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Date:
October 10, 2005
UCSD Medical Center Presents Treat Children To A Safe Halloween
A safe Halloween is just a few tricks away according to the staff at UCSD Medical Center and the California Poison Control System-San Diego Division, located at UCSD Medical Center. The following are safety precautions for parents to help them keep Halloween safe:
Tips for Trick-or-Treating
- An adult should accompany young children, and Halloween visits should be limited to familiar, local neighbors.
- Carry a flashlight after dusk and watch for cars.
- Walkways and lawns should be made safe by removing obstacles and leaving outside lights on.
- Stay away from barking dogs or other upset animals.
- Choose costumes with light or bright colors, which can be seen by drivers.
- Use reflective tape on costumes and trick-or-treat bags so that they are highly visible.
Treats
- Feed children before they go trick-or-treating. Select a small amount of candy or other food to eat while trick-or-treating, so they won’t be tempted to eat from the bag before their treats can be checked.
- Insist the child bring back the treat bag for examination before he or she eats any items. Look carefully at all treats to detect signs of tampering. Discard any treats not packaged in the original wrapper. Throw away unwrapped candy, candy with faded, torn or holes in the wrappers, or show signs of re-wrapping.
- Parents with children of different ages should sort the candies to make sure that younger kids don't get hold of small hard candies, peanuts or other objects that may get lodged in a youngster's throat.
- Some treats, especially chocolate, can be poisonous to pets.
- This year, kick the Halloween candy habit by offering pencils, small pads, crayons, stickers, tiny finger puppets, or tissue ghosts wrapped around sugar- free lollipops.
Costumes
Pumpkin Carving/Jack O’Lanterns
- Children can have fun drawing a face on a pumpkin and scraping out the contents, but an adult should do the carving.
- Jack O’Lanterns with candles should be watched carefully and should be placed where they cannot start a fire.
- Halloween also means parties for parents. Parents should make sure all alcohol and cigarette butts are cleaned up. These items can poison small children.
Poison Center staff members stress that careful review of all treats by parents is the best prevention for poisoning incidents. Parents who find any candy that has been tampered with should report the incident to the Police Department. If children are experiencing any symptoms following ingestion of food or candy, parents should call the California Poison Control System-San Diego Division at (800) 876-4766. The Center is open 24-hours per day, seven days a week.
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News Media Contact: Eileen Callahan 619-543-6163
Note to broadcast and cable producers: UCSD provides an on-campus satellite uplink facility for live or pre-recorded television interviews. Please phone, or e-mail, the media contact listed above to arrange an interview.
UCSD Health Sciences Communications HealthBeat: /news/
RSS feed URL: /news/ucsd_hsc_rss.xml
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