Young children love water and it can be fun for everybody, as well as great exercise. It's vital that you or another adult always watches your child around the bath or any water, though, because drowning can occur in less than a minute, and without you hearing a thing.

About 15% of child drownings happen in the bath. Stay with your child, even if she's only splashing in a couple of centimetres of water in an inflatable pool or in the bathtub.
Babies and toddlers are top-heavy, which makes them susceptible to drowning. If a baby falls into even shallow water, she cannot always lift herself out. Drowning can occur in less than a minute, and without any warning noises.
In Australia, children drown in:
Children also drown in less obvious locations, such as nappy buckets, water tanks, water features and fish ponds – even pets' water bowls. Nine children drowned in these locations during 2005-06.
For every drowning, approximately three other children are hospitalised from a near-drowning incident, some of which result in severe brain damage. Prevention and 100% supervision are the keys to keeping your child safe around water.
It's important to always stay with your child and watch her whenever she is near water – even when she can swim.
Keep her in sight and within arm's reach at all times, whether you're at the beach or the swimming pool, near dams, rivers and lakes, or at home when the bath or spa is full. Hold her hand when you are near waves or paddling in rivers.
You can also teach your child about water safety and how to swim. Many children can learn to swim by the time they are four or five.
Learning CPR and what to do in an emergency could also save your child's life. You might like to keep a copy of our guide to CPR for babies under one and our CPR guide for children, or enrol in a CPR course and update your skills annually.
Around the house
Outside the house – dams, ponds and tanks
Beaches, lakes and rivers
Byard, R. (in press). Rainwater tank drowning. Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine. Retrieved 8 September, 2008, from www.sciencedirect.com
Royal Life Saving Society Australia (2006). The National Drowning Report, 06. Sydney: Author.
Royal Life Saving Society Australia (2007). The National Drowning Report, 07. Sydney: Author.
Thompson, D.C., Rivara, F.P. (1998). Pool fencing for preventing drowning in children. The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Issue 1.
Victorian Injury Surveillance System (1990). Drownings and near drownings at home. Hazard, 5, 1-3.