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Mall Safety Tips for the Holiday Season


shopping_in_mall_1Trying to make your way through crowded malls while carrying your jacket, juggling bags, and keeping your child from breaking anything you can’t afford to buy makes you an attractive target to criminals looking to grab wallets, purses and your purchases. Here are a few mall safety tips that can help keep you and your valuables safe from would-be mall thieves.

Here are a few mall safety tips that can help keep you and your valuables safe from would-be mall thieves.

WALLET AND PURSE PROTECTION STRATEGIES

PERSONAL SAFETY IN MALLS

The threat of physical assault does not necessarily increase along with the crowds that herald the holiday season. It’s when you’re far from the crowd, in distant reaches of parking lots or other isolated areas of the mall that you are most vulnerable. To protect yourself:

Always try to walk to and from your vehicle with another person. If you are shopping alone, consider walking near other shoppers in the parking lot.

DEALING WITH CHILDREN WHEN SHOPPING DURING THE HOLIDAYS

Holiday shopping can be chaotic, tiring and frustrating. Just imagine how much more of an ordeal it may be to a young child dragged from one store to the next as you work your way down your shopping list. The Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children offers these guidelines to keep tots from being pushed beyond their endurance, and older children from wandering off or otherwise getting into trouble out of boredom:

If you bring infants or toddlers on a shopping trip, limit the excursion to one or two hours. Also, make sure your child is rested and fed before you head out.

SHOPPING CART SAFETY TIPS FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON

Some 21,600 children end up in the hospital each year after they’ve fallen — or even leaped — from shopping carts, according to the National Safe Kids Campaign. Children 5 years old and younger, particularly boys, are especially at risk. Shopping cart injuries include head and neck trauma, fractures, lacerations and damage to internal organs. Three children have died.

Part of the problem is that shopping carts can tip over easily because the wheelbase is narrow. Adding to a cart’s instability, children have a hard time sitting still.

Statistics compiled by the National Safe Kids Campaign show that 80 percent of parents leave their children unattended at least once during a shopping trip. The only way to keep children safe is to stay with the cart at all times. Even if you strap your child into the cart seat, he may still manage to tip the cart over. Just wiggling out of the harness or seat belt can quickly unbalance an already unstable load. To keep shopping carts from tipping over:

Place young children in the seat, not the basket.

ESCALATOR SAFETY

Mangled hands and feet, lacerated tendons, broken or cut off fingers and toes, head injuries — all are documented escalator injuries. Children can fall and get caught when they run, walk, sit or play on moving escalators. Those age 6 and younger are at the highest risk.

In some cases, escalator injuries occur when children get their hands caught between moving and stationary parts of the handrail. Others are hurt while playing at the foot of the escalator and becoming entangled in the machinery of the comb plate at the bottom of the stairs.

Though uncommon — fewer than 1,000 are reported each year — escalator injuries are usually serious. Luckily, most such accidents are avoidable. Teaching your children to face forward, to hold both an adult’s hand and the handrail while riding, to stand still and keep feet away from the edge of the step are probably the best preventive measures, according to the Escalator Safety Foundation.

To keep your child and yourself safe:

Check for loose or dangling items of clothing before stepping on. Loose shoelaces, mittens, and drawstrings can get trapped in an escalator’s moving parts, cautions the National Safety Council.


CAR BREAK-INS MALLS

As parking areas fill during the holiday season, shoppers are often forced to park far from mall exits, sometimes in poorly lighted areas. Now that there is less daylight, you’re likely to find yourself entering the mall while the sun is up and leaving after dark, so make sure there are lights nearby before parking. Other parking tips:

Park as close to entrances and exits as you can. No one wants to circle the lot for an hour waiting for a good spot to open up, but give it a shot, at least for a few minutes.

ATM CRIME

Automated teller machines are handy to have around when you’re spending it up at the mall and don’t want to max out your credit cards. But while ATMs make it easier for you to get to your money, they provide the same service for thieves.

To protect yourself, handle your bank card with the same prudence you would cash or credit cards and keep it in a safe place. Memorize your PIN code so you won’t have to write it on your card or a piece of paper, and carry it in your purse or wallet. And keep your PIN to yourself — if others are nearby waiting to use the ATM, don’t let them see which buttons you press.

MORE ATM ADVICE

Choose a bank with an ATM located in a highly visible, well-lighted area.

Mall Safety Tips for the Holiday Season was last modified: October 29th, 2019 by Beth Williams
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