Child Proofing a Room

Focus on Safety When Decorating Children’s Rooms

Parents and parents-to-be have a million things on their minds when it comes to raising their children. But every parent needs to be aware of child safety, and this begins in the home.

Children’s rooms are the best place to start. According to child-safety experts, the typical focal points for decorating a child’s room — windows, cribs and bedding — also hold the greatest potential danger to a child’s safety.

To make sure your child’s room is a safe one, consider the following tips:

Window Areas

Never place a crib, playpen, bed or any type of low-standing furniture near a window. In exploring their surroundings, young children can accidentally fall through an open window or window screen, or become tragically entangled in a nearby window covering cord.  Whenever possible, place cribs and furniture on a non-windowed wall. Dangling or accessible cords on window coverings can pose an accidental strangulation hazard to infants and young children. For safety’s sake, replace older corded window coverings with today’s safer products.  The Window Covering Safety Council (WCSC), safety advocates, and government safety officials recommend that you only use cordless window coverings in homes with young children. If you can’t replace your corded window coverings, you can order free retrofit kits from WCSC at windowcoverings.org.  The website also contains a wealth of useful safety information for parents and caregivers.

Cribs

Make sure the crib you are using is sturdy, properly assembled and in compliance with the latest safety standards.  The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) cautions that crib mattresses should fit snugly, headboards and footboards should be without decorative cutouts, and corner-post extensions should be eliminated. Heirloom cribs and hand-me-downs may not meet the latest safety guidelines, or may have dangerously loose or missing parts. The CPSC recommends consumers replace any crib that is 10 years or older with one that meets current safety standards. Remember to place the crib on a non-windowed wall.  Once a child is able to push up on his hands or knees, or reaches 5 months of age, the CPSC recommends removing any crib toys strung across the crib or playpen to avoid accidental strangulation.

Bedding

Adorable as they may seem, crib comforters, bumpers, and baby pillows can pose a safety hazard. Safety officials caution parents not to place fluffy soft comforters or pillows in the crib where they might smother a baby. Consider a colorful mobile suspended from the ceiling, wallpaper borders, a patterned window valance or a cheerful color of wall paint as a satisfying and safer decorative focal point for baby’s room.

Other Room Elements

Be sure to cover all electrical outlets. Consider open bins for storing toys. Children can easily injure themselves with hinged toy boxes. Purchase a spring-loaded lid-support device for a toy chest to prevent the lid from falling on a child’s neck or from closing and trapping a child playing inside the chest. Finally, make sure the changing table has safety straps. Baby powder, diaper ointment, and similar baby-care products should be accessible to the caregiver, but well out of the child’s reach.