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Playground Safety

Overview

Playgrounds are fun places, but they may have hazards that can cause injury. Following some basic safety measures can help your child have fun and play safely.

  • Find playgrounds that have safe equipment.
    • Make sure the playground has a soft surface that is covered with material such as wood chips, pour-in-place rubber, rubber tiles, rubber mat, sand, or pea gravel.
    • Check that playground equipment has rails or barriers that can help reduce the risk of falls.
    • Check the surface temperature of play equipment. Extreme weather (hot or cold) can impact playground equipment and the play area.
    • Use wooden equipment that has a smooth surface made from all-weather wood. Check surfaces now and then to make sure there are no splinters.
    • Check equipment for loose joints, open chains, exposed bolts, sharp edges, and rust. Report any problems with playground equipment to your local environmental public health office, your city or town office, or the community centre or school where the playground is located.
    • Use swings that are made from soft and flexible material.
  • Know what activities are safe at different ages.
    • Closely supervise children younger than age 5.
    • Make sure the playground equipment your child is using is safe and appropriate for their age.
    • Don't let children younger than 3 use a teeter-totter (seesaw). Children younger than 3 don't have the coordination to safely use them. Partners should be close in age and of similar weight.
    • Have children sit in a bucket swing with leg holes until they can safely sit in the middle of a standard swing.
  • Help your child be safe when on the equipment.
    • Have your child use both hands on the swings. Don't allow more than one child on the same swing. Help your child learn to stay away from swings while others are using them.
    • When using a slide, teach your child to sit and go feet first, one child at a time.
    • Make sure children go single-file up steps to use slides. Make sure that they don't climb up the slide's surface. Have your child exit the landing of the slide quickly, so that other children coming down the slide don't fall on your child.
    • It's best to keep your child off trampolines. Trampolines aren't safe for children. Even with constant adult supervision and protective netting, many children are injured on them.
    • Make sure that your child doesn't wear things that could get caught in playground equipment. Avoid things like a necklace, a hooded sweatshirt, or a helmet. Tie back long hair.

Credits

Adaptation Date: 12/06/2024

Adapted By: Alberta Health Services

Adaptation Reviewed By: Alberta Health Services

Adapted with permission from copyrighted materials from Healthwise, Incorporated (Healthwise). This information does not replace the advice of a doctor. Healthwise disclaims any warranty and is not responsible or liable for your use of this information. Your use of this information means that you agree to the Terms of Use. How this information was developed to help you make better health decisions.