Showing posts with label water safety. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water safety. Show all posts

Saturday, 21 May 2016

Princess Health and CDC finds health problems are common at public pools; state requires local health departments to inspect each one twice a year. Princessiccia

By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

Thousands of public pools, hot tubs and water playgrounds are forced to close every year for serious health and safety violations, according to a new study by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Kentucky requires local health departments to conduct two full inspections of each public swimming pool during the operating season, once every six months for its continuous-operation indoor facilities, and monthly water chemistry inspections, according to the state Department for Public Health.

"The local health department environmentalists are the ones who do these inspections and monitors, so the records for these inspections are kept with each local health department, Beth Fisher, spokesperson for the Cabinet for Health and Family Services, said in an e-mail.

But you might want to do your own inspection if you go on vacation out of state, because that's not the case everywhere.


"Almost one third of local health departments do not regulate, inspect, or license public pools, hot tubs, and water playgrounds,� Michele Hlavsa, chief of the CDC's Healthy Swimming Program, said in a news release. �We should all check for inspection results online or on site before using public pools, hot tubs, or water playgrounds and do our own inspection before getting into the water.�

And even if states are checking their pools, that doesn't mean they are always safe.

A 2013 CDC study of inspection data from the five large states containing 40 percent of the nation's public aquatic venues found that almost 80 percent of them had at least one violation. It found that one in eight inspections resulted in immediate closure because of serious health and safety violations and that one in five kiddie or wading pools were closed due to violations. Most of the violations were related to improper pH (15 percent), lack of proper safety equipment (13 percent) and inadequate disinfectant levels (12 percent).

"Young children who are still learning their toileting skills are more likely to contaminate the water. They're more likely to swallow the water. Both of which can lead to outbreaks of diarrheal illness," Michael Beach, the CDC's associate director for healthy water, told Dennis Thompson at HealthDay News. He said pH levels are "critical because it determines how effective the disinfectant is killing germs."

The CDC recommends that parents change their infants' diapers often and in the bathroom, not poolside, to take children to the bathroom every hour, and to teach children to spit out any pool water they get in their mouth.

Beach said most contamination of public pools and hot tubs are the result of people swimming while suffering from diarrhea. He said adults should not swim while recovering from diarrhea, and if they do, should shower before getting in the water.

The CDC recommends individuals do a self-inspection of all public pools before getting in them and offers this checklist that identifies some of the most common swimming pool health and safety problems:
  • Use a test strip (available at most superstores or pool-supply stores) to determine if the pH and free chlorine or bromine concentration are correct.
  • Make sure the drain at the bottom of the deep end is visible.
  • Check that drain covers appear to be secured and in good repair.
  • Confirm that a lifeguard is on duty at public venues. If not, check whether safety equipment like a rescue ring with rope or pole is available.
If you find problems, do not get into the water and tell the person in charge so the problems can be fixed, says the release.

    Saturday, 14 May 2016

    Princess Health and Tips for staying healthy and safe on Kentucky's waters. Princessiccia

    Brad Molnar on Taylorsville Lake
    (Courier-Journal file photo, 2003)
    The state Division of Water and Department for Public Health offer tips to help Kentuckians stay safe and healthy as they go boating, fishing, swimming or otherwise recreate in the state's waterways this summer:
    • Avoid ingesting or inhaling the water.
    • Thoroughly clean hands and other areas that have come in contact with the water.
    • Avoid allowing open wounds to have direct contact with the water.
    • Avoid areas where swimming or harmful algal bloom advisories have been issued.
    • Avoid water with obvious odors or surface scums.
    • Avoid getting in water after heavy rainfall, especially in dense residential, urban and agricultural areas.
    • Avoid areas below wastewater-treatment outfalls, animal feedlots, straight pipes or other obvious sources of pollution.
    • Restrict pets and livestock from drinking the water if a bright green or blue-green surface scum is present.
    James Bruggers, environmental reporter for The Courier-Journal, reminds us: "The Clean Water Act of 1972 declared that all waterways in the United States were to be 'fishable and swimmable' by 1985. We've made progress, but we have a long way to go. Be safe out there."

    Friday, 23 May 2014

    Princess Health and Princess Health andSummer and water recreation offer fun and risk at the same time; prevention is the key to decrease the risk.Princessiccia

    Princess Health and Princess Health andSummer and water recreation offer fun and risk at the same time; prevention is the key to decrease the risk.Princessiccia

    One of the best parts of summer is splashing in a pool, playing in the back yard sprinkler or swimming in a lake or stream, but recreational water activity always comes with a risk of drowning.

    It's important not to lose sight of this risk as you strive to keep your children and adolescents safe, writes Susan Pollack, director of the Pediatric and Adolescent Injury Prevention Program at the Kentucky Injury Prevention and Research Center at the University of Kentucky.

    "Every year in Kentucky, an average of 14 children die by drowning. About half the drowning deaths occur among children ages 1 to 4," Pollack writes in the Lexington Herald-Leader. "From 2009-11, 80 percent of childhood drowning deaths occurred at the child�s residence or someone else�s home. A quarter of drowning deaths occurred among adolescents, mostly while swimming, boating or fishing on lakes and rivers."

    Prevention requires constant supervision of toddlers and children around all types of water. This not only includes the obvious such as pools, swift-flowing creeks and large bodies of water, but also bath-tubs, car-washing buckets and ornamental ponds, Pollack says. Toddlers can fall in and drown even in just a few inches of standing water in a bucket. It is also important to empty baby pools immediately after use.

    Drowning can happen "swiftly and silently," Pollack writes. This requires a responsible adult to supervise children at all times, even if lifeguards are present. And if a child can't swim, this adult should be within arms-reach. Supervision is needed even if the child is wearing an appropriately sized Coast Guard-approved life vest. Floaties and water-wings are not sufficient life-saving devices.

    It is also important to create barriers to water sources. This can be accomplished by putting a four-sided, 4-foot-high fence with a self-closing gate around backyard pools or removing the ladder from above-ground pools that are not fenced.

    While teaching children to swim does not replace supervision, it is an important life-saving skill children should learn, Pollack writes. The YMCA, Red Cross and university swim programs all offer lessons.

    Adolescents should be reminded to never swim without a buddy and that alcohol and boating never mix, Pollack says. They should also be reminded of the dangers of swimming while fatigued and the importance of wearing a U.S. Coast Guard-approved life jacket when boating. (Read more)