Posts Tagged ‘Clearwater Florida Child Injury Lawyer’
Are birth defects the leading cause of death in children and adolescents? Is sunscreen the best defense against sunburn for babies 6 months and under? Get answers to these questions and more by visiting the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website.
Test your knowledge about kids’ health and safety. Unintentional injuries, not birth defects, are the leading cause of death in children and adolescents. The greatest threats to child safety come in the form of the following accidents and injuries:
- Poisonings
- Playground Injuries
- Car Accidents as Child Passengers
- Fireworks-Related Injuries
- Traumatic Brain Injuries
- Fire and Burn Injuries in the Home
- Teen Car and Motor Vehicle Accidents
Our Clearwater /St. Petersburg, Florida Child Injury Law Firm has served the needs of families for over twenty five years. If your child was injured due to someone’s carelessness or negligence, you may have unanswered questions and certainly, you have concerns. Request a copy of Florida Child Injury Lawyer James Dodson’s free consumer guide, “When Kids Suffer Big Injuries, A Parent’s Guide to Child Injury in Florida” as a first step to understanding your legal rights or call our toll free number (888) 340-0840 to speak directly with Attorney Dodson. There is no obligation to hire an attorney.
The Wall Street Journal recently published an article which examined a new study on vaccinations and children. Due to child health and safety concerns, children today are receiving twice as many vaccinations as they did twenty-five years ago.
Although some parents are requesting alternative immunization schedules because they fear that their children are being exposed to too many vaccinations, the study indicates there are no advantages in delaying the vaccines, only disadvantages.
Two years ago in Minnesota during a shortage of the Haemophilus influenza Type B vaccine, which babies receive at the ages of 2, 4 and 6 months, five cases of illnesses were reported. In one instance a child died because they could not ward off the disease. In three of the cases, the babies hadn’t received the Hib vaccine, and the other two babies hadn’t been fully vaccinated.
Recommended vaccines are designed to prevent infection with 14 diseases. Babies can receive up to 26 vaccines in their first year of life, a doubling since the mid-1980s.
The topic of childhood vaccines is discussed in Chapter 4 of Clearwater Florida Child Injury Lawyer Jim Dodson’s newly released consumer guide, “When Kids Suffer Big Injuries: A Parent’s Guide to Child Injury in Florida.”
Request your FREE copy of “When Kids Suffer Big Injuries” by clicking here or email your book request to judi@jwdodsonlaw.com



