Five Easily Overlooked Home Safety Threats

Remember to storing harmful chemicals out of reach of young children.
When you think about how to make your home safer for your little ones, it may all feel so overwhelming. OHealthy’s article on “5 Home Safety Threats You Can Overlook” breaks it down to the first five you should tackle first.
You’re a careful parent who steers children away from things that could harm them. But hidden threats lurk in every house—sometimes where you least expect them. For safety’s sake, look through your home often. Keep an eye out for not-so-obvious hazards. Here are five of them:
Scalding tap water
“It is common for a home’s water heater to be set above 170 degrees, and this can cause a scald burn to a child in seconds,” says emergency room pediatrician Denise Dowd, M.D., of Kansas City, Mo. Scalding hot tap water causes 3,800 injuries and more than 30 deaths a year. A lot of victims are young kids.
Solution: Set your hot water heater to 120 degrees. Check a child’s bath water with a thermometer; aim for 100 degrees.
Unstable furniture
Each year, thousands of young kids are badly injured—and some die—when large TVs and heavy furniture tip over on them. Often, the victims were leaning on the furniture, climbing it, or pulling themselves up on it.
Solution: Double-check the stability of large furniture. Anchor bookcases, shelves, or bureaus to the wall. Get rid of items that may tempt kids to climb.
Window blinds
Hundreds of children have strangled to death after getting tangled up in cords or chains on window blinds. Window coverings sold before 2001 pose the most danger.
Solution: Fix older window coverings (see http://www.windowcoverings.org) or replace them with safer blinds. Move cribs, beds, and other furniture away from windows.
Poorly stored chemicals
Each year, more than a million children younger than 6 are poisoned by accident—and 30 die. Many poisons are found in the garage. There, “parents can unknowingly put their kids at risk by storing gasoline, lighter fluid, or other chemicals in old soda bottles or cans,” Dr. Dowd says. Kids drink the liquid, with tragic results.
Solution: Store harmful chemicals in their original, labeled containers—safely out of reach.
Home trampolines
Backyard trampolines send nearly 248,000 people younger than 20 to doctors and emergency rooms each year. Injuries range from sprains, broken bones, and cuts to neck and spinal cord injuries, paralysis, and even death.
Solution: Avoid use of home trampolines. In gym classes or competitive sports, use a trampoline only with strict adult guidance and supervision.
How safe is your home? Take the hazardous materials quiz now and find out!
What did you score? Share in the comments box below.




































This is a great blog. Keep up the great work. Anyone ever tried House Flipping?