Title: Playground Safety at Commercial Childcare Centers
1Playground Safety at Commercial Childcare Centers
- Four KEY areas where direct attention can
significantly reduce the risk of injury to
children. - The advice provided in this presentation was
developed from reliable sources and from
practical experience in the industry. However,
Thomco, LLC cannot accept legal liability for the
thoroughness of the material as it relates to
practical applications at playgrounds. Although
the advice is intended to help improve playground
safety at childcare centers it is not intended to
address all potential hazards or scenarios at a
playground. - Bill Coons, Loss Control Director
- Thomco, LLC
2Key 1Supervision
3Play time for the children IS NOT break time for
employees.
- Outside play time is a great change of scenery
for the teachers AND the children. - It should not be thought of as rest time for
teachers. - Children are more excited and active when outside
which increases the chances of injury. - If adult supervision DECREASES as child
excitability INCREASES
4Accidents Happen!
- Each play area should have an adult supervisor
- Playgrounds should NOT be set up with teacher
sitting areas as this tends to minimize the
importance of the need for supervision - Caregivers should watch for child behavior that
tends to lead to injuries running, not paying
attention to nearby swings, arguing over toys,
children pushing other children, line battles,
etc.
5Supervision, Continued
- Teacher supervisors must pay attention to keeping
toddler children out of areas where older
children are playing. A common playground injury
includes children running into other children
when a child less experienced in walking cannot
get out of the way of a running 3 or 4 year old. - Prior to heading to the playground a quick
clothing check should take place. Things to look
for necklaces, drawstrings, ear-rings, loose
belts, untied shoes - Supervise child traffic at the end of slides and
in front of swing sets - Enforce proper use of equipment, for example
children should not be allowed to climb up the
sliding surface - Teachers should be stationed where they can see
children in the crawl spaces and on the equipment - There should not be any areas where children can
easily get out of sight of teachers as this
increases the chance for abuse allegations
6Key components of supervision
- Pre-Supervision and
- Active Monitoring
7Pre-Supervision
- An adult should enter the playground area BEFORE
the children are allowed to enter the area. - A quick inspection for any obvious, out of the
ordinary hazards should take place prior to
children being allowed onto playgrounds
8Active Monitoring
- Active requires that monitoring children on the
playground is INTENTIONAL - Proper positioning allows supervisor to see
children from different angles, changing
locations in the play area allows for closer
supervision - Scanning supervisors should look up, down,
right, left, over and under to see all areas of
the play environment - Eye contact with children often can prevent
unruly behavior that leads to injuries
9Key 2Age Appropriate Equipment Design
10Equipment for children aged 2 to 5 years should
be separate from play equipment for children 5 to
12 years old.
- Signs in the play area will help reinforce
teacher instruction on age appropriate play
equipment - Resist the temptation to move advanced younger
children to older group play areas - If possible fences should separate age
appropriate play areas from each other
11Platforms on equipment
- Are intended to allow children to change
direction and get off the equipment if they want
to - Should have appropriate guardrails
- Minimum of 38 high for school age children 5-12
- Minimum of 29 high for Preschoolers 2-5 y.o.
12Design and Supports
- Equipment design should prevent the possibility
of climbing on the outside of the structure - Supports for the equipment should prevent
children from climbing on the outside of the
structure
13Cautions about Head Entrapment
- General rule of thumb is that ALL OPENINGS in
guardrails, between ladder rungs and similar
openings should be - Less than 3.5
- More than 9
- Openings between those ranges can allow a childs
head to become trapped in the space
14Key 3Fall Zones
15Height Children Gravity Falls
- Fall zones should be created due to the common
event of children falling - Proper fall zones should NOT allow for less
teacher supervision - Supervision helps prevent falls
- Fall Zone Guidelines are established to prevent
life threatening head injuries
16Physics
- Its a matter of physics. The higher the fall
and harder the surface, the worse the injury. - E. Henzy
17Equipment Height Recommendations
- Preschool children should play on equipment no
higher than 6 feet maximum - School aged children (5-12y.o.) should play on
equipment no higher than 8 feet maximum
18Playground Injury Statistics
- Each year more than 15 children die in playground
related incidents - An estimated 205,850 playground related injuries
result in hospital emergency room visits - Approximately 75.8 of playground injuries in
1999 occurred on playgrounds designed for public
use - Fractures are most commonly reported injuries
accounting for 39 of all injuries - Approximately 80 of reported fractures involve
the wrist, lower arm, or elbow - Approximately 79 of injuries that occurred
involved falling from playground equipment onto
the ground below the equipment
19Material Types
- Loose Fill Material
- And
- Unitary
20Loose Fill Material
- Organic including wood chips, bark mulch, and
engineered wood fibers - Should be replaced over time, may allow for bugs
and weed growth, require retaining structures,
and should be shifted regularly to provide
maximum protection from fall impacts
21Loose Fill Material
- Inorganic including sand, pea gravel, and more
recently - shredded tires - Sand has problems when wet and with floor
abrasions - Pea gravel has problems with curious children
placing stones in various body cavities - Shredded tires are inconsistently processed in
the past so problems with clothes stains arose
22Unitary Material
- Particles are bonded together through heating or
cooling processes or with the use of a bonding
agent or adhesive - These materials are costly to install and over
time require costly maintenance
23Important factor is Shock-Absorption
Characteristics
- Depth of material needed depends on height of
equipment - Recommendations include
- 9 to 12 inches of wood chips for equipment 7 to 8
feet high - 6 inches minimum of wood chips for equipment 6
feet high and lower
24Practical tips
- Use a straight ruler pushed into the material to
measure depth - Feel the material move under your feet, if there
is no give you need more surfacing - Consider 8 PVC connected to contain loose fill
material
25Key 4 Equipment Maintenance
- Inspect Playground equipment for the following
- Broken or missing parts
- Protruding bolts or fixtures
- Dangerous gaps that can catch drawstrings or
entrap body parts - Gaps between 3.5 inches and 9 inches create
special hazards
26Contd, Inspect Equipment for
- Rust on metal parts
- Splinters on wood pieces
- Cracks and holes in plastic equipment
27Regular Inspections
- Designate people responsible for routine and more
thorough inspections - Use checklists to mark areas inspected and take
notes for future maintenance concerns - Keep files of inspections with dates which will
provide for defense of some claims
28For more information
- Visit the following websites
- www.playgroundsafety.org
- www.cpsc.gov
- www.kidchecker.org