Archive for the ‘School | Playground Injuries’ Category
With spring here and summer fast approaching, children are out and about in playgrounds all across the country. With proper care and guidance playgrounds should be a safe environment for your child. Are they receiving enough supervision, though? Fall injuries are the number one reason why children aged 5 to 9 are taken to the emergency room.
Here are some tips pediatrician, Dr. Susan Surry explains parents and caregivers can implement to help keep their child safer at the playground and prevent unintentional injury.
- Check playground equipment for any damage, including loose bars or broken swings
- Ensure that the equipment is the right size and meets the physical abilities of your child
- Teach children playground safety rules and consistently reinforce them
- Don’t take skipping ropes onto playground structures
- Stand next to your child when they’re learning a new skill
The Law Office of James W. Dodson, protecting children and representing families of injured victims in Florida personal injury claims. For a free case review, please call our toll free number at (888) 340-0840.
Officials have reported three girls have admitted to harassing a 10-year-old classmate reportedly at Lockhart Elementary Magnet School.
Tampa police say the alleged bullying transpired when the three girls slapped their classmate and threw her into a fence. There have been other episodes, as well. Investigators believe on another occasion, the victim was threatened while a rope was wrapped around her shoulders.
The three youths have not given a reason for the abuse. A case of bullying on a Tampa elementary school campus could lead to arrests. Criminal charges are expected.
Bullying is tragically, a problem for thousands of school children each day. For a comprehensive look at how to handle bullying , please visit KidsHealth.org.
The Dodson Law Firm provides this Florida child injury blog as a resource for families in an effort to educate parents and “to make safety every child’s reality.”
Call our Florida Personal Injury Law firm for a free consultation about your injury case @ 1-888-340-0840.
Two years ago when a 15-year-old autistic boy came home his parents found him with a contusion on his forehead and a scrape on his nose. What happened? That’s the debate that is going on in an Orlando federal courthouse, according to a news article published by the Orlando Sentinel.
Rosmarie and Lawrence Casto have filed a lawsuit against the Princeton Charter School alleging that the school physically abused their son, Christopher.
Also alleged is the staff tackled, jumped and sat on Christopher — depriving him of breath — and held his face against the ground.
Princeton House officials maintain that they did nothing wrong and that their staff responded to the teen’s behavior correctly. “He was just being violent,” said Carol Tucker, executive director of the Princeton House.
Staff had to restrain Christopher because of potential injuries to other people, as well as property damage that could have been incurred, she said. “We do the best we can under terrible situations,” she said.
Christopher, the report states, now lives in a group home, where he requires a strict routine and consistent care.
Public playgrounds are a vital part of a child’s growth, both socially and physically. Unfortunately, playground injuries are very real. They happen every day and they can be quite serious. The proof is in the numbers.
In fact, the CDC reports that more than 200,000 children ages 14 and younger are rushed to the emergency room annually for accidents that take place on a playground. Roughly 90,000 of those injuries are severe. Children suffer fractures, concussions, internal injuries, dislocations and in some instances even amputations.
Approximately 75% of nonfatal accidents occur on public playgrounds with the majority of these occurring at schools and daycare centers. In some instances these playground accidents result in fatalities. In the ten year span between 1990 and 2000, 147 children died on playgrounds. Fifty-six percent of these deaths were the result of strangulation and 31% happened because of a fall on a playground surface. The vast majority of these deaths occurred at a play area at home.
Defective playground equipment, a lack of protective safety procedures as well as negligent supervision are just some of the claims that could be filed on behalf of a family’s legal counsel.
Because many playgrounds accidents do take place on school property during daytime hours there are legal challenges that may inhibit a claim even for a very serious injury to be filed. It is in your best interest and the interest of your child to seek the counsel of an experienced Florida Child Injury attorney as early as possible after an accident has taken place.
Tampa Mom, Katie Guice, was concerned about the potential dangers the unsafe playground eq
uipment at her neighborhood park posed for her young son. A sign posted at the entrance of Ballast Point Park warns parents that a fall to a hard surface from the playground equipment could lead to death for a child. Parents have reported incidents of fall accidents on the playground.
This was troubling to Guice whose three year old son, Rylan, enjoys playing with his friend at the park on equipment intended for older children (ages 5-14), not toddlers like Rylan.
A recent post to our Florida Child Injury website describes this young Mom’s determination and efforts to gather local community support and to provide a safe and developmentally appropriate area for toddlers to run and play.
Parents, often concerned for their small child’s safety on a playground slide, place the child in their lap. A new study suggests this actually may be putting their child at greater risk of injury.
A recent news article reported a study in the Journal of Pediatric Orthopaedics showing that when parents go down the slide with their children on their lap, the children risk breaking a leg.
Sarasota Orthopaedic surgeon Dr. David Sugar sees this frequently, “Their foot gets caught against the side of the slide, their leg gets twisted, and now with the momentum of the heavier parent behind them there is even more force, enough to break the bone.” A mother interviewed for the article had this experience with her two- year- old daughter who suffered a broken tibia, as a result.
Sugar recommends that children go down a playground slide by themselves, feet first with legs straight, not bent. It is easy for the rubber of a child’s shoe to get caught on the slide…they keep going, the foot is stuck and they twist. We have actually had this happen with our grandchild but fortunately she was not hurt.
Playgrounds are wonderful places for children to run and explore. As a grandparent reading this article has raised my level of awareness of the risks of injury on slides.
Trusting a school with your child takes a great deal of faith…for Lee Ann Mizell, that trust has been lost.
Her daughter, 5-year-old, Kaylee Mitchell has been put at risk twice in the last few months when school officials at Griffin Elementary in Lakeland have lost track of her.
Kaylee is supposed to attend an aftercare program at Griffin. According to her mother, she has been put on a schoolbus two times and been sent home instead. The problem…her mother works during the day and hasn’t been there at the apartment complex to pick Kaylee up. Both times she has been found wandering around the complex lost.
Fortunately no accidents have occurred. Charlene Brinson, Polk County’s Director of Elementary School issued this statement, “The teacher was dealt with. That’s all I can tell you. It’s a personnel matter.”
Kaylee’s mother is taking matters into her own hands, she is transferring her daughter to another school.


