After a number of drownings over the past week, the Royal Life Saving Society is urging parents to be vigilant when their children are playing around water.
A 23-month-old girl died this week after she was found in her family’s pool in Perth. On Wednesday, a seven-year-old boy drowned when the kayak he was in overturned in a dam.
Royal Lifesaving Society spokesperson Greg Tate said children still require supervision even if they have learned to swim.
“It is very important that parents provide supervision when children in that age group are participating in aquatic activity,” he said.
This post by Anabelle Cottee is a poignant reminder of the importance of water safety. She writes:
Ten years ago, I watched my baby brother’s lifeless body being pulled out of our family swimming pool by my devastated older sister.
I remember standing there, watching in disbelief, as she carried our precious Lachie inside. He was grey with blue lips and completely limp. There was no pulse. No heartbeat.
My sister, only 13 at the time, desperately tried to remember the CPR she had learnt in school while Mum called the ambulance. But all she could say was, “Please help me. My baby was in the pool. Please, please help me.”
My sister cleared Lachie’s airways and he immediately began vomiting torrents of water. But he still wasn’t breathing. Time stopped. Mum’s fingers pressed furiously on Lachie’s chest as she took instructions from the 000 operator over the phone. We finally heard three ambulances scream up the driveway, just as Lachie quietly gasped his first breath. A horde of paramedics rushed in, moving us away from him.
Top Comments
This is a heartbreaking story, but I'm so glad to read it worked out for you in the end
A few weeks ago a 2 year old daughter of my brother's friend drowned on a day out with her mum and other siblings in an open body of water.
My brother went to the funeral to support him and his family and to say goodbye to her, he said despite it being a beautiful service- the fact that it was for a child, and one so young, was devastating.
I hope everyone takes this message of being careful and giving *constant* supervision around the ocean or other open bodies of water to heart. It really does only take a few seconds for a child to be gone.
EDIT- this is the news piece on this poor girl http://www.adelaidenow.com....
I was horrified when doing swimming with a group of students ( as a helper). They had been doing swim and water games for about 6 months, and were oh so confident in the shallow end. But when we did a fall in return to the side activity quite a few of them dropped limestones, quickly, silently, staring up at me.
They didn't kick, they didn't splash, they just floated down...