April 22, 2011
Johns Hopkins International Injury Research Unit to Study Wireless Technology for the Prevention of Drowning in Bangladesh
http://www.jhsph.edu/iiru/news.html#turtle
The Johns Hopkins International Injury Research Unit will begin a new research project in rural Bangladesh this year that aims to study the acceptability of using wireless alarm systems in the prevention of drowning.
Unintentional injuries are the biggest killer of children ages 1-15 in Bangladesh and drowning presents the greatest risk. For children ages 1-4, drowning accounts for 20 percent of childhood mortality and causes 46 child deaths every day.
Water hazards like ponds and rivers surround many homes, so behavioral solutions such as playpens and swimming education have limited effect in the region. The Unit’s work, therefore, will center on studying a new solution – wireless alarm systems. Specifically, Dr. Labrique and Dr. Hyder will test the Safety Turtle from Terrapin Communications to evaluate its acceptability and functionality in rural Bangladesh. The Safety Turtle can be worn around a child’s wrist or ankle and will sound an alarm when immersed in water.
JSU will evaluate both the origninal Turtle and the new SOS sensor adapted for workplace, marine, lifeguard and aquatic physiotherapy use by adults. While activating within one second of complete immersion, Safety Turtle SOS will not false alarm due to heavy, prolonged rain / splash.
-30-
For Terrapin Communications media inquiries, please contact:
Grant Landis
1-909-489-9048
grant@amicuspr.com
Contact the Johns Hopkins International Injury Research Unit:
Safewater Alarms limited
Welcome to Safewater Alarms Blog, this blog gives you upto date news on our protection products as well as child safety news.
Saturday, 14 May 2011
Monday, 25 April 2011
Safety Turtle SOS

Terrapin Communications Inc.
Safety Turtle SOS
Safety Turtle SOS is a version of the Safety Turtle personal immersion alarm adapted for workplace and marine use. While activating within one second of complete immersion, Safety Turtle SOS will not false alarm due to heavy, prolonged rain / splash that characterizes marine and some outdoor work and pet environments. Safety Turtle SOS is not recommended for young children.
Background:
Inspired by the experience of Bob Lyons, Terrapin’s founder and president, Safety Turtle was launched in 1998. Its reliability, simplicity of use and portability were immediately appreciated by North American consumers. Safety Turtle is now the world’s leading personal immersion alarm, used near pools, on boats and in workplaces, to protect people and pets, and on pool lifeguards to alert the front desk of a water rescue. The Safety Turtle wireless gate / door alarm introduced in 2006 offers a second layer of protection for pool owners.
For more information, please visit our web site and click on Safety Turtle SOS
64 DROWNINGS AND NEAR-DROWNINGS IN 14 WEEKS
April 18, 2011
64 DROWNINGS AND NEAR-DROWNINGS IN 14 WEEKS
Terrapin Communication Applauds the Pool Safely Campaign for its 2011 Public Safety Messages
Pool Safely PSAs Urge Parents to Watch Children at All Times Around Pools and Spas This Summer and All Year Long
The summer swimming season is just around the corner, and Terrapin Communications supports the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission’s (CPSC) release of the Pool Safely: Simple Steps Save Lives 2011 public service announcements (PSAs) highlighting various water safety steps that can be taken to save a life. In the first few months of 2011, there have been 30 drownings and 34 near-drowning incidents reported by the media across America. The PSAs are being released nationally today as part of CPSC’s ongoing campaign to urge parents and children to adopt as many safety steps as possible in and around pools and spas. The Pool Safely campaign is the federal government’s first-of-its-kind national public education effort to reduce child drownings and near-drownings in public swimming pools and spas.
As a Campaign Safety Leader, Terrapin Communications is helping to deliver the campaign’s safety messages to the public by distributing materials, posting information online, holding events and incorporating the campaign into existing public safety outreach programs.
“Young children usually drown with a caregiver close by. Contact with the child was lost during the seconds an immersion accident takes to unfold. Rescue, though moments away, is usually too late. The silence of drowning doesn’t give second chances. Our goal is to break the silence of immersion accidents, to give parents that last chance.” Bob Lyons, Terrapin Communications
Working with the American Red Cross and the Y, CPSC produced television and radio PSAs to promote the Pool Safely campaign nationwide. The PSAs introduce four families and their stories about the simple steps that save lives: door alarms, knowledge of CPR, fencing around pools and spas and safety drain covers in pools and spas. The radio PSAs promote the importance of swimming lessons as a simple step that saves lives. Available to local television and radio stations in both English and Spanish, the English-language versions feature Ming-Na, the voice of Mulan in Disney animated films and star of the NBC drama “ER”, “The Joy Luck Club” and “Stargate Universe”.
“As the summer swimming season quickly approaches, our message to parents and children is simple: stay safe in and around pools and spas by practicing as many safety steps as possible,” said Inez M. Tenenbaum, Chairman of the CPSC. “We encourage everyone to have fun in the water this summer, but we also remind parents and caregivers to stay close to children at all times, know water safety skills like CPR, and ensure anti-entrapment drain covers are installed in all pools and spas. Every drowning and near-drowning incident represents a family tragedy.”
Since January 2010, the Pool Safely campaign has responded to over 530 media-reported drowning, near-drowning and entrapment incidents. Steps such as staying close to children at all times, learning water safety skills and having the appropriate equipment, can help families have a safer experience in and around pools and spas. You can learn more about the campaign’s water safety steps here.
About CPSC
CPSC is an independent federal regulatory agency created by Congress in 1972 “to protect the public against unreasonable risks of injuries and deaths associated with consumer products.” The Pool Safely campaign is CPSC’s national information and education program associated with the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act (P&SS Act). The Pool Safely campaign is designed to raise public awareness about drowning and entrapment prevention, support industry compliance with safety standards, and improve safety at pools and spas. The Pool Safely campaign is proud to partner with leading organizations, including American Red Cross, The YMCA of the USA, Safe Kids USA, National Drowning Prevention Alliance (NDPA), World Waterpark Association (WWA), USA Swimming Foundation, National Swimming Pool Foundation, National Aquatic Safety Company (NASCO), Abbey's Hope and Association of Pool and Spa Professionals (APSP). For more information, visit the website at http://www.poolsafely.gov/ and follow the campaign on Twitter @poolsafely.
About Terrapin Communications
Terrapin Communications manufacturers Safety Turtle, the world's leading personal immersion alarm. Introduced in 1998 as a last layer of protection for parents, Safety Turtle has been adapted to protect adults as well as children, and pets, near hazardous water, pools, ponds and open water. Pool lifeguards now wear Turtles to automatically alert the front desk of a water rescue. High risk patients such as stroke victims wear Turtle visors during [supervised] water exercise. For more information, visit the website at http://www.safetyturtle.com
64 DROWNINGS AND NEAR-DROWNINGS IN 14 WEEKS
Terrapin Communication Applauds the Pool Safely Campaign for its 2011 Public Safety Messages
Pool Safely PSAs Urge Parents to Watch Children at All Times Around Pools and Spas This Summer and All Year Long
The summer swimming season is just around the corner, and Terrapin Communications supports the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission’s (CPSC) release of the Pool Safely: Simple Steps Save Lives 2011 public service announcements (PSAs) highlighting various water safety steps that can be taken to save a life. In the first few months of 2011, there have been 30 drownings and 34 near-drowning incidents reported by the media across America. The PSAs are being released nationally today as part of CPSC’s ongoing campaign to urge parents and children to adopt as many safety steps as possible in and around pools and spas. The Pool Safely campaign is the federal government’s first-of-its-kind national public education effort to reduce child drownings and near-drownings in public swimming pools and spas.
As a Campaign Safety Leader, Terrapin Communications is helping to deliver the campaign’s safety messages to the public by distributing materials, posting information online, holding events and incorporating the campaign into existing public safety outreach programs.
“Young children usually drown with a caregiver close by. Contact with the child was lost during the seconds an immersion accident takes to unfold. Rescue, though moments away, is usually too late. The silence of drowning doesn’t give second chances. Our goal is to break the silence of immersion accidents, to give parents that last chance.” Bob Lyons, Terrapin Communications
Working with the American Red Cross and the Y, CPSC produced television and radio PSAs to promote the Pool Safely campaign nationwide. The PSAs introduce four families and their stories about the simple steps that save lives: door alarms, knowledge of CPR, fencing around pools and spas and safety drain covers in pools and spas. The radio PSAs promote the importance of swimming lessons as a simple step that saves lives. Available to local television and radio stations in both English and Spanish, the English-language versions feature Ming-Na, the voice of Mulan in Disney animated films and star of the NBC drama “ER”, “The Joy Luck Club” and “Stargate Universe”.
“As the summer swimming season quickly approaches, our message to parents and children is simple: stay safe in and around pools and spas by practicing as many safety steps as possible,” said Inez M. Tenenbaum, Chairman of the CPSC. “We encourage everyone to have fun in the water this summer, but we also remind parents and caregivers to stay close to children at all times, know water safety skills like CPR, and ensure anti-entrapment drain covers are installed in all pools and spas. Every drowning and near-drowning incident represents a family tragedy.”
Since January 2010, the Pool Safely campaign has responded to over 530 media-reported drowning, near-drowning and entrapment incidents. Steps such as staying close to children at all times, learning water safety skills and having the appropriate equipment, can help families have a safer experience in and around pools and spas. You can learn more about the campaign’s water safety steps here.
About CPSC
CPSC is an independent federal regulatory agency created by Congress in 1972 “to protect the public against unreasonable risks of injuries and deaths associated with consumer products.” The Pool Safely campaign is CPSC’s national information and education program associated with the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act (P&SS Act). The Pool Safely campaign is designed to raise public awareness about drowning and entrapment prevention, support industry compliance with safety standards, and improve safety at pools and spas. The Pool Safely campaign is proud to partner with leading organizations, including American Red Cross, The YMCA of the USA, Safe Kids USA, National Drowning Prevention Alliance (NDPA), World Waterpark Association (WWA), USA Swimming Foundation, National Swimming Pool Foundation, National Aquatic Safety Company (NASCO), Abbey's Hope and Association of Pool and Spa Professionals (APSP). For more information, visit the website at http://www.poolsafely.gov/ and follow the campaign on Twitter @poolsafely.
About Terrapin Communications
Terrapin Communications manufacturers Safety Turtle, the world's leading personal immersion alarm. Introduced in 1998 as a last layer of protection for parents, Safety Turtle has been adapted to protect adults as well as children, and pets, near hazardous water, pools, ponds and open water. Pool lifeguards now wear Turtles to automatically alert the front desk of a water rescue. High risk patients such as stroke victims wear Turtle visors during [supervised] water exercise. For more information, visit the website at http://www.safetyturtle.com
Sunday, 24 April 2011
Children don't just drown in swimming pools
I read my first sad story of the year at the weekend, a small child drowned in a back garden paddling pool. Why do people still not get it? children can drown in any form of water. It does not have to be a swimming pool it just has to be deep enough to cover the mouth and the nose when lying face down. The trouble with Paddling pools is that the child is introduced to them and in some sence the child feels that it is there's and as a parent you incourage the child to use the paddling pool highlighting how much fun they are and how not to be scared to get in and enjoy yourself. Then the day is over and play time has finished but the child still wants to play and you have forgotten to empty the paddling pool and the child wanders back into the garden to play with the paddling pool you have spent all day encouraging your child to play in.
Please, when you finish with the paddling pool ensure you empty it and turn it over or better still pack it away.
Remember children don't just drown in swimming pools.
Please, when you finish with the paddling pool ensure you empty it and turn it over or better still pack it away.
Remember children don't just drown in swimming pools.
Tuesday, 17 March 2009
I got a email from Bob Lyons today about a debate, the subject was "Does Safety Turtle undermine supervision"?
Here are some good talking points in response to this citing, made by both the Lifesaving Society of Ontario, and now the Pool Council of Canada.
"Rodney Taylor, Vice President of the Pool Council of Canada seems to think kids pulled out of pools wearing a Turtle aren't really lives saved, because caregivers would have been watching otherwise. This reminds me of the opposition to car seat belts in the 50s - that people would drive less carefully wearing them. This is not and has never been the trend. Seat belts, like Safety Turtle, do not prevent accidents, they only mitigate their effect. Immersion accidents, like car accidents, are still serious and do damage. People use the Turtle like they use a seat belt. It's really very simple!"
Bob Lyons, Terrapin
"At no point did you ever suggest eliminating parental supervision, but Mr. Taylor seems to believe that protection is some kind of zero sum exercise where adding one layer of protection detracts from another. People in Canada and people in the US are all still people and people tend to behave the same wherever they are. In the US, studies have shown that parental supervision alone can and does fail. We're all aware of the statistic that 69% of all drowning incidents occur when one or both parents were responsible for supervision. Human beings are prone to error and lapses of judgment. It's irresponsible to think that supervision alone is enough to prevent drowning and near drowning incidents. That's like saying we don't need seat belts, we should all just drive perfect all the time. On top of that, we know that in nearly 70% of drowning incidents children were not thought to be in the pool area. That makes his solution of always being in the water with your child a bit weak.
The idea of a "false sense of security" is always ridiculous. You don't "rely on an alarm," or a pool fence for that matter, and let your children run about unsupervised. Let's use some common sense. Putting on my seatbelt and equipping an airbag does not embolden me with a sudden "false sense of security" so I suddenly drive like a maniac. Installing a security alarm at my house does not provide me with a "false sense of security" that prompts me to leave all my doors and windows open when I go out of town. Likewise, you don't set your two year old in the backyard to play by herself while you go inside and do chores just because she's wearing a Safety Turtle alarm. If anything, the sight of the Safety Turtle, the act of putting it on the child, is a constant reminder that water is a danger. It keeps safety present in your mind when it may have ordinarily slipped.
"Eric Lupton, Lifesaver Pool fence"
If organisations like RLSSA can make a comment that one reason that they do notlike the turtle is that they want to prevent the child getting to the waterin the first place, as falling into a pool can be traumatic, then it is abit odd that they still recommend parents should engage in CPR training. Ofcourse, every parent should know first-aid, IN CASE a child somehow getspast the supervising parent, but if supervision is as perfect as they wantit to be (in fairy-land!) then no parent should ever have to resuscitate achild. If they are prepared to allow for the fact that a child COULD getpast the watchful eye of a parent somehow and therefore CPR training isessential, surely we then have to make allowance for the fact that a Turtlethat warns the parent BEFORE CPR is required MUST BE a part of the drowningprevention process.
"Steven Lewsen, Safety Store Australia
Here are some good talking points in response to this citing, made by both the Lifesaving Society of Ontario, and now the Pool Council of Canada.
"Rodney Taylor, Vice President of the Pool Council of Canada seems to think kids pulled out of pools wearing a Turtle aren't really lives saved, because caregivers would have been watching otherwise. This reminds me of the opposition to car seat belts in the 50s - that people would drive less carefully wearing them. This is not and has never been the trend. Seat belts, like Safety Turtle, do not prevent accidents, they only mitigate their effect. Immersion accidents, like car accidents, are still serious and do damage. People use the Turtle like they use a seat belt. It's really very simple!"
Bob Lyons, Terrapin
"At no point did you ever suggest eliminating parental supervision, but Mr. Taylor seems to believe that protection is some kind of zero sum exercise where adding one layer of protection detracts from another. People in Canada and people in the US are all still people and people tend to behave the same wherever they are. In the US, studies have shown that parental supervision alone can and does fail. We're all aware of the statistic that 69% of all drowning incidents occur when one or both parents were responsible for supervision. Human beings are prone to error and lapses of judgment. It's irresponsible to think that supervision alone is enough to prevent drowning and near drowning incidents. That's like saying we don't need seat belts, we should all just drive perfect all the time. On top of that, we know that in nearly 70% of drowning incidents children were not thought to be in the pool area. That makes his solution of always being in the water with your child a bit weak.
The idea of a "false sense of security" is always ridiculous. You don't "rely on an alarm," or a pool fence for that matter, and let your children run about unsupervised. Let's use some common sense. Putting on my seatbelt and equipping an airbag does not embolden me with a sudden "false sense of security" so I suddenly drive like a maniac. Installing a security alarm at my house does not provide me with a "false sense of security" that prompts me to leave all my doors and windows open when I go out of town. Likewise, you don't set your two year old in the backyard to play by herself while you go inside and do chores just because she's wearing a Safety Turtle alarm. If anything, the sight of the Safety Turtle, the act of putting it on the child, is a constant reminder that water is a danger. It keeps safety present in your mind when it may have ordinarily slipped.
"Eric Lupton, Lifesaver Pool fence"
If organisations like RLSSA can make a comment that one reason that they do notlike the turtle is that they want to prevent the child getting to the waterin the first place, as falling into a pool can be traumatic, then it is abit odd that they still recommend parents should engage in CPR training. Ofcourse, every parent should know first-aid, IN CASE a child somehow getspast the supervising parent, but if supervision is as perfect as they wantit to be (in fairy-land!) then no parent should ever have to resuscitate achild. If they are prepared to allow for the fact that a child COULD getpast the watchful eye of a parent somehow and therefore CPR training isessential, surely we then have to make allowance for the fact that a Turtlethat warns the parent BEFORE CPR is required MUST BE a part of the drowningprevention process.
"Steven Lewsen, Safety Store Australia
Monday, 20 October 2008
Workplace & Aquatic Facilities
"I wanted to pass along this news story for you and your staff concerning the turtle. It has been slightly just over a year since we installed the turtle in all of our branches. Yesterday the turtle was involved in a pool emergency at our Downtown YMCA location and really improved the response time for the victim. It allowed our guard to be a first responder in a lone guard situation and give him the ability to give 100% of his attention to the victim and have the comfort that help was on the way. After folks see this and our insurance company which is Redwoods Groups promotes the Turtle even more you may get lots of calls. It help us save a life yesterday. Our victim is not out of the woods yet but hopefully all will be well. Thanks for all of your support along the way with getting the Turtle installed properly in our YMCAs!" NE, 8 Aug 2008
”Safety Turtle addresses a real concern that I have had with my patients who participate in aquatic therapy,“ said Paul Hougan, founder and president of Therapywerks, Minneapolis. ”I have been particularly impressed with how patients have adopted the practice of using the Safety Turtle alarm. While the safety profile of our patients has been greatly improved with the installation of the Safety Turtle alarm, our patients hardly notice the alarm components and the alarm in no way affects their therapy experience.“
"The front desk staff needs to respond to the pool area and see what needs to happen next," said Simi Valley YMCA Aquatics Director Robert Martin. "The whistles can't always be heard through the walls of the facility. On the first day the alarm was installed, a little girl at the YMCA taking swim lessons was rescued after falling off the steps into the water while her instructor worked with another child. I think what it's done is made the rest of the staff here more aware that we do make rescues. Now everyone hears it."
“A portable aquatic-emergency summoning device should be employed instead of a hard-wired emergency button or telephone in the pool area. Such a device would allow the lifeguard to respond nearly immediately to an aquatic emergency, rather than having travel from where s/he was standing to the emergency call button and then to the distressed swimmer. The lost time often precludes the guard from meeting the 10-second standard for reaching the distressed swimmer. Such devices can be obtained from several sources. Appropriate protocols combined with a commercial version of the Safety Turtle™ (see www.safetyturtle.com) or devices similar to models DXS-62 or DXS-63 by Linear Security, when coupled with an appropriate receiver provide excellent coverage (see www.linearcorp.com).”, Peter Kvale, Risk Management Services, Redwoods Group
"I wanted to pass along this news story for you and your staff concerning the turtle. It has been slightly just over a year since we installed the turtle in all of our branches. Yesterday the turtle was involved in a pool emergency at our Downtown YMCA location and really improved the response time for the victim. It allowed our guard to be a first responder in a lone guard situation and give him the ability to give 100% of his attention to the victim and have the comfort that help was on the way. After folks see this and our insurance company which is Redwoods Groups promotes the Turtle even more you may get lots of calls. It help us save a life yesterday. Our victim is not out of the woods yet but hopefully all will be well. Thanks for all of your support along the way with getting the Turtle installed properly in our YMCAs!" NE, 8 Aug 2008
”Safety Turtle addresses a real concern that I have had with my patients who participate in aquatic therapy,“ said Paul Hougan, founder and president of Therapywerks, Minneapolis. ”I have been particularly impressed with how patients have adopted the practice of using the Safety Turtle alarm. While the safety profile of our patients has been greatly improved with the installation of the Safety Turtle alarm, our patients hardly notice the alarm components and the alarm in no way affects their therapy experience.“
"The front desk staff needs to respond to the pool area and see what needs to happen next," said Simi Valley YMCA Aquatics Director Robert Martin. "The whistles can't always be heard through the walls of the facility. On the first day the alarm was installed, a little girl at the YMCA taking swim lessons was rescued after falling off the steps into the water while her instructor worked with another child. I think what it's done is made the rest of the staff here more aware that we do make rescues. Now everyone hears it."
“A portable aquatic-emergency summoning device should be employed instead of a hard-wired emergency button or telephone in the pool area. Such a device would allow the lifeguard to respond nearly immediately to an aquatic emergency, rather than having travel from where s/he was standing to the emergency call button and then to the distressed swimmer. The lost time often precludes the guard from meeting the 10-second standard for reaching the distressed swimmer. Such devices can be obtained from several sources. Appropriate protocols combined with a commercial version of the Safety Turtle™ (see www.safetyturtle.com) or devices similar to models DXS-62 or DXS-63 by Linear Security, when coupled with an appropriate receiver provide excellent coverage (see www.linearcorp.com).”, Peter Kvale, Risk Management Services, Redwoods Group
Tuesday, 19 August 2008
Summer is nearly over

Summer is nearly over and most of us have had our long awaited holiday, its now time to pack away the bucket and spade, clean out the cool box and store away all the stuff for next year.
However there is one item that you should not put away and that's the Safety Turtle, the Safety Turtle helped to look after your child or children on holiday and should now help to look after your children at home.
Every year to many children die due to drowning in back yard ponds, every one thinks that it is the holiday that possess the greatest risk to your child's health, but the real dangers are often closer than you imagine.
When you go around your parents, how many times have you left your child to play in your parents back garden not even thinking about what dangers it could hold. The fish pond, the water butt, the garden water feature, all a fascination to young minds but all a possible death trap.
You paid good money for the Safety Turtle so why not carry on letting it assist you in safeguarding your children, and why not educate your parents on how it can help them look after your children.
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