Office of
Information and Public Affairs |
Washington, DC 20207 |
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: Mark Ross |
May 26,
2000 |
(301) 504-0580 Ext. 1188 |
Release #
00-113 |
|
|
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WASHINGTON, D.C. - Memorial
Day weekend is the time many families open their home pools for the summer.
Pool owners, especially those with young children and grandchildren, should
always keep in mind the deadly hazards a pool can pose. About 350 children
under 5 years old drown in pools each year nationwide and 2,600 are treated in
hospital emergency rooms for near-drowning incidents. Most of the cases involve
residential pools.
To prevent this tragedy,
many pool owners use pool alarms designed to sound a warning if a child falls
into the water. Sales of pool alarms have doubled since 1994. A study released today by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) tested the
performance of various pool alarm systems.
The CPSC study looked at
three types of alarms: floating alarms that detect waves on the surface;
underwater alarms that detect waves under the surface; and a wristband alarm,
which is worn by a child, and alarms when exposed to water.
CPSC's
tests showed that underwater alarms performed the most consistently (with one
surface alarm - PoolSOS - performing almost as well). Underwater sensors alarm
more consistently and are less likely to false alarm. When a test object,
intended to simulate the weight of a small child, was pushed into a pool, the
underwater sensors detected it most reliably. The underwater alarms also can be
used in conjunction with pool covers, whereas the surface alarms cannot. The
wristband device alarmed well but can be impractical because the caregiver must
remember to put it on the child, and it alarms when exposed to any water
source, such as tap water.
Pool Alarms that Performed Well in
the CPSC Tests |
|
Underwater
Alarms |
Floating/Surface
Alarm |
Poolguard
- PBM Industries |
PoolSOS -
Allweather Inc. |
Sentinel
LINK - Lambo Products Inc. |
|
"Pool
alarms can be used as an extra safeguard, but should never be relied upon as
the only line of defense in preventing a child from drowning in your
pool," said CPSC Chairman Ann Brown. "The keys to preventing these
tragedies are placing barriers around your pool, closely supervising your child
and being prepared in case of an emergency."
CPSC Swimming Pool Safety Guidelines
Pools should have layers of protection to prevent drowning:
CPSC offers three free
publications consumers can use to help prevent child drowning: "Safety
Barrier Guidelines for Pools," "How to Plan for the Unexpected"
and "Guidelines for Entrapment Hazards: Making Pools and Spas Safer."
Some localities have incorporated the CPSC guidelines into their building codes
and regulations.
Copies of these
publications can be obtained here on CPSC's website, or by writing to "Pool
Safety", CPSC, Washington, D.C., 20207.
Consumers can also view a video clip about pool alarms. This is in "streaming video" format.
The
U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission protects the public from the
unreasonable risk of injury or death from 15,000 types of consumer products
under the agency's jurisdiction. To report a dangerous product or a
product-related injury, you can go to CPSC's forms page and use the first on-line form on that page.
Or, you can call CPSC's hotline at (800) 638-2772 or CPSC's teletypewriter at
(800) 638-8270, or send the information tomailto:info@cpsc.gov. To order a press
release through fax-on-demand, call (301) 504-0051 from the handset of your fax
machine and enter the release number. Consumers can obtain this release and
recall information from CPSC's web site at http://www.cpsc.gov/ or by calling the
hotline or sending your request to mailto:info@cpsc.gov You can also
subscribe to CPSC's email subscription list which normally
sends all press releases the day they are issued.
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