Water safety doesn’t end as your children get older. Teens often underestimate dangerous situations, especially around natural bodies of water. Our vision is to educate and equip parents and teens with water safety tips in order to protect children once they enter adolescence.

Fatal drowning rates for teens and adolescents 15-17 years old are twice the rate of toddlers and infants younger than 5 years old

 

Research shows that this is a result of overestimating swimming skills, underestimating dangerous water situations, and substance use.

Learning how to perform CPR can save a teen’s life in dangerous water situations

 

Starting CPR as soon as a person is rescued from the water can save their life. CPR is the most effective strategy to improve outcomes of drowning.

Teens have the second highest fatal drowning rate

 

Research shows that around 70% of all teen drownings occur in lakes, rivers, or oceans.

Teach your teens to be water watchers

 

Counseling your teens about water safety best practices is critical to keeping your children and their peers safe during any water activity.

 

Visit our Designate ‘Water Watchers’ page for more information about creating layers of protection.

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Teach your teen to always enter freshwater feet first for the first time

 

This will help them know if there are underwater hazards like large rocks that can’t be seen from the surface.

Boys younger than 15 drown at twice the rate of girls

Life jackets & teens in the water

 

Even if they know how to swim, your teen should always wear a life jacket when boating or recreating in lakes.

 

Note: inner tubes and inflatable flotation devices are not appropriate substitutes for life jackets.

Research shows that Black male teens have the 3rd highest drowning death rate

 

White male children up to 4 years old have the highest drowning death rate, while American Indian and/or Alaskan Native Children up to 4 years old have the 2nd highest rate.

30-70% of recreational water deaths among U.S. adolescents occur while drinking alcohol and swimming or boating

Encourage your teens to help end the national lifeguard shortage

 

There’s a lifeguard shortage affecting children and parents all over the US.

 

Encourage your teens to become lifeguards and help end the lifeguard shortage.

For more information on this, please read through our Teens FAQs.

~4500
people drown each year

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