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KidsHealth > Parents > First Aid & Safety > Outdoors & Seasonal Safety > Playground Safety

Playgrounds and outdoor play equipment can provide your child with fun, fresh air, and exercise, but they can also pose some safety hazards. Faulty equipment, improper surfaces, and careless behavior are just a few of the dangers that cause children on playgrounds to visit hospital emergency departments.

Each year, more than 200,000 kids are treated in hospital ERs for playground-related injuries. Many of these injuries could have been prevented with the proper supervision.

You can make the playground a place that's entertaining and safe for your child by checking equipment for potential hazards and following some simple safety guidelines. In addition, teaching your child how to play safely is important: if your child knows the rules of the playground, it's less likely he or she will get hurt.

Adult Supervision

Parents can help prevent playground accidents by taking some precautions, ensuring that there is adult supervision at the playground, and making sure that any equipment that their child plays on is appropriate to his or her age and maturity level.

Adult supervision can help prevent injuries by making sure kids properly use any playground equipment and don't engage in unsafe behavior around it. If an injury does occur, an adult can assist the child and administer any needed first aid right away.

Kids should always have adult supervision when they're at the playground. Young children (and sometimes older ones) can't always gauge distances properly and aren't capable of foreseeing dangerous situations by themselves. Older children often love to test their limits on the playground, so it's important for an adult to be there to keep them in check.

Before you visit a playground, check to make sure that play areas are designed to allow an adult to clearly see kids while they are playing on all the equipment.

Safety Guidelines

The most important factors in evaluating the safety of any playground are surface, design and spacing, and equipment inspection and maintenance.

Surface

A proper playground surface is one of the most important factors in reducing injuries - and the severity of injuries - that occur when kids fall from equipment. The surface under the playground equipment should be soft enough and thick enough to soften the impact of a child's fall.

Here are some things to consider:

  • Concrete, asphalt, and blacktop are unsafe and unacceptable. Grass, soil, and packed-earth surfaces are also unsafe because weather and wear can reduce their capacities to cushion a child's fall.
  • The playground surface should be free of standing water and debris that could cause a child to trip and fall, such as rocks, tree stumps, and tree roots.
  • There should be no dangerous materials, like broken glass or twisted metal.
  • The surfaces may be loosely filled with materials like wood chips, mulch, sand, pea gravel, or shredded rubber.
  • Surfacing mats made of safety-tested rubber or rubber-like materials are also safe.
  • Rubber mats and wood chips allow the best access for people in wheelchairs.
  • Loose-fill surface materials 12 inches (30 cm) deep should be used for equipment up to 8 feet (2.5 m) high. The material should not be packed down because this will reduce any cushioning effect.
  • No surfacing materials are considered safe if the combined height of playground and the child (standing on the highest platform) is higher than 12 feet (3.7 m).
  • The cushioned surface should extend at least 6 feet (1.9 m) past the equipment. Additional coverage may be needed, depending on how high a slide is or how long a swing is.

Keep in mind that even proper surfacing can't prevent all injuries. Also, the greater the height of the equipment, the more likely the child is to get injured if he or she falls from it.

Design and Spacing

Playground equipment should be designed for two different age groups: 2- to 5-year-olds (preschool children) and 5- to 12-year-olds (school-age children). In the safest playgrounds, play areas for younger children are separated from those meant for older children and signs clearly designate each area to avoid any confusion.

Younger children should not play on equipment designed for older kids because the equipment sizes and proportions won't be right for small children, and this can lead to injury. Likewise, older children should not play on equipment designed for younger children. Smaller equipment and spaces can cause problems for bigger kids.

Here are some things to check out on the equipment to make sure that it's designed and spaced to be safe:

  • Guardrails and protective barriers should be in place for elevated surfaces, including platforms and ramps. 
  • Play structures more than 30 inches (76 cm) high should be spaced at least 9 feet (2.7 m) apart.
  • Swings, seesaws, and other equipment with moving parts should be located in an area separate from the rest of the playground.
  • Swings should be limited to 2 per bay.
  • Tot swings should have their own bay.
  • Swings should be spaced at least 24 inches (60 cm) apart and 30 inches (76 cm)between a swing and the support frame.
  • Be sure there are no spaces that could trap a child's head, arm, or any other body part. All openings on equipment (for example, rungs on a ladder) should measure less than 3 1/2 inches (9 cm) or they should be wider than 9 inches (23 cm).
  • Playground equipment with moving parts - like seesaws and merry-go-rounds - should be checked for pinch points that could pinch or crush a child's finger or hand.

Maintenance and Inspection

Whether your child plays on a home or public playground, it's important that you take a general look at the equipment to make sure that it is clean and well maintained.

  • There should be no broken equipment.
  • Wooden equipment should not be cracking or splintering.
  • Metal equipment should not be rusted.
  • The fence surrounding a public playground should be in good condition to prevent children from running into surrounding traffic.
  • Surface materials on the playground should be maintained regularly so that the surfacing is loosely packed and covers all appropriate areas - especially the fall zones surrounding playground equipment.
  • Playground equipment should be made of durable materials that won't fall apart or worn down too much by the weather.

Check for objects (like hardware, S-shaped hooks, bolts, and sharp or unfinished edges) that stick out on equipment and could cut a child or cause clothing to become entangled.

All hardware on equipment should be secure, with no loose or broken parts. Plastic and wood should show no signs of weakening, and there should not be any splintered or rusted surfaces.

If the local playground has a sandbox, check for hazardous debris such as sharp sticks or broken glass, and be sure that the sand is free of bugs. Sandboxes should be covered overnight to prevent contamination from animals, such as cats.

Help keep your playground clean and safe by picking up trash, using the equipment properly, and reporting any problems to the city, town, or county parks department, school, or other organization that is responsible for the upkeep of the playground. If a part seems broken, loose, or in need of other maintenance, designate it off limits immediately and report the problem to the appropriate authorities.

Teaching Your Child About Playground Safety

Safe playground equipment and adult supervision are extremely important, but it's only half of the equation: Kids must know how to be safe and act responsibly at the playground. Here are some general rules to teach your child:

  • Never push or roughhouse while on jungle gyms, slides, seesaws, swings, and other equipment.
  • Use equipment properly - slide feet first, don't climb outside guardrails, no standing on swings, etc.
  • If you jump off equipment, make sure that you check to make sure that there are no other children are in the way. When you jump, land on both feet with knees slightly bent.
  • Leave bikes, backpacks, and bags away from the equipment and the area where you're playing so that no one trips over them and falls.
  • Playground equipment should never be used if it is wet because moisture causes the surface to be slippery.
  • During the summertime, playground equipment can become uncomfortably or even dangerously hot, especially metal slides. So use good judgment - if the equipment feels hot to the touch, it's probably not safe or fun to play on.
  • Don't wear clothes with drawstrings or other strings at the playground. Drawstrings, purses, and necklaces could get caught on equipment and accidentally strangle a child.
  • Wear sunscreen when playing outside even on cloudy days so that you don't get sunburned.

Safe Swings, Seesaws, Slides, and Climbing Equipment

Because swings, slides, and climbing equipment are be so different from one another, they each require a different set of safety considerations. And there are some kinds of equipment that are not safe for playgrounds, no matter how careful your child is.

Swing Safety

Swings are the most frequent source of childhood injuries from moving equipment on a playground. But a few simple precautions should keep your child safely swinging in the breeze:

  • Swings should be made of soft material such as rubber or plastic, not wood or metal.
  • Your child should always sit in the swing, not stand or kneel. Your child should hold on tightly with both hands while swinging, and when finished swinging, he or she should stop the swing completely before getting off.
  • Children should stay a safe distance from other children on swings, being careful not to run or walk in front of or in back of moving swings.
  • Kids should never ride with more than one child to a swing. Swings are designed to safely hold only one person.

Seesaw Safety

Because seesaw use requires cooperation between children, they are generally not recommended for preschoolers unless the seesaw has a spring-centering device to prevent abrupt contact with the ground. Regardless of design, both seesaws and merry-go-rounds should be approached with caution. Other safety tips to keep in mind include:

  • Seesaw seats are like swings: one child per seat. If your child is too light to seesaw with a partner, he or she should find a different partner - not add another child to the same side of the seesaw.
  • Kids should always sit facing one another, not turned around.
  • Teach your child to hold on tightly with both hands while on a seesaw, not to touch the ground or push off with his or her hands, and to keep feet to the sides, out from underneath the seesaw.
  • Kids should stand back from a seesaw when it's in use. They should never stand beneath a raised seesaw, stand and rock in the middle, or try to climb onto it while it's in motion.

Slide Safety

Slides are safe if kids are careful when using them. Here are a few guidelines to keep in mind:

  • Children should take one step at a time and hold onto the handrail when climbing the ladder to the top of the slide. They should not climb up the slide itself to get to the top.
  • Your child should always slide down feet first and sitting up, never head first on his back or stomach.
  • Only one child should be on the slide platform at a time, and kids shouldn't slide down in groups.
  • Your child should always check that the bottom of the slide is clear before sliding down. When he or she reaches the bottom of the slide, he or she should get off and move away from the end of the slide so it's clear for other kids to slide down.

Climbing Equipment Safety

Climbing equipment comes in many shapes and sizes - including rock climbing walls, arches, and vertical and horizontal ladders. It's  generally more challenging for kids than other kinds of playground equipment. Be sure your child is aware of a safe way down in case he or she can't complete the climb. The highest rates of injuries on public playgrounds are associated with climbing equipment, which is dangerous if not designed or used properly.

Adult supervision is especially important for younger kids who are playing on climbing equipment.

Climbing equipment can be used safely if children are taught to use both hands and to stay well behind the person in front of them and beware of swinging feet. When they drop from the bars, kids should be able to jump down without hitting the equipment on the way down. Remind kids to have their knees bent and land on both feet.

  • Too many children on the equipment at one time can be dangerous. Everyone should start on the same side of the equipment and move across it in the same direction.
  • When climbing down, kids should watch for those climbing up; they should never race across or try to reach for bars that are too far ahead.
  • Children who are younger than the age 5 may not have the upper body strength necessary for climbing and should only be allowed to climb on age-appropriate equipment. Preschoolers should only climb 5 feet (1.6 m) high and school-age children should only climb 7 feet (2.3 m) high.

Unsafe Playground Equipment

The following types of equipment are not safe for playgrounds:

  • animal figure swings
  • glider swings that hold more than one child at a time
  • swinging ropes that can fray, unravel, or form a noose (any kind of rope attached to play equipment poses a strangulation hazard, so never let your child tie jump ropes or leashes onto the equipment)
  • exercise rings (as used in gymnastics) and trapeze bars
  • monkey bars
  • trampolines

Play is an important part of your child's physical, social, intellectual, and emotional development. If you keep these safety tips in mind, you're on your way to making sure your child's play is as safe as possible.

Reviewed by: Mary L. Gavin, MD
Date reviewed: June 2005 





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