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REMEMBER DA KID! Hot Weather and Hot Cars Deadly Combination for Children


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REMEMBER DA KID!

MIAMI – At least 35 Florida children have died from heat stroke after being left alone or trapped in a closed vehicle in the last nine years.

“Every one of these tragedies is avoidable,” said Ignatius “Iggy” Carroll of the City of Miami Fire Rescue, who spoke at a news conference sponsored by Safe Kids Worldwide and General Motors. “We hope by getting the Never Leave Your Child Alone message out now, before the summer heat really sets in, that lives can be saved.”

The 35 Florida children killed by hyperthermia since 1998 – including three in 2006 – was No. 2 in the United States over that period. The 10.94 deaths per million children ranked No. 4 in the nation. The children killed ranged from 1 month to 3 years of age.

More than 320 children have died nationwide in the same period, most of them under 3 years of age, according to statistics compiled by Jan Null, Adjunct Professor of Meteorology at San Francisco State University.

A child’s physiology and hot temperatures can be a deadly combination in just minutes. Even the seemingly mild temperature of 70 degrees Fahrenheit can be dangerous. Miami’s average daily temperature is 75.9 degrees, according to CityRating.com.

“The inside of a vehicle can rise 19 degrees above the outside temperature in just 10 minutes,” said Wes Bender, Safe Kids Buckle Up regional manager for Safe Kids Worldwide, GM’s partner in child passenger safety programs. “After an hour, the temperature inside and outside temperature can differ by 45 degrees or more – even if the window is left open a crack.”

“Children are more susceptible to heat stroke than adults because their bodies warm at a rate three to five times faster than adult bodies do,” said Null. “Heat stroke occurs when the core body temperature reaches 104 degrees Fahrenheit. A core body temperature of 107 degrees Fahrenheit is considered lethal.”

The Florida fatalities have occurred in outside temperatures between 79 F and 110 F.

Safe Kids Worldwide and General Motors created the Never Leave Your Child Alone program to educate families on the dangers kids face in hot vehicles, said Beth Lowery, GM vice president of Environment, Energy and Safety Policy.

“A child is our most precious cargo and drivers must know that these deaths and injuries are entirely preventable,” she said. “Our heart goes out to every family that has lost a child or children in this way. No one ever thinks it would happen to them, and that is why this message cannot be repeated too often.”

Safe Kids suggests these tips for parents and caregivers:
-Teach children not to play in, on or around vehicles.
-Never leave a child unattended in a vehicle, even with the window slightly open.
-Always lock a vehicle’s doors and trunk – especially at home.
-Keep keys and remote entry devices out of children’s reach.
-Place something that you’ll need at your next stop – such as a purse, lunch, gym bag or briefcase – on the floor of the backseat where the child is sitting. This simple act could help prevent you from accidentally forgetting a child.