Sledding
Sledding can be fun and safe
The speedy, bumpy, sometimes scary slide downhill is one of the outdoor winter activities that youths and adults have always enjoyed. It can be fun, but every year thousands of youths and adults are injured sledding down hills in city parks, streets and resort areas. Most of these injuries are preventable.
According to the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, there were 74,000 sledding, snow tubing and tobogganing-related injuries treated at hospital emergency rooms, doctors' offices and clinics in 2004. The total medical, legal and liability, pain and suffering, and work loss-related costs were more than $2.3 billion.
The majority of injuries happen to youths age 14 and younger, especially in the run outs at the end of the sledding path. Adult supervision is needed to make sure that children sledding down a hill don't collide with children in the run outs and that the end of the sledding path isn't in a street or parking lot, pond or other hazardous area.
Some of the injuries can be serious enough to cause lifelong disability or death. When a sled hits a fixed object such as a tree, rock or fence, the rider may suffer head and neck injuries. Helmets help prevent head injuries and should be worn by sledders under 12 years old.
Young children are very vulnerable to injuries. They have proportionally larger heads and higher centers of gravity than older children and teens. Their coordination has not fully developed and they can have difficulty avoiding falls and obstacles.
Don't sled on public streets
The first big snowfall of the winter season often tempts youths to sled down sloping streets where they may be hit by cars and trucks or slam into parked vehicles, curbs and fences.
Speeding down hills in parks that are not designed for sledding is risky. Individuals may have to dodge trees and rocks.
Sit in a forward-facing position
Some youths may run with their sleds and leap forward in a "belly flop" that does not give them control of where they are sliding. Do not sled on plastic sheets; they can't be steered and can be pierced by sharp objects.
Essential Precautions
- Sledding should be done only in designated and approved areas where there are no trees, posts, fences or other obstacles in the sledding path. The sledding run must not end in a street, drop off, parking lot, pond or other hazard.
- Parents or adults must supervise children in sledding areas to make sure the sledding path is safe and there are not too many sledders on the hill at the same time or at the end of the run to avoid collisions.
- No one should sled headfirst. All participants should sit in a forward-facing position, steering with their feet or a rope tied to the steering handles of the sled.
Preferred Precautions
- Young children should wear a fitted helmet while sledding.
- The sled should have runners and a steering mechanism, which is safer than toboggans or snow disks.
- Sledding in the evening should only be done in well-lighted areas.
- Plastic sheets or other materials that can be pierced by objects on the ground should not be used for sledding.
- Sledders should wear layers of clothing for protection from injuries and cold.
Your orthopaedist is a medical doctor with extensive training in the diagnosis and nonsurgical and surgical treatment of the musculoskeletal system, including bones, joints, ligaments, tendons, muscles and nerves.
This brochure has been prepared by the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons and is intended to contain current information on the subject from recognized authorities. However, it does not represent official policy of the Academy and its text should not be construed as excluding other acceptable viewpoints.
February 2002
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