Quebec study sheds light on frequency, severity of drownings among children
Global News
A study just released concludes that every day this summer, one child will end up at an emergency room in the province for drowning, or near drowning.
Geneviève Daigneault always makes sure to keep an eye on her daughter Charlotte whenever the two go swimming.
“You can lose your kids really, really fast,” she stressed while watching her daughter at the beach in Verdun. “You need to look at them all the time. All the time. Every second.”
She should know. The former lifeguard has seen her share of near tragedies.
“I saw a lot of kids that were drowning,” she told Global News, “so I tried to help them and I brought them back to their mom or dad and I said, ‘You need to watch them.'”
That’s the same message Dr. Hussein Wissanji has. The pediatric surgeon at the Montreal Children’s Hospital just released a study which concludes that every day this summer, one child will end up at an emergency room in the province for drowning, or near drowning.
“A lot of adults think about water as something pleasant and relaxing and safe,” he argues. “But when we think about children, we should reframe it and think of it like a flame.”
You don’t leave your child alone with an open fire, so don’t do it with water either, he advises. According to him, for every drowning death, there are 10 near-drowning events where the child ends up in the emergency room. Most victims are toddlers.
“What our study shows is that the vast majority of drowning events were without active supervision, or when there was a gap in the supervision,” he noted.