Hot Cars & Children
Every year, we hear stories about children dying because they were left inside a car during the heat of summer. According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, an average of 37 children die annually from heatstroke after being trapped in a car. Laura Dunn, a highway safety specialist with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, says there are three scenarios where a child can get heatstroke in a car.
Dunn says it doesn’t take a long time for a child to get heatstroke while in a car.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has a safety campaign titled “Stop. Look. Lock.” There’s more information on that through this link: https://www.nhtsa.gov/campaign/heatstroke .
You can hear more from Laura Dunn this Saturday on Access Health, which airs at 8am on KRJB and KRJM and at 8:30am Saturday on KKCQ.

