Showing posts with label safety gear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label safety gear. Show all posts

Monday, October 22, 2007

Skateboard Safety

skateboard safely buy quality protective gear and skateboard parts Skateboarding has become an increasingly popular recreational activity especially among many but primarily adolescents and teens. It is a fun and healthy sport that can give you a great low-impact aerobic workout, improves coordination and balance, and can give you a great sense of accomplishment and boosts self esteem. Because of this it is most important to make sure that you or your kids practice skateboarding safely and use protective equipment.

The American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons encourages physical activity as part of an overall health and fitness plan. Staying fit and having fun while doing so is important to a high quality lifestyle, but always be safe!

Incidence of Injury
To improve skateboarding safety, a growing number of communities are providing skaters with designated areas and even skateboard parks. These typically have smooth surfaces, durable obstacles and rails, and professionally designed bowls and ramps or other designated skateboarding areas that are contained and located away from vehicle and pedestrian traffic.

Skateboarding is an activity in which you move quickly and generally over hard surfaces. This can lead to injuries that range from minor cuts and bruises to catastrophic brain damage. Each year in the United States, skateboarding injuries cause thousands of visits to emergency room and many children, adolescents, and adults to be hospitalized.

Most hospitalizations involve head injury. Even injuries that heal quickly can cause pain, anxiety, cost time, and money and in the worst cases lead to disabilities. This can include loss of vision, hearing and speech; loss of personal mobility, and thinking and behavior changes.

Serious skateboarding injuries happen when you lose control and fall or run into a motor vehicle, road hazard, pedestrian, another skateboarder or bicyclist.

You are at risk for injuries:


  • If you don't use protective equipment.

  • If you don't keep your skateboard in good condition.

  • If you skateboard on irregular surfaces.

  • If you attempt "tricks" beyond your skill level.

Sixty percent of skateboard injuries involve children under age 15; most of those injured are boys.

At highest risks are:

Inexperienced skateboarders: Those who have been skating for less than one week suffer one-third of injuries, usually caused by falls.

Skateboarders who do not wear protective equipment: Every skateboarder should wear standard safety gear. This includes a helmet, wrist guards, elbow and knee pads and appropriate shoes. Skateboarders who perform tricks should use heavy duty gear.

Skateboarders who go near traffic or use homemade skateboard ramps: Both activities are particularly dangerous.
Experienced skateboarders who encounter unexpected surfaces or try risky stunts: Irregular riding surfaces, rocks or other debris can cause you to fall. You can stumble over twigs or fall down slopes. Wet pavements and rough or uneven surfaces can cause a wipeout. Avoid risky behavior. Don't skateboard too fast or in dangerous or crowded locations.

Types of Injury
Skateboarding injuries often involve the wrist, ankle or face. Many injuries happen when you lose your balance, fall off the skateboard and land on an outstretched arm.

Injuries to the arms, legs, neck and trunk range from bruises and abrasions to sprains and strains, fractures and dislocations. Wrist fractures are quite common. Wearing wrist guards can reduce their frequency and severity.

Facial injuries include breaking your nose and jawbone

Severe injuries include concussion, closed head injury and blunt head trauma.

You can suffer permanent impairment or even death if you fall off the skateboard and strike your head without a helmet. Most brain injuries happen when your head hits pavement. You are most at risk if you skateboard near traffic and collide with motor vehicles, bikes, pedestrians or other obstacles.


Prevention
You can prevent most skateboarding injuries if you follow all of these recommendations:

Use a quality skateboard:
Skateboards have three parts, the skateboard deck (the board itself), the skateboard trucks (the mechanism to which wheels are attached), skateboard bearings (sits in the wheels and allow them to spin fast and smoothly), and the skateboard wheels. Shorter decks are best for beginners because they are easier to balance and handle. Skateboards have various characteristics for all types of riding including slalom or hill bombing, street and park or pools.

Keep your skateboard in proper working order:
You should inspect it before every ride. Look for problems that need repair. These can include loose, broken or cracked parts; sharp edges on metal boards; a slippery top surface; wheels with nicks and cracks, etc. Get professional help to repair serious defects.

Learn the basic skills of skateboarding: Especially how to stop properly.
Also learn slowing and turning techniques, and how to fall safely: If you are losing your balance, crouch down on the skateboard so you won't have as far to fall. Try to land on the fleshy parts of your body rather than your arms. Relax and roll.

Wear proper protective equipment:
Before getting on your skateboard, empty your pockets of all hard and sharp objects and put on your protective gear.

Essential protective equipment includes:


  • A properly fitting helmet

  • Wrist guards

  • Knee and elbow pads

  • Shoes

  • Helmet

To protect your head from injury, always wear a properly fitting helmet. This is true no matter what your age, level of experience or location where you are skateboarding. Get a quality bicycle or multi-sport helmet. It should meet or exceed safety standards of the U.S Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) or Snell Memorial Foundation. You may need to try on several sizes and models to find a helmet that fits your head correctly and securely.

A properly fitting helmet:

Is worn flat on your head with the bottom edge parallel to the ground
Sits low on your forehead
Has side straps that form a "V" shape around each ear
Has a buckle that fastens tightly (there should be room to put only two fingers between the strap and your chin)
Has pads inside that you install or remove so the helmet fits snuggly
Does not move in any direction when you shake your head
Does not interfere with your movement, vision or hearing

Replace your helmet when it is damaged, outgrown or at least every five years. You may need to replace it sooner if the manufacturer recommends it.

Please Note: California has expanded its bicycle helmet law to require that children under age 18 wear helmets each time they use a skateboard, inline skates, roller skates or scooter, making the state's child helmet law the strictest in the nation. Violators face fines, most of which benefits local health departments promoting helmet safety education and subsidizing helmet purchases for low-income families.

Wrist guards, knee and elbow pads and other gear: Wrist guards help support the wrist and reduce the chances of breaking a bone if you fall. Knee and elbow pads reduce the severity of cuts and scrapes, and prevent gravel burns. You should also wear closed, slip-resistant shoes, and consider goggles to keep debris out of your eyes.

Skateboard only on smooth pavement away from traffic, preferably in a supervised skate park.
Never hold onto the side or rear of a moving vehicle while riding a skateboard ("skitching"). You could fall or be thrown into oncoming traffic if the vehicle suddenly slows, stops or turns.
Never use your skateboard in wet weather.
Avoid skateboarding in crowded walkways or in darkness.
Always screen the area before you skateboard, inspecting surfaces for rocks and other debris.
Be careful with tricks and jumps.

Skateboarding skill is not acquired quickly or easily.

Don't take chances by skateboarding faster than your experience allows, or faster than is safe for conditions or the speed of other skateboarders. If you try tricks and jumps, practice them only in a controlled environment, such as a skate park that has adult supervision and appropriate access to emergency medical care.

Stay in shape. Prevent skateboarding injuries by keeping in top physical condition. It’s always a good idea to stretch and do conditioning exercises before and after any physically demanding activity. This is especially true for skateboarding and more experienced skaters who like to push the limits of their abilities.

Do not use headphones while skateboarding. If you can’t hear the cars passing by or the sound of your own skateboard wheels on the pavement you may find yourself in a collision you can’t walk away from.

Never put more than one person on a skateboard. This is true even for long boarders; come on this is just common sense!

Be considerate of fellow skateboarders, especially those who are younger and or less skilled.

Know what to do in an emergency. Skateboarding accidents happen, so you should always know what to do in emergency situations. Don't panic. Call 911 for medical assistance or an ambulance.

Wednesday, October 3, 2007

Medical Center Urges Kids To Stay Safe While Skateboarding

Responsible parents get their kids pads and a helmet
According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, approximately 26,000 people are treated in hospital emergency departments annually with skateboard-related injuries. With the growing popularity of the sport and the opening of skateboard parks in the region, Community Medical Center urges kids to stay safe while enjoying these facilities.

Community Medical Center's Emergency Department, which earlier this year introduced a pediatric emergency service to provide care via a dedicated team of physician's board certified in pediatrics or emergency medicine and nurses, is dedicated to the safety of the children of its community. Laurence DesRochers, M.D., FACEP, chairman of emergency medicine at Community, says skateboarding is a great activity for kids, as it promotes good cardiovascular exercise, but he warns it is imperative that kids use proper safety equipment and make sure their skateboards are in good working order to help prevent injury.

"Skateboarding is a good form of exercise, as it helps children develop good balance and body control," he says. "However, young or inexperienced skaters may not have developed the necessary body strength and balance to help protect themselves from falls."

Dr. DesRochers says it is not uncommon for kids to experience sprains, strains, fractures, cuts and abrasions as the result of skateboarding. He adds that skateboarding at a skateboard complex or skate park is safer than skating in the streets or parking lots because skate parks have more even surfaces, no gravel, holes, curbs, moving vehicles or other elements that could cause additional injury during a fall.

"The majority of children who are injured in skateboarding accidents are under the age of 15," says Dr. DesRochers, who oversees an emergency department that includes eight dedicated pediatric beds and a number of special amenities for children. "Injuries, in most part, are due to falls and occur to both first-time and experienced skaters."

He offers the following skateboarding safety tips:

Inspect skateboards prior to use for things such as cracked boards, sharp edges, loose wheels or other defects; Skaters should always wear protective gear including a helmet, knee and elbow pads and slip resistant shoes. Padded clothing such as jackets, shirts and shorts are also available and recommended; Never ride in the street or hitch a ride on a moving vehicle; Don't skate in crowded areas and only one rider per skateboard.

Dr. DesRochers says learning to fall properly can also help lessen the chance or severity of injury. "Practice falling on a soft or grassy surface," he says. "If you are about to fall, crouch down low so you don't have as far to fall and try to land on fleshy parts of the body or try to roll instead of absorbing the fall with arms or hands."

In the event an injury should occur while skateboarding, parents are urged to contact their pediatrician or health care provider immediately, and in urgent situations go directly to an emergency room or call 911.
Original Source: Toms River Times

Skateboarding accident leaves football player comatose

Be smart and stay that way protect your head with a skateboard helmet
A Saguaro High School football player is in a coma this morning after a skateboarding accident. Jake Dunn, a senior, hit his head while longboarding with his friends Sunday. The Sabercat linebacker fell while trying to avoid a car that had pulled out in front of him. Dunn was not wearing a helmet at the time. According to one neurosurgeon, these types of accidents can cause major injuries.

"The most tragic accidents we see are, of course, the low-velocity accidents which are bicycle and skateboard accidents with people who are not wearing helmets," said Dr. Nicholas Theodore.

Dunn's family is hoping for the best, saying their son is the strength in the family. They say it's that strength that has kept them going.
Original Source: azfamily.com