Safety is stressed after drowning
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Marisa O’Neil
Authorities on Wednesday stressed the importance of poolside safety,
following the second drowning death of a toddler this month in
Newport-Mesa.
Christian Diaz, 2, who was found at the bottom of a Costa Mesa
apartment complex swimming pool, died at 6:26 p.m. on Sunday at Hoag
Hospital, Orange County Supervising Deputy Coroner Larry Esslinger
said.
Police said that Christian wandered out of an apartment in the 300
block of West Wilson Street just before 6 p.m. while his mother was
taking a nap.
“The child got outside while his mother was sleeping and somehow
found his way into the gate-protected swimming pool,” Costa Mesa
Police Sgt. Marty Carver said. His mother found him at the bottom of
the pool, after waking and being unable to find the boy in the house,
Caver said.
Police investigated the drowning and found no evidence of neglect,
he said.
It was the fifth toddler drowning in Orange County this year, fire
prevention specialist Brenda Emrick said.
Taylor Ackroyd, 3, drowned May 5 in a poolside spa in a Newport
Beach condominium complex. Police said his father had left him alone
in the pool area with a teenage sibling for less than three minutes.
When he came back, he found Taylor at the bottom of the spa. It
appeared there was a miscommunication about who was watching the
child, and charges were not filed, police said.
A small child can drown in only two inches of water in a very
short time, Emrick said.
“If you have a pool or access to a pool, you have to be thinking
beyond: ‘My kid’s not going to do that,’” she said.
Parents have to think of multiple layers of protection, she said.
“Constant, constant adult supervision,” she said. “Not brothers,
not sisters -- one adult for every child in the water. Know CPR. Have
resources by the pool for rescue -- a hook, a life preserver.”
Swimming lessons help add another layer of protection, she said,
but don’t prevent all drownings. Neither do flotation devices.
Drowning is the second-leading cause of injury-related death of
children younger than 14, according to a 2004 study by the National
Safe Kids Campaign.
Of those, boys under 4 most frequently drown.
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