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    summer-safety

    Explore "summer-safety" with insightful episodes like "Summer Safety", "Summer Fever, Tick-Borne Illness", "Summer Burn Hazards", "Staying Safe While Hiking with Kids" and "Summer Safety from an ED APP" from podcasts like ""Pediatric Voices", "Penn Primary Care Podcast", "Baptist Health Radio", "HealthTalks by Stanford Medicine Children’s Health" and "Advanced Practice Perspectives"" and more!

    Episodes (17)

    Summer Safety

    Summer Safety
    summer-safetyWhen pediatricians think of summertime, they think of vacation, time with family and friends, and the end of the school year. They also worry about activities which put kids at risk for injuries and accidents. In this episode, we speak with Dr. Emily Greenwald—a pediatric emergency medicine physician—who teaches us about the extraordinarily hectic world of the emergency department during summer. We review some of the principles of prevention of summertime emergencies, and Dr. Greenwald shares some tips for keeping kids safe.

    Summer Burn Hazards

    Summer Burn Hazards
    summer-burn-hazardsSchool's out and temperatures are rising. You probably know to always keep your eyes on kids in and around water, but have you thought about other potential injuries, like burns? Ramona Criss, coordinator for the Snyder Family Burn and Wound Care Center at Wolfson Children’s Hospital, joins us to talk about how you can avoid an emergency.

    Preventing Diving Injuries and Staying Safe in the Water

    Preventing Diving Injuries and Staying Safe in the Water
    preventing-diving-injuries-and-staying-safe-in-the-waterDiving is the fourth leading cause of spinal cord injury for men, and the fifth for women, according to the National Spinal Cord Injury Statistical Center. A single dive can result in a life-altering injury. Diving injuries take place in swimming pools, lakes, rivers, creeks, swimming holes and any water environment.

    In this podcast, Emma Harrington, Shepherd Center’s Director of Injury Prevention Education, discusses how and where diving injuries occur, and how to prevent them.

    Tick Safety & Lyme Disease

    Tick Safety & Lyme Disease
    tick-safety-lyme-diseaseToday’s ticks that carry Lyme disease are more rampant than ever.

    White-tailed deer are the primary carrier of these ticks. Our growing civilization has greater proximity to these deer, so our tick exposure has increased.

    What Do Ticks Look Like?

    Ticks have eight legs and come in different sizes. They don’t have eyes or antennae. They have a head and body. There are many varieties of ticks that carry different kinds of germs. You have to identify the ticks correctly to know the potential disease exposure.

    Tick Safety

    Spray your shoes with permethrin since DEET isn’t very effective on ticks. You can also have your clothing treated with permethrin. Botanical oils may not work well if you’re going into a tick-infested area. Ticks that carry Lyme disease latch on at shoe level and climb up your legs.

    If you go exploring, the American dog tick is prevalent and may hitchhike a ride home with you. Toss your clothes in the dryer for 10 minutes to kill any live ticks. Check yourself, family and pets for ticks after the adventure.

    It typically takes at least 24 hours for diseases to transmit. Use a pointed tweezer to pull the tick straight out. Take a photo of the tick. Save the tick in a plastic bag for a few weeks in case it needs to be tested.

    Listen as tick expert Dr. Thomas Mather joins Melanie Cole, MS, to talk ticks.
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