Community Corner

Hot-Car Deaths: How Many Kids Have Died In Texas?

Cars can heat up quickly, even when outside temperatures are mild. How many kids have died in hot cars in Texas?

Spring has barely arrived, but children have already died in South Carolina and Florida this year after being left in hot cars, which can heat up quickly even when the temperature outside is cool and comfortable. In Texas, more children die in hot cars than anywhere else.

Experts say hot-car deaths, which claimed 837 children under age 14 from 1990 to 2017 nationwide, are entirely preventable. In Texas during those same years, 120 infants and children died after being left in hot cars. That ranked Texas No. 1 in the nation, followed by Florida with 89 deaths.

On average, 37 kids a year die of vehicular heat stroke, according to national statistics. Excluding crashes, that's the leading cause of death in vehicles for children 14 years and younger.

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Hot-car deaths can occur anywhere, though they happen most often in states where temperatures are the hottest. Despite the state's size and hot weather, child advocates say Texas still ranks high nationwide even on a per capita basis.

From 1990-2017, only two states — Alaska and Vermont — reported no deaths due to vehicular heat stroke, according to KidsAndCars.org, which keeps a database of these tragedies.

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Consumer Reports said last fall that its tests show temperatures inside cars can reach dangerous levels of children and pets within an hour. One test showed that when the temperature outside was 61 degrees, the temperature inside reached more than 105 degrees within an hour.

But on warm summer days, the interior of cars can become deadly in as little as 10 minutes, Jan Null, an adjunct professor and research meteorologist at San Jose State University, told Patch in an email. It's never OK to leave a child unattended in a car, he said.

Hot cars are especially dangerous for children and, especially, babies, who dehydrate more quickly than adults and can't regulate their body temperature. Their bodies heat up three to five times faster than adults', according to the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Last June, a Houston father forgot to drop off his 7-month-old son with the baby sitter after taking his two other children to day care. Instead, the father drove to work and the baby boy was left in the back seat, where he was found dead about 10 hours later, the Associated Press reported.

"The fact is that heatstroke tragedies happen to loving, caring, attentive parents," the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said. "The vast majority of these tragedies happen when a child is mistakenly left behind in a vehicle or when an unattended child gains access to a vehicle."

In many cases, a parent completely loses awareness that the child is in the car," David Diamond, professor of psychology, molecular pharmacology and physiology at the University of South Florida told ABC News in 2016.

"It's our brain habit system. It allows you do do things without thinking about it. That plan we have to stop a habit seems to get suppressed. We lose awareness of our plan to interrupt that habit," Diamond said. "These different brain systems actually compete against each other."

The problem is particularly acute among parents experiencing sleep deprivation or stress, Diamond said.
"You sort of go in autopilot mode," he said, explaining how a routine drive from home to work, instead of home to the daycare center, is automatic.

The NHTSA offers some tips for parents:

  • Look before you lock: Get into the routine of always checking the back seats of your vehicle before you lock it and walk away.
  • Leave yourself a gentle reminder: Get in the habit of keeping a stuffed toy or other momento in your child's car seat, then move it to the front seat as a visual reminder when the baby is in the back seat. Or, place your phone, briefcase or purse in the back seat when traveling with your child.
  • Get in the practice of routine checks: If someone else is driving your child, or your daily routine has been altered, make a call to make sure the child arrived safely at the destination.
  • Keep your keys out of children's reach: Nearly three in 10 heatstroke deaths happen when an unattended child gains access to a vehicle, the NHTSA said.

Beth Dalbey of Patch's national staff contributed to this report.

Photo by Pushish Images via Shutterstock

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