Ten Simple Tips for Baby Proofing with Toddlers
Posted in baby on 08/04/2009 02:34 pm by adminWhen your child becomes a toddler, he or she begins to walk and this causes greater hazards for baby to get into. Knick knacks on the table can be reached, bookshelves can be toppled over and table cloths can be pulled off. Take a look at these ten basic tips in order to toddler proof your house.
1. Put tapes to tape down all electrical cords or cords on curtains and blinds so that baby cannot strangle on them. The cord on the treadmill should be removed so that the child cannot start the treadmill and strangle on the cord. You can purchase cord shorteners for blinds and curtain cording.
2. Remove the garbage or hide it behind a latched door. Babies can get inside the garbage and can get into toxic items.
3. Cover all electrical sockets that aren’t being used with thick plastic plugs to prevent electrocution injuries in your child.
4. Household cleaners and medications can be harmful. Seemingly innocuous items can be very dangerous when a child eats them. Keep them locked away in a cupboard or cabinet.
5. When baby proofing your home, watch out for smaller objects such as cigarette butts, coins or paper clips. The child can reach up and get them and can choke on them when swallowed.
6. Make sure that all bookshelves and taller pieces of furniture are bolted to the wall so that the baby cannot pull those items down on top of him or her. Use straps alternatively to keep these items affixed to the wall.
7. Remember to keep all glass objects, electrical appliances, knives and other sharp objects away from the baby’s reach. Keep them up high in locked cabinets. The latched drawers are unfortunately not as safe as they were with babies and toddlers can get into them. This is why these things and cleaning products should be in locked cabinets high off the ground so the toddler has no chance of getting into them.
8. Protect the sharp ends and edges of furniture, such as coffee tables. Toddlers and older babies are wobbly when they are walking so they can easily fall and bump a body part on a sharp object if it isn’t properly covered with protective plastic.
9. Cover all dangerous doorknobs and use baby proofing gates in order to keep baby out of places so that he or she cannot go where they don’t belong. Especially cover doors to stairways and use safety gates that are wall mounted on those types of openings. Pressure gates may be insufficient when using something for stairs.
10. Make sure that child safety gates are firmly attached to the top and bottom of stairwells. Use hardware-mounted proofing gates instead of pressure gates for stairwells. Remember that the stairs are not safe for kids at both the top and bottom of stairways. The vertical gate railings should be no further apart than 2 and 3/8 inches.
Feel free to use the following example poem to enhance your baby’s footprint in the image that you will create as your memory of baby’s early days.