CHILD SAFETY
Thousands of children are reported missing every year in America. Some children
will be found and returned home. Some will not.
Child abduction is a tragedy that devastates parents and touches all of us. These
tips tell you how to keep your children safer.
WHAT TO DO:
1. Know where your children are at all times.
2. Never leave children alone in cars.
3. Establish strict procedures for picking up children at school, after movies, at
friend's homes, etc. Don't let your children accept rides from people with
whom you haven't made prior arrangement, even if they say they are police
officers, teachers, or friends of the family.
4. Teach your children their full names, your full name, address, and telephone
number. Teach them how to reach either you or a trusted adult and how to
call for police assistance. Make sure they know how to make local and long
distance telephone calls. Even small children can learn to dial 9-1-1 to get
help.
5. Tell your children about the abduction problem in a calm and simple way, as if
you were teaching any other important coping skill.
6. Listen attentively when your children discuss anyone they've encountered in
your absence.
7. Establish a family code word. Tell your children never to go with anyone who
does not know the code word.
8. Have photographs taken of you children four times a year (especially for
preschoolers). Make note of birthmarks or other distinguishing features. This
won't protect you child, but will help to make it easier to identify them whether
they are found safe, injured, or deceased.
TEACH YOUR CHILDREN:
1. Never leave the yard without your permission. Very small children should
play only in the backyard or in a supervised play area.
2. Not to wander off, to avoid lonely places, and not to take shortcuts through
alleys or deserted areas.
3. They are safer walking or playing with friends.
4. Always to come straight home from school unless you've made other
arrangements.
5. Never to enter anyone's home without your prior approval.
6. To scream, run away and tell you or a trusted adult if anyone attempts to
touch or grab them.
7. Not to give any information over the telephone, particularly their name and
address, or that they are alone.
8. Never to go anywhere with anyone who does not know the family code word.
9. To keep all doors locked and admit only authorized people into the house.
EMERGENCY NUMBERS
The following telephone numbers should be posted by the telephone and each
child in the home should know what each number is for:
1. Emergency Police/Fire/Ambulance 9-1-1
2. Doctor ____________
3. Parent's Work Numbers ____________
4. Close Relative ____________
5. Close Friend ____________
6. School ____________
7. Poison Control Center ____________
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