MAJORITY OF PUBLIC PLAYGROUNDS SURVEYED PLACE CHILDREN AT RISK
Consumer Federation of America and U.S. Public Interest Research Group Release Sixth National Survey
Washington, D.C. June 20, 2002 -- Hard surfacing, equipment that is too
high, and swings that are too close together pose preventable hazards
to children at a majority of public playgrounds across the country,
according to Playing It Safe, a survey released today by the Consumer
Federation of America (CFA) and the U.S. Public Interest Research Group
(U.S. PIRG).
According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, almost
190,000 children were treated in hospital emergency rooms in 2001 as a
result of injuries sustained on public playground equipment. Each year,
between 15 and 20 children die as a result of playground injuries.
"Playgrounds can be wonderful places for children to have fun and face
new challenges," said U.S. PIRG Research Director Alison Cassady, a
co-author of Playing It Safe. "But children face serious injury on
playgrounds when they fall from equipment that is too high onto
surfacing that is too hard," continued Cassady.
"The Consumer Product Safety Commission has some voluntary guidelines
but unfortunately we easily identified too many playgrounds that don't
comply," added CFA Assistant General Counsel Rachel Weintraub, and a
co-author of Playing It Safe. "Parents working with local officials can
be effective advocates for safer playgrounds," continued Weintraub.
In their sixth national survey of public playgrounds, the PIRGs and CFA
surveyed 1,037 playgrounds in 36 states and Washington, DC, including
51 in Washington, DC. The researchers focused on the hazards that cause
the most serious playground injuries: falls, impact with moving swings,
entanglement and head entrapment.
Because 80% of all injuries are caused by falls, protective surfacing
under and around playground equipment is critical. At 75% of
playgrounds across the country, researchers found inadequate surfacing.
In Washington, DC, 29% of the playgrounds surveyed had inadequate
surfaces. The report also found that 33% of climbers and 25% of slides
in Washington, DC were more than six feet high. Nationally, 52% of
climbers and 35% of slides were too high.
Impact with moving swings causes 69% of all swing injuries. Swings that
are too close to each other or to other equipment increase the chance
that a child will be hit by a moving swing. U.S. PIRG and CFA found
swing hazards at 33% of playgrounds in Washington, DC, and 49%
nationally. Surveyors also found that children can face strangulation
hazards at 65% of Washington, DC playgrounds, because of head
entrapment and clothing entanglement dangers caused by gaps,
protrusions and other similar hazards.
The groups also found that 14% of the playgrounds they surveyed across
the country and 10% in Washington, DC were made of wood that may be
pressure treated. Some pressure treated wood may contain chromium
copper arsenate (CCA), a known carcinogen. "We urge local authorities
to test their playgrounds made out of wood for CCA. Children should not
be exposed to toxic chemicals as they play on playgrounds," Weintraub
said.
The groups noted that nine localities and fifteen states have passed
some form of regulation to protect their children from playground
hazards. These regulations come in many forms and by many
authorities-the strongest laws mandate safety requirements for
playground design, installation, and maintenance in all public
playgrounds, while the weakest merely recommend that child care
providers take a class on product safety. In the absence of a mandatory
federal law, the groups stressed that state and local advocacy efforts
are crucial to protect children from unsafe playgrounds.
The groups cited a 2002 study by the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill School of Public Health that documented a 22% decrease in
the rate of injuries at childcare centers in North Carolina since the
state enacted a requirement that all new playground equipment and
surfacing in childcare facilities conform to CPSC guidelines. "Public
health and injury prevention experts have advocated regulation as one
strategy among many to reduce the risk of injury to children on
playgrounds. This is the first study to my knowledge that has
demonstrated a significant decrease in more serious playground injuries
following improved child care playground safety regulations," stated Dr
Jonathan Kotch, professor of maternal and child health and co-author of
the UNC study.
CFA has produced a Model Law on Public Play Equipment and Areas that
contains detailed provisions addressing safety and design for all play
equipment and areas, as well as separate requirements for equipment
used by both pre-school age and school age children. The groups
encourage state and local jurisdictions to adopt these requirements and
use them when purchasing new equipment or when refurbishing, remodeling
or maintaining existing playgrounds. The model law is available on the
web at www.safechild.net.
Consumer Federation of America is a non-profit association of 300
consumer groups, with a combined membership of more than 50 million
people. CFA was founded in 1968 to advance the consumers' interest
through advocacy and education.
U.S. PIRG is the national lobby office for the State Public Interest
Research Groups. State PIRGs are non-profit, non-partisan public
interest advocacy groups.
For parents who would like to check on their neighborhood playgrounds,
CFA offers a free Parent Checklist: How Safe Is Your Local Playground?
The checklist sets out 12 important factors to examine and includes an
explanation of what is recommended for safer playgrounds, available
free to individuals by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to:
Playground Checklist, PO Box 12099, Washington, DC 20005-0999 or on the
web at www.consumerfed.org.
The full report is available on the web at www.pirg.org/playground and www.safechild.net
or by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to: Playing It Safe,
218 D St SE, Washington, DC 20003. For more information, send e-mail to
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
or visit the PIRG web site www.pirg.org/playground.