Crime & Safety
Boy, 5, Believed To Have Drowned In Backyard Pool In LA County
Authorities are investigating the death of a 5-year-old boy, whose sister reportedly found him in the family pool.

HACIENDA HEIGHTS, CA — A 5-year-old boy died in Hacienda Heights Sunday, and police are investigating the case as a possible drowning in a backyard swimming pool, authorities said Monday.
The emergency was reported at 10:30 p.m. Sunday in the 16000 block of Sigman Street at Stimson Avenue, Los Angeles Sheriff's Department Deputy Jacob Sivley told City News Service.
The initial call was about a child not breathing, possibly due to drowning, Sivley said. According to FOX11, the boy's mother was at home with a little girl, who noticed her brother was in the swimming pool. She ran and alerted her mother.
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Sheriff's homicide detectives were dispatched to the scene, Sivley said.
Drowning is the second-most common cause of accidental death among children 14 and younger, according to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 750 children drown each year, 375 of whom do so within 25 yards of a parent or adult. More startling, the CDC said 10 percent of parents watch their children drown because they don’t know it’s happening.
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About 10 people drown every day in the United States, where drowning is the fifth-leading cause of unintentional injury death, according to the CDC. About one in five people who die from drowning are children 14 and younger, and for every child who dies from drowning, another five are rescued, the agency said.
Rescuers have as few as 20 seconds and up to a minute to save a person from drowning.
Here are five tips for recognizing drowning, as originally published in the Coast Guard’s On Scene magazine and shared by Slate.com:
1. In all but rare circumstances, people are physiologically unable to call for help. The respiratory system is designed for breathing, and speech is a secondary function. “Breathing must be fulfilled before speech occurs,” the article said.
2. A drowning person’s mouth alternately sinks below the surface of the water and then reappears, but the mouth is never above the surface long enough to exhale, inhale and cry for help. A drowning person will exhale and inhale quickly before their mouths start to sink below the surface of the water again.
3. Drowning people can’t flag down help. “Nature instinctively forces them to extend their arms laterally and press down on the water’s surface,” the article said. “Pressing down on the surface of the water permits drowning people to leverage their bodies so they can lift their mouths out of the water to breathe.”
4. When they’re drowning, people lose control of their arms. They’re struggling to stay afloat in the water, and “cannot stop drowning and perform voluntary movements such as waving for help, moving toward a rescuer, or teaching out for a piece of rescue equipment,” the article said.
5. While they’re drowning, people will remain upright in the water, and there’s no evidence of a supporting kick.
Some signs to look for also include:- The drowning person’s head is tilted back with the mouth open;
- Eyes appear glassy and empty, unable to focus, or may be closed;
- Hair may be over the forehead or eyes of the drowning person;
- The drowning person won’t be moving his or her legs;
- The drowning person may be hyperventilating or gasping;
- The person may be trying to swim in a particular direction, but isn’t making headway;
- The person may try to roll over the back;
- The person may appear to be climbing an invisible ladder.
Young children are especially at risk because they can slip quickly away from their parents and go into water without understanding how dangerous it is, according to Parent.com. The most important thing is to get the drowning child out of the water as quickly as possible. If the child isn’t breathing, flip the child over on his or her back and begin rescue breathing while someone else calls for help. Don’t stop performing CPR until medical help arrives, even if the child is unresponsive.
Here are the steps you should follow:
1. Open the child’s airway by gently tilting back the head with one hand and lifting the chin with the other. Put your ear the child’s mouth and nose, and look, listen and feel for signs the child is breathing. Do you feel air or your cheek? Is the infant’s chest moving? While you’re doing this, call the child’s name and check for a response. Can you hear breathing (gasping for air isn’t breathing)? If the child isn’t breathing, what you do next depends on the age of the child.
2. For a child under 1 year, cover the infant’s nose and mouth with your mouth and breathe out two shots of air, each lasting about a second, and look for the chest to rise and fall. If the child or person is older, pinch the child’s nose, and seal your lips around the mouth. Give two, slow, full breaths, about a second each, then wait for the chest to rise and fall.
3. Check for a pulse once you see the person’s chest rising and falling. To check for the pulse, put two fingers on the child’s neck to the side of the Adam’s apple. To find an infant’s pulse, feel inside the arm between the elbow and shoulder. Wait five seconds, and if there still is no pulse, give one breath every three seconds. Check for a pulse every minute, and continue rescue breathing until the child begins breathing or help arrives. When you resume rescue breathing, be sure to tilt the child’s head back and lift the chin.
4. If you can’t find a pulse, you’ll need to begin chest compressions. For infants, visualize a line between the child’s nipples and place two fingers just below the midpoint, then apply five quick, half-inch compressions in about three seconds. After each one, give one breath using the rescue breathing technique. Among older children, use the heel of your hand — or both hands if the person is a teenager or adult — and apply five quick, one-inch compressions to the breastbone (just above where the ribs come together) in about three seconds. After five compressions, perform rescue breathing and give one full breath. For all ages, continue the cycle of five chest compressions followed by a breath in one minute until the person begins breathing on their own or help arrives.
Drowning hazards aren’t limited to big bodies of water, though. Infants and toddlers can drown in as little as two inches of water, including in bath tubs, buckets and containers, toilet bowls, diaper pails and wading pools, according to Parent.com
City News Service contributed to this report.
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