Be a Safe Babysitter!
Caring for young children is a very
important job. Babysitters are responsible for the children’s
safety and must be able to react quickly and correctly in case of an
emergency.
Important InformationA babysitter must be
certain of important information before the parents leave. Remember to
ask these questions:
- How many children will be watched?
- Where are the parents going and when will they
return?
- Is there a phone number where parents, a relative
and/or a neighbor can be reached in case of an emergency?
- Do the children have special food or medicine needs?
- What time is bedtime?
- Where is a flashlight in case of a power failure?
Parent Responsibilities
- Have and post important information:
- address
- health insurance
- emergency numbers (9-1-1, poison control)
- child's information (name, date of birth, medical
conditions, medications/dosage, allergies)
- Have your home address clearly visible from the
street and posted near the phone.
Post the Home Escape Plan
The babysitter should know this safety information:
- If caring for infants or physically challenged
children, consider how to get them out of the house in case of fire.
- Be sure the home has a working smoke alarm.
- Know CPR. Attend a childcare program.
- If meals are to be cooked, remember kitchen safety
rules.
- In an emergency, call 9-1-1.
Things to Remember
- If the home has a swimming pool, be sure all gates,
access doors, doggy doors and windows are closed and locked.
- A baby sitter should NOT talk on the phone when
taking care of children (unless there is an emergency).
- Don't open the door to strangers, even if they claim
to be friends or neighbors of the family, unless parents gave prior
authorization.
- Keep doors and windows locked.
- Never leave a child unattended when in a bathtub.
- Close and/or lock bathroom doors when not in
use.
Remember, children need to
be watched at all
times!
For a printable brochure on "Be a Safe Babysitter," click HERE.
Last modified on 04/14/2010 13:03:14
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