Let’s work together to prevent deaths of kids left in cars


THE recent deaths of young children left in cars due to thermal injury is of concern. Twenty minutes in a closed vehicle under the sun is all it takes to kill a young child.

This is not just a Malaysian problem but also a worldwide worry. For example, in the United States, more than 1,000 children have died in “hot vehicles” while over 7,000 others survived with varying injuries since 1990. It has been dubbed the “forgotten baby syndrome”.

We recognise that this could happen to any parent or caregiver. This is not a neglect issue but one of the busyness of modern life taxing our memory.

We must appreciate the mechanism of this tragedy. It is usually a young child, under six years old, who has fallen asleep in the back of the car. The parent or carer experiences a “break in routine” resulting in a loss of habit.

The key factor is a distracted parent, one who has too much on their mind and is rushing to complete many tasks on a busy day. We have all been there many times.

Remember that data support that the safest place for your child is in the backseat, in a car restrain (car seat). Hence, putting them in the front seat is not a good option.

We need to work together to reduce these tragic child deaths. What we will need is for all of us to develop good habits (disciplines) when transporting children in vehicles as well as counter-checking mechanisms and reminders, plus support from society.

1. Keep an important item in the back seat with your child, an item that you cannot do without at a meeting, work or shopping. This will serve to remind you as you leave the car.

2. Keep an object in the front seat to remind you of your child, like a stuffed animal. Swap the child and the object when you place the child in the back seat and vice versa when you take your child out of the vehicle.

3. Remind your child care provider or kindergarten teacher to call you if your child does not turn up at the correct time. This can serve as a back-up safety net.

4. As public, it is our vital duty to stop whenever we see any child left alone in a car. Find out why and call the police if you cannot immediately find the parents. Don’t wait more than a few minutes for the driver to return before taking action. Never hesitate to rescue a child trapped in a car; break a window, if necessary.

5. There are technologies being developed to support parents, and we should keep abreast of them – car seats with built-in sensors/alarms, apps with alerts/reminders and GPS trackers/distance alerts for our children. We need to push for these to become routine in all cars sold in Malaysia. Note that Waze has inbuilt reminders to support parents transporting children.

We ask that parents be extra vigilant when there is a change in their routine or if someone else is driving their child (another parent or carer). Always check to make sure that your child has arrived safely at the destination.

We ask that all child care providers – child minders, nurseries, Taska and kindergartens staff – be trained to call parents if their child is more than 10 minutes late arriving at the centre.

We ask that the government work with civil society to install stickers on all cars and vehicles that carry children. These should be on the dashboard/front seat and state “look before you lock” or “check for your child before you leave”.

We ask that the government work with all automotive companies to introduce legislation to help prevent child car deaths. This would require that all new vehicles are equipped with systems (audio and visual reminders) to alert drivers to check rear seats for children when the engine is switched off.

We should also explore if rear-seat detection or reminder units could be mandated and installed in all vehicles. Carmakers should not wait for legislation but install them immediately.

Every death of a child in a car is one death too many.

We can work together to prevent this. – October 27, 2023.

Signatories:

1. Dr Amar-Singh HSS, consultant paediatrician, child-disability activist

2. Syed Azmi Alhabshi

3. Srividhya Ganapathy, co-chairperson CRIB Foundation

4. Bina Ramanand, co-founder Foreign Spouses Support Group

5. Amy Bala, Malaysian Association Social Workers

6. Gill Raja, social work lecturer

7. P.H. Wong Childline Foundation.

* This is the opinion of the writer or publication and does not necessarily represent the views of The Malaysian Insight. Article may be edited for brevity and clarity.



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