Four Months to One Year (or until baby is walking)
Once a baby is walking, making your home safe for baby is almost a daily chore. Here are some important things to watch for:
# Keep coins, small toys, nail scissors, and balloons -- any item that is small enough to fit inside a cardboard toilet paper roll -- out of infant's reach.
# Remove mobiles and other hanging toys from the crib as soon as your child can reach up and touch them.
# Shorten drapery and blind cords.
# Remove the plastic end caps on doorstops, or replace the stops with a one-piece design.
# Drill breathing holes into any trunk you are using as a toy box in case a child gets trapped inside. (And install safety hinges on toy boxes, or buy one with a removable lid to prevent pinched fingers.)
# Lock any potentially dangerous substance in an upper-level cabinet. This includes alcoholic beverages, household cleaning formulas, laundry supplies, medications (including nonprescription varieties like vitamins, children's Tylenol or Advil), paint, kerosene, gasoline, charcoal, lighter fluid, bug spray, pesticides, and fertilizers.
# Place houseplants out of children's reach; know the names of all plants in case a child eats one of them.
# Keep a bottle of Ipecac and activated charcoal in your home, but use only when instructed by a medical professional.
# Cover every electrical outlet in your home with a child-resistant outlet cover (the plastic plugs are easy to pry out).
# Install ground fault circuit interrupters on outlets near sinks and bathtubs since they stop the electrical current when an appliance gets wet.
# Place screened barriers around fireplaces, radiators, and portable space heaters.
# Install hardware-mounted safety gates at the top and bottom of stairways with two or more steps.
Pressure-mounted models may not be strong enough.
# Pad the edges of coffee tables and brick or tile fireplaces.
# Remove the crib bumper pad as soon as your infant can get up on all fours since baby may use it as a step to climb out.
# Position audio/video equipment so children cannot pull televisions or stereos off furniture.
# Keep appliance cords wrapped short so children cannot pull coffee makers, toasters, and other appliances.
# Secure bookshelves, entertainment centers, and bureaus to walls since they can topple onto children who use furniture to pull up and stand.
# For more information about creating a child-safe home, visit the National Safe Kids Campaign at
:: Safe Kids Worldwide - Preventing Accidental Injury ::.