Crime & Safety

Hot Car Deaths In Virginia: What Parents Need To Know

Know how to keep kids safe in the car this summer as temperatures rise. 8 children in VA, 4 other states have died in hot cars this year.

VIRGINIA — Eight children in five states, including the Commonwealth, have died in hot cars so far this year, a reminder to parents in Virginia that cars can heat up quickly, even on mild days, becoming deadly in little as 10 minutes.

Virginia parents are, unfortunately, familiar with the tragedy. From 1998 through 2021, 29 children age 14 and younger in our state have died of vehicular heatstroke, according to No Heat Stroke.

Per capita, that’s 18.68 hot car deaths per 1 million kids age 14 and younger, the statistics show. Virginia ranks 34th in the country for hot car deaths.

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An 18-month-old child died after he was left in a hot car June 28, Chesterfield County Police said, and the distraught father then took his own life. Last summer, a 5-year-old died in Springfield. Two deaths were reported in 2020 in Virginia.

Research conducted by No Heat Stroke founder Jan Null, an adjunct professor and research meteorologist at San Jose State University, shows that on a 70-degree day, the temperature inside a vehicle can reach 89 degrees within five minutes. Within an hour, it can reach 113 degrees.

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It’s even worse on 90-degree days. Within five minutes, the temperature can reach 100 degrees; in an hour, it can reach 133 degrees.

Consumer Reports said its tests show temperatures inside cars can reach dangerous levels for 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.

Young children are at a heightened risk of dying of heatstroke, and not only due to their inability to escape a hot car. A child’s body temperature rises three to five times faster than that of an adult, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. Heatstroke begins when the core body temperature reaches about 104 degrees, and children can die when theirs reaches 107.

In many cases, a parent completely loses awareness that the child is in the car, according to David Diamond, professor of psychology, molecular pharmacology and physiology at the University of South Florida who has studied the hot car deaths phenomenon for 15 years.

His research shows parents can forget their kids are in the car as a result of competition among the brain’s memory systems — the “habit memory” system that allows people to rotely perform routine tasks without thinking about them, and the “prospective memory” system used to plan. The habit memory system typically prevails, and the problem is particularly acute among parents experiencing sleep deprivation or stress, according to Diamond.

“Often these stories involve a distracted parent,” Gene Brewer, an Arizona State University associate professor of psychology, said in a news release. “Memory failures are remarkably powerful, and they happen to everyone. There is no difference between gender, class, personality, race or other traits. Functionally, there isn’t much of a difference between forgetting your keys and forgetting your child in the car.”

As the national child hot-car death toll since 1998 surpasses 900, the NHTSA offers some tips to help parents and other caregivers prevent leaving children in cars during hot weather.

  • Never leave a child in a vehicle unattended — even if the windows are partially open or the engine is running and the air conditioning is on.
  • Make it a habit to check your entire vehicle — front and back — before locking the door and walking away. Train yourself to “Park, Look, Lock,” or always ask yourself, "Where's Baby?"
  • Ask your child care provider to call if your child doesn’t show up for care as expected.
  • Place a personal item such as a purse or briefcase in the back seat, as another reminder to look before you lock. Write a note or place a stuffed animal in the passenger's seat to remind you that a child is in the back seat.
  • Store car keys out of a child's reach, and teach children that a vehicle is not a play area. A quarter of all hot car deaths occur because the child got into an unlocked car, not because a parent left them inside, according to the NHTSA.

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