Chapter 2
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
2 BECED- A
:
Bumagat, Trisha Kate S.
Mesias, Jessa Mae Angelica T.
Natividad, Irish H.
Lontoc, Stephen Marc T.
OBJECTIVES:
1. Explain what Active Supervision
active supervision - Most effective strategy for creating a safe environment and
is and what it preventing injuries in young children.
might look like. - It transforms supervision from a passive approach to an active
skill.
- Requires focused attention and intentional observation of
children at all times.
Here, staff position themselves so that they can observe all of the
children; watching, counting, and listening at all times. During
transition, staff account for all children with name-to-face
recognition by visually identifying each child. They also use
their knowledge of each child’s development and abilities to
anticipate what they will do, then get involved and redirect them
when necessary.
3. Identify Car crashes, suffocation, drowning, poisoning, fires, and falls are
common risks that some of the most common ways children are hurt or killed.
lead to injury in
children. Using data from 2000- 2006, the CDC determined that:
● For children less than 1 year of age, two-thirds of injury
deaths were due to suffocation.
● Drowning was the leading cause of injury death between 1
and 4 years of age.
● Falls were the leading cause of nonfatal injury for all age
groups of less than 15 years of age.
● For children ages 0 to 9, the next two leading causes were
being struck by or against an object and animal bites or
insect stings.
● Rates for fires or burns and drowning were highest for
children 4 years and younger.
4. Describe how Injuries in child care settings remain a serious, but preventable,
understanding health care issue.
injuries can help
create a safety Sudden Infant Death
plan that prevents
future injury. Always put infants to sleep on their backs
Cribs, bassinets, and play yards should conform to safety
standards and covered in a tight-fitting sheet
There should be no fluffy blankets, pillows, toys, or soft
objects in the sleeping area
Don’t allow children to overheat
Choking
Drowning
Burns
Falls
Poisoning
Pedestrian