Halloween Safety Tips
from
goodmortgage.com
October 29, 2008
WHERE LOANS CLICK.
Kids love Halloween! They get to dress up and get free candy! What a perfect holiday!  Give your kids some precious Halloween memories that they'll have for life.

There are many ways to keep your child safe at Halloween, when they are more prone to accidents and injuries. The excitement of children and adults at this time of year sometimes makes them forget to be careful. Simple common sense can do a lot to stop any accidents from happening.

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  • Children should go out during daylight hours only unless accompanied by a responsible adult.
     

  • Instruct your child to never go into the home of a stranger or get into their car.
     

  • Make sure your child carries a flashlight, glow stick or has reflective tape on their costume to make them more visible to cars.
     

  • Help your child pick out or make a costume that will be safe. Make it fire proof, the eye holes should be large enough for good peripheral vision.
     

  • If you set jack-o-lanterns on your porch with candles in them, make sure that they are far enough out of the way so that kids costumes won't accidentally be set on fire.
     

  • Make sure that if your child is carrying a prop, such as a scythe, butcher knife or a pitchfork, that the tips are smooth and flexible enough to not cause injury if fallen on.
     

  • Kids always want to help with the pumpkin carving. Small children shouldn't be allowed to use a sharp knife to cut the top or the face. There are many kits available that come with tiny saws that work better then knives and are safer, although you can be cut by them as well. It's best to let the kids clean out the pumpkin and draw a face on it, which you can carve for them.
     

  • Instruct your children not to eat any treats until they bring them home to be examined by you.
     

  • Treating your kids to a spooky Halloween dinner will make them less likely to eat the candy they collect before you have a chance to check it for them.
     

  • Teaching your kids basic everyday safety such as not getting into cars or talking to strangers, watching both ways before crossing streets and crossing when the lights tell you to, will help make them safer when they are out Trick or Treating.
     

Make Halloween a fun, safe and happy time for your kids and they'll carry on the tradition that you taught them to their own families some day!
 

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