Summer Safety

Aug. 262025

Probably everyone has one friend who is always scolding you or telling you that you’re doing something wrong. How annoying! Unfortunately, life can be dangerous for children, so I have to be that friend. Here are a few ways to keep summer fun.

  1. If your children use a scooter, skates, a bike, or anything else that propels them when their feet are not firmly on the ground, they need a helmet. Make sure the helmet fits properly and is buckled. Used helmets are usually not a good idea. Once a helmet has protected someone in a collision, it is no longer as effective as when it was new.
  2. Water safety is important. If you take your child swimming, you are responsible for your child’s safety. Do not rely on other adults, teens, lifeguards, or flotation devices. The younger the child, the lower the water level capable of causing drowning. Also, children and adults rarely yell when they’re drowning. It is curious and unfortunate, but the usual behavior when unable to keep your head above water is silence. Keep your eyes on your child. While it is a good idea to teach your child to swim, even good swimmers can get into trouble in calm waters.
  3. Another way to ruin summer is to ignore the sun. Even cloudy days can be a risk for sunburn. Every day that your child spends playing outside is a good day to use sunscreen. The sun’s damage is cumulative. Skin damage can lead to skin cancer as we get older. Sunburn can be painful. Pay attention to the tops of the feet, the ears, the neck, and actually every other exposed part of the skin. And the eyes! Often people think it’s the chlorine that’s burning their eyes when it’s actually the sun. Everyone needs decent sunglasses on sunny days. Swimming removes a lot of the sunscreen. The best choice for the face is actually the non-chemical sunscreen that contains titanium dioxide or zinc oxide. A swim shirt that protects the trunk and arms is also a convenient way to protect skin and reduce reliance on frequent application of sunscreen. A special word about infants: there is no minimum amount of sun that is safe for infants. Their skin is just too thin. They should always be shaded. Even sun bouncing off sand can cause a burn.
  4. One of the reasons I like winter is because there are no insects. In the summer, especially at dusk, we are susceptible to mosquitoes that can cause life-threatening diseases. Use repellant that has DEET or wash clothes with permethrin. If you can educate yourself about permethrin, you can learn the easy way to protect yourself from insects. Permethrin also protects against ticks. There are now 5 different kinds of ticks in Connecticut and several new illnesses. If your kids play in grassy or wooded areas, you need to check them for ticks every night. Check in all the folds if they can’t do it themselves. If you will be in places like Florida or the Caribbean or Central/South America, you are at risk for dengue, zika, and chikungunya from mosquitoes. As funny as it may be to say these strange words, the diseases are very dangerous.
  5. Finally, safety is not a high priority for kids. They need to be reminded constantly about street safety and where it is safe to play. Your personal situation may be different from your neighbors’, and you can’t assume your children will always make the right choices. Start by imagining the unimaginable. Then figure out how to prevent it. Enjoy your summer!
Meet the Author: Dr. Robert Golenbock
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After Hours

Center for Pediatric Medicine is here for your pediatric needs 24.7, 365 days a year! We understand that your child may get sick outside of CPM’s normal office hours.

How does after-hours work:

  • Monday – Thursday: our offices will close at 9:00 pm. We then re-open at 8:30 am Friday.
  • Friday- our offices will close at 6:00 pm. We then re-open at 8:30 am Saturday.
  • Saturday- our office will close at 2:00 pm. We then re-open at 8:30 am Sunday.
  • Sunday- our office will close at 1:00 pm. We then re-open at 8:30 am Monday.

During the hours we are closed we are readily available to assist you with any urgent clinical concerns you may have.

You can call any of our office locations or 203-790-0822. You will be promoted with an after-hours message. If you select option 1 you will be connected with CPM’S after-hours answering service team. The after-hours team will gather all of your child’s information (Patient's first and last name, best contact number, and health care concern). This message will be sent to “Rainbow Babies” an experienced triage service that CPM uses to assist us with clinical after-hours calls. A trained triage nurse will call the patient back and provide the recommended clinical advice. If the triage nurse needs more assistance they will reach out to one of CPM’s on-call providers for the night. CPM’s on-call provider will call the patient directly and continue to evaluate your child over the phone. All phone call encounters are followed up with a call the next day from CPM’s triage department.

If it is a life-threatening emergency please call 911.

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