Safety Toys

What are the safety issues involving children's toys?
With the recent spate of injuries related to playground recess, parents are becoming more aware of what is and is not safe in a child's toy outdoors. Sadly, hundreds of thousands of children are injured each year in incidents involving the toy. So how can you make sure your child is safe when he or she plays? First, is important to remember that it is impossible to completely secure a child during the game, or at any time, so that issue. Some bumps, bruises, scratches and cuts expected on the road to growth, and little injuries like that are good for children, give them an idea of the world around them, and teach them what the laws of physics and not allowed to do. That said, no child should be injured while playing so badly that he or she had to go to the emergency room. And the best way to prevent this from happening is to know what is happening with your child at all times. However, equally important, especially with very young or very small, they play with toys that are appropriate for their age unless it is well with them. One thing is to keep a child on a bicycle seat and let them pretend to be mounted, is quite another for the same child ride the bicycle while lying on the floor and is at the other end of the courtyard. As always lands butter toast up when it falls, an abandoned child in his own will damage if possible. Make sure small parts or sharp edges on any toy before allowing your child to play with him without the right over them. Eye, I'm not saying you should become a second shadow, and if you have more than one child may not, anyway. I'm saying that should always be near their children when playing, and always make sure that the toys they are playing with can not hurt whether to give back for several minutes. Check the labels. Most toys come with a warning that reads "3 +" or "Not for children children under four years. "Pay attention to labels. Pay attention to them. But not just assume that because a label says" For children aged three and above "and your child is four that the toy is safe automatically. Check for sharp edges. See if there are places where curious little hands could get stuck. (The chain and gears bicycles are particularly bad about it, for example.) Above all, be aware and use common sense!
Eye Safety, Toys, and the Holidays