Emirates 24|7
Sharjah: The Child Safety Organisation, affiliated with the Sharjah Family and Community Council, has warned that many risks facing children are hidden in the most familiar places: homes, residential buildings and play areas that adults often consider safe. In an awareness message on the dangers of falls and unintentional injuries, the organisation called on families and caregivers to carry out regular safety checks of the spaces where children live, move and play, stressing that child safety should be treated as an essential part of everyday care, not as a response after an incident occurs. The organisation said many childhood accidents do not begin with unusual hazards or exceptional circumstances, but with ordinary details that families have grown used to seeing. A window, balcony, staircase, chair or piece of furniture may appear normal to an adult, but to a child it can become an invitation to climb, reach, explore or follow others, before they are able to understand danger or anticipate consequences. It added that the early years of a child's life are marked by rapid physical development and a growing desire to move and discover, while their ability to assess risk remains limited. Children learn through experience, move with curiosity and trust, and naturally test the environment around them. This makes some homes and shared residential spaces far more dangerous than they may appear to adults. The organisation noted that fall risks are not limited to windows and balconies. They can also include furniture placed near edges or windows, unsecured stairs, elevated surfaces, shared areas in residential buildings, sharp corners and protruding edges, and any object that may help a child reach an unsafe area or cause injury if they trip and fall. The Child Safety Organisation also highlighted that unintentional injuries, including falls, drowning, burns, poisoning and road traffic accidents, remain among the leading causes of child deaths and injuries worldwide. International estimates indicate that more than 1,600 children and adolescents under the age of 19 lose their lives every day due to injuries, many of which are preventable. The World Health Organisation also classifies falls among the major causes of serious injury and injury-related deaths among children. Safety begins when we see the space through a child's eyes Hanadi Saleh Al Yafei, Director-General of the Child Safety Organisation, said, "Real safety begins when we look at a space through a child's eyes. A place that seems ordinary to adults may feel like an invitation to explore for a child whose awareness of danger is still developing. What we see as a window, corridor, or chair may be seen by a child as a chance to move closer, climb higher or follow someone nearby." She added, "In their early years, children do not move out of recklessness, but out of trust. They trust the place around them, the people close to them and their new ability to move. This trust is a beautiful part of childhood, but it requires conscious care and continuous responsibility. Our role is not to make children afraid of the world, but to make the world around them more suitable for their age, needs and level of awareness."
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