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Baby’s and Toddlers, Safety Comes First

New parents and grandparents alike often want the best for the baby or toddler in their life, but sometimes, the price can outweigh quality or safety when it comes to what we use in our lives to treat the children.

While I have gone through some of the safety thoughts for the baby’s nursery in another article, I want to tell you about more of the safety features, ideas, and tips that you should be looking for when purchasing items for your baby or for your toddler. 

Where are you going to have to be more aware of the items that you are purchasing? At yard sales, garage sales, from ads in the local newspaper, from friends and relatives, and even in discount stores, you are going to have to keep safety first in your mind when you are reviewing prices and features of baby furniture and baby items. 

Many homes use child gates to protect the child from stairs, rooms they should not enter and to keep children out of rooms that are not child or baby proof for their own protection. One thing you have to be sure that you are looking for when purchasing a baby gate is that the openings in the gate are small enough so a child’s head cannot fit through the spaces in a gate. 

Children stick their tiny heads through any type of opening, but you need to be sure they cannot get their head in the gate that you purchased for your peace of mind and their safety when you are using a baby gate in the house.

Another feature of baby gates that you have to be aware of when purchasing a gate is that all gates use some type of force or latch to hold the gate into place. You have to be careful about folding hinges or pressure bars that attach the gate to the door opening. 

Little fingers are going to play with the hinges, the locks, and the gate itself. Hinges that lock into place and pressure bars, which lock into place, are going to be more difficult for the young child to ‘get’ hurt on. Purchasing a baby gate that has additional safety features in regards to their fingers and heads should be first on your mind. 

High chairs are one item that your child is going to use from infant stages through their toddler years. Safety is important when purchasing a high chair that your child is going to use through their growing years. You don’t want to purchase a high chair that is going to fall apart, fall down, or allow your child to crawl out easily and get hurt when they fall to the floor. Purchase a high chair that has straps around the waist of the child, and that will pull up between the legs of the child. The straps should be separate from the tray on the high chair. 

All too often, parents will pull off the tray, covered in food and goo, turn around, and set it on the table and the child falls from the chair. With the straps not attached to the tray, your child is safer while you get the tray off the chair so you can then wash up your child. 

Look for locks on the high chair tray that are more difficult for a child to get off. The easier a child can remove the tray from the high chair their selves while sitting in the chair, the higher the chances are for an accident happening.

Continued >> on the next page

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Copyright 2007 tipking all rights reserved. Last update 27th May 2007