Baby Safety
Bedroom
- Always put your baby to sleep on his/her back on a firm, flat, tight-fitting mattress in a crib that meets current safety standards, and remove all pillows, quilts, comforters, sheepskins, and pillow-like bumper pads and toys from the crib. Follow this advice to reduce the risk of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) and suffocation.
- Make sure your baby’s crib is sturdy and has no loose or missing hardware. This will prevent babies suffocating or strangling by becoming trapped between broken crib parts.
- Never place your baby’s crib or furniture near window blind or curtain cords. This will prevent babies from strangling on the loop of the cord. To prevent falls, keep children away from windows.
Bathroom
- Keep medicines and cleaning products in containers with safety caps and locked away from children. This will prevent children from being poisoned.
- Always check bath water temperature with your wrist or elbow before putting your baby in to bathe. This will prevent burns to a baby’s delicate skin.
- Never, ever, leave your child alone in the bathtub or near any water, including water in toilets, 5 gallon buckets, and pools.
Kitchen
- Don’t leave your baby alone in a highchair; always use all safety straps. This will prevent injuries and deaths from the baby climbing out, falling, or sliding under the tray. Be sure to use safety straps in strollers and baby swings.
- Use your stove’s back burners and keep pot handles turned to the back of the stove. This will prevent deaths and injuries from burns. In addition, keep children away from tablecloths, so they can’t pull down hot foods or liquids on themselves.
- Lock household cleaning products, knives, matches, and plastic bags away from children. This will prevent poisonings, bleeding injuries, burns and suffocation.
In Other Living Areas
- Install smoke detectors on each floor of your home, especially near sleeping areas; change the batteries yearly. This will prevent deaths and injuries from fires.
- Use safety gates to block stairways and safety plugs to cover electrical outlets. This will prevent injuries from falls and electric shocks.
- Keep all small objects, including tiny toys and balloons, away from young children. This will prevent choking and possible death.
Car seat Safety
Michigan's Child Passenger Safety Law requires: Children must be properly buckled in a car seat or booster seat until they are 8 years old or 4-feet-9-inches tall. Children must ride in a seat until they reach the age requirement or the height requirement, whichever comes first.
Contact Taylor Police Department if you have any questions or need assistance with proper installation of car seat