DIY Family Safety Series Part 2

We don’t want to even think about what could happen to our children or anyone in our family.  That being said, we also cannot live naively and not prepare to protect ourselves and our children.  Part two of our family safety series will focus on personal safety in regards to physical attacks on our persons and possessions.  We have to be ever vigilant in our care of our children and our homes.

As a single mom, the risks are sometimes greater than homes with more than one parent.  There are a few creative ideas you can implement to help yourself and your children not be as much of target.

  • Go to Goodwill and buy the biggest most rugged pair of men’s boots you can find and place them by the front door in obvious view.  Granted this will not deter the normal neighbors who see you and your children coming and going with no male presence.  But it could deter a prowler who doesn’t belong near you or your kids.
  • Carry a body alarm or whistle.
  • Don’t place bushes, shrubs and trees near windows inside or outside of your home.  This gives burglars/attackers potential hiding places.
  • When walking to your vehicle, keep your keys in your hand with the longest key grasped between your thumb and forefinger pointing outward like a weapon.  If someone comes at you from behind, reach behind and stab your attacker in the eye or anywhere else on the face you can reach.
  • Download the Silent Bodyguard App for iPhone.  The Silent Bodyguard is a mobile app that sends an SOS distress signal with GPS coordinates to immediately reach potential rescuers without alerting any onlookers.

The Boy Scouts of America have The Three R’s of Personal Safety and Protection to fend off Sexual Abuse:

1.      Recognize situations that place you at risk of being situations that place you at risk of being molested, how child molesters operate, and that anyone could be a molester.

2.      Resist unwanted and inappropriate attention. Resistance will stop most attempts at molestation.

3.      Report attempted or actual molestation to a parent or attempted or actual molestation to a parent or other trusted adult. This prevents further abuse and helps to protect other children. Let the child know he or she will not be blamed for what occurred.

Teach children to trust their instincts. Explain that if they ever feel scared or uncomfortable, they should get away as fast as they can and tell an adult. Tell them that sometimes adults they know may make them feel uncomfortable, and they should still get away as fast as possible and tell another adult what happened. Reassure children that you will help them when they need it.

Teach your children to be assertive. Make sure they know that it’s okay to say no to an adult and to run away from adults in dangerous situations.

Encourage your children to play with others. There’s safety in numbers!

For the sake of being prepared, what should you do if you find yourself in the worst case scenario?

  • Keep a current, complete physical description of your child, current photograph, fingerprints, current medical records and dental charts, and sample DNA in a child safety kit.  You can get a free Child Safety Kit mailed to you from Polly Klaas.  Or you can download a kit here.

If you or anyone you know is in the awful position of realizing their child is missing, follow these guidelines:

1.      Immediately report the child missing to local law enforcement.

2.      Ask law enforcement to enter the child into the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) Missing Persons File.

3.      Limit access to the home until law enforcement arrives and has the opportunity to collect possible evidence.

4.      Give law enforcement investigators all information on the child including the child safety kit contents and the circumstances related to their disappearance.

5.      Call the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC) at 1-800-THE-LOST (1-800-843-5678)

If you or anyone you know has information regarding child pornography, child molestation, child prostitution and/or the online enticement of children, log onto www.cybertipline.com.  This is the NCMEC tip website.

For further resources regarding the protection of children from abduction and exploitation, go to these websites:

  • Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Department of Justice

OJJDP Publications-Child Protection

www.ojjdp.jcjrs.org/pubs/missing.html

  • National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (NCMEC)

www.missingkids.com

  • NCMEC’s website to teach children about dangers on the internet:

www.netsmartz.org

  • The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Crime Against Children Program webpage:

www.fbi.gov/hq/cid/cac/crimesmain.htm

  • The Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Tip and Publix Leads webpage:

www.ifccfbi.gov/complaint/terrorist.asp

  • McGruff the Crime Dog:

Information for child safety, identification, abduction, fingerprinting and crime prevention

www.mcgruff-safe-kids.com/


DIY Family Safety Series Part 1


Ever get that unexplained feeling that you’re not alone?  All it takes is one look at a newspaper or the local evening news to make anyone scared to leave their house.  As a single mom I can’t tell you the number of times I have worried if that car was really following us, or if I had just seen that man at the last store we were in, or worse, wondering if your child was safe at the bus stop.  I’m not proud to admit it but my son has been a latch key kid at different times during his childhood.  That’s not to say that everyone should feel bad if there kids are latch key as well; but I think I can confidently say that no parent likes not being there for their children in any way.  Working families have no choice but to do the best they can to teach their kids personal safety in certain situations when everyone cannot be together.

There are some simple steps you can take as a parent to keep yourself and your children as safe as possible together or apart.  It will require some thoughtful planning on your part and some conversations you have been naively avoiding thinking it won’t happen to you or your kids.  The first part in our safety series will deal with family safety and basic emergency preparedness.  Next week we will follow up with personal safety for moms and their kids.

1.  Have a code word for texts, calls and unplanned caregivers.

When I was four, I was playing on the playground at my preschool.  I remember my teacher calling me over after a woman had drove up to the parking lot, gotten out and came over to our area.  I think the only reason I remember this is because what happened afterward.  My teacher and the lady came over to me and my teacher told me that I needed to go with this nice lady because my mom had been in an accident.  I can’t remember when but my mom had the stranger talk with me and told me never under any circumstance should I ever go somewhere with a stranger.  I believe we had even had the talk in preschool, too.

I don’t have to tell you how obstinate a four year old can be.  If you are a parent, you know!  :)   It took minutes, it seemed like hours, for my teacher to even convince me that this person wasn’t a kidnapper.  I couldn’t believe my teacher was telling me to go with a stranger.  Now, here’s the funny part, the lady was a plain clothes cop.  I didn’t care what my teacher told me about this woman, I was not leaving with her no matter what.

In time, they finally told me that my mom had a wreck.  She had been hit by a slow moving train.  She was four months pregnant with my sister and did not want to release her from the hospital.  For whatever reason, there was no one in the family they could reach by phone to come pick me up before daycare closed.  My mom was a single mom, too.  At the time, the easiest, quickest solution was to have a local officer pick me up and bring me to the hospital to be with my mom until our family could be contacted and be there for us.

Even though this was definitely a situation that required an unknown person to pick up and care for a child there could have been one thing that might have helped the situation.  If we had a family code word we could have prevented fear, confusion and loss of precious time in an emergency from happening.  A family code word is a word you and your children decide upon to use with each other if you are relaying a message by text, phone or in person if something out of the ordinary is happening and you cannot talk to each other.

2.  Come up with a family escape route in case of fire or natural disaster at your home and while you are at work and school.

Actually have a family drill and practice the best escape routes from your home in any possible scenario.  Have these drills regularly to make sure the plans are memorized and your children know exactly what to do in an emergency.  Have a plan for tornado, fire, earthquake, flood and heaven forbid a break in.

It’s also a good idea to have a plan if disaster strikes while everyone is at school and work during the day.  If the kids are at school, most likely they will remain in the care of responsible adults until they are back in your care or safe with authorities.  If something happens before or after school and they ride the bus or with a friend, then what?  Families should have an outside contact person, like Aunt May, that they agree to call in case the phones don’t work in their town.  Granted if this is true, calling Aunt May will be a problem :)   But let’s assume landlines in your town are out but not cell towers, or only some cell towers.  You can’t reach each other or home.  If you can all call Aunt May a few hours away where the phones are still in working order, then you can find out if everyone is OK and arrange a meeting time/place to be reunited.

3.  Teach kids simple emergency preparedness.

You remember the drills we learned in school:  stop, drop and roll; don’t touch a door handle in a fire; feel the wood of a door before opening in a fire; stand in a doorway in an earthquake; how to dial 911 and give pertinent information police need; never enter high water; which type of fire you can throw salt on and which kind you throw water on; how to use a fire extinguisher; if they are old enough, sign up to take CPR as a family.

4.  Create a First Aid kit for home and the car.

We have a homemade first aid kit that is quite large.  We have full size bottles and boxes of most of the items on the following list.  We also have a small plastic handbag that we keep a smaller, travel first aid kit in for vacations when we travel.  You can adapt these items and kit sizes to your families needs easily.  Some people might need supplies of asthma medications and daily prescription medications that are necessary such as diabetic medications and blood pressure pills.

You will need:

Band-aids, all shapes and sizes

Bandages, all sizes

Gauze

Gauze tape

Antibiotic ointment

Heat wrap

Cold pack

Asprin, advil and Tylenol

Ziploc Bags

Qtips

Wipes

Tweezers Tums

Anti Diarhea Medication

Ex-Lax

Pepto Bismol

Benadryl

Powder

Cotton Balls

Alcohol

Peroxide

Burn Ointment

Visine

Hydrocortisone Cream

Cough & Cold Medicine

Saline Solution, for nose and eyes

GermX

Iodine Solution

Tweezers

Vaseline Jelly

Lotion

Thermometer

Disposable Ponchos

Compass

Whistle

Blanket

Distilled Water

Canned goods

Radio & batteries

Flashlight and batteries

Matches

Candles

Aloe Vera

Baking Soda

Elastic Bandages

Ice Pack

Syrup of Ipecac

Latex Gloves

Magnifying Glass

Burn Cream

Sling

Tissue

Syringe

Soap

Mirror

Needle

Scissors

Safety Pins

Once you have assembled all your family’s necessary first aid items, find a box or plastic conatiner that will hold everything and keep the kit in an easily accessible place for you and your children.

For more information on how to get your family ready in case of natural disasters or fire, go to The American Red Cross Site and see how they teach families to be prepared.

Next week, personal safety for your family.