches of protective, resilient surfacing material (such as wood
chips, mulch, or rubber), extending a minimum of 6 feet in all directions.
Fall zones around swings should extend twice the height of the swing
hanger in front of and behind the swings. Swings should not be attached
to play systems. There should be a minimum of 12 feet between play structures.
Absence of guard rails. Elevated surfaces such as platforms, ramps,
and bridgeways should have guard rails to prevent accidental falls.
Dangerous protrusions and entanglements. Objects such as nails, screws,
bolts, pipe ends, and sharp or pointed hardware can impale or cut children.
Hooks or parts that catch strings and clothing can cause strangulation.
Open S hooks allow swing seats to slip off their chains and can cause
children to fall.
Hazardous entrapment areas. Openings between posts, ladder rungs, deck
levels, or entryways are fine for foot-first entry, but they can also
entrap children's heads. Ideally, openings on playground equipment should
measure less than 3 inches or more than 9 inches.
Dangerous swing seats. Hard wood or metal swing seats can hit children
passing too closely to or jumping off a swing. Heavy animal-type swings
are particularly dangerous because they act as battering rams; bumpers
attached to these swings do not reduce the risk of injury.
Other dangerous playground equipment. Equipment such as suspension
bridges, merry-go-rounds, swinging gates, and seesaws (teeter-totters)
may have moving parts that can pinch or crush children's fingers or
other body parts.
Age-inappropriate equipment. It is important to ensure that playground
equipment is appropriate to the age group using it. For example, equipment
for children in preschool should have guard rails on elevated surfaces
higher than 20 inches, and it should be separated from equipment for
school-age children. Small children may not have the coordination and
balance to climb on equipment designed for older children.
Inadequate supervision or lack of supervision. It is estimated that
more than 40 percent of playground injuries are directly related to
lack of proper supervision. Most children are unable to foresee danger.
Parents and school staff need to be alert to potential hazards.
How Can You Help Children Play Safely?
Proper supervision is essential to safe play. Parents and teachers
should ensure that children observe the following rules:
Wear shoes, such as sneakers, that do not slide on wet surfaces. However,
check for footwear rules at indoor play areas.
Do not play on slippery or wet equipment or force body parts through
small spaces.
Do not play on hot metal surfaces, such as slides, that may cause third-degree
burns.
Do not cross in front or behind moving swings.
Get off a seesaw only when your partner's feet are on the ground.
Do not push or pull others while playing on climbing equipment.
How Can an Unsafe Playground Be Made Safe?
If a playground is unsafe, it can be renovated by making these improvements:
Install a fall zone of appropriate materials that extends the correct
distance in all directions under all equipment.
Modify unsafe equipment if it is economical; otherwise, unsafe equipment
should be replaced.
Replace hard swing seats with softer ones and remove animal-type swings
and multiple-occupancy glider swings.
Install guard or barrier walls on all elevated surfaces, close S hooks,
and modify protrusions.
Space equipment appropriately and remove equipment with openings that
can trap children's heads.
Remove hazards that children may trip over, such as exposed concrete
footings, tree roots, stumps, or rocks; modify containment borders and
abrupt changes in surface elevations.
Talk with contractors and equipment manufacturers to ensure that equipment
complies with safety standards.
http://www.kidsource.com/kidsource/content3/safe.playgrnd.t.p.k12.safe.html