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Speedo Life Suit is a Drowning Hazard
by Jamie B. written to speedo international
Posted Mon June 23, 2008 12:00 pm
Write a Letter to this Company

This letter is featured on Mommage



On 6-16-08 I took my 7 yr old son and 3 yr old daughter up to a friend's pool to cool off and play in the water. It was a spur-of-the-moment thing and I didn't have a suit or floaties for my 3 year old. My friend had plenty of suits to choose from. I chose to put her in a Speedo Life suit; the kind that has the floatation device built in the entire front to back torso part. I felt pretty good about it especially since she just wanted to sit on the side of the pool and put her feet in. I didn't have a suit so I sat at the table next to the pool and watched her and her brother play. Next thing I knew she was face down in the water kicking her feet round-like, trying to flip herself over. This suit had prevented her from flipping over thus keeping her head down in the water. I believe this product to be very dangerous and a drowning hazard not a life saving device. Parents: ~BE CAUTIOUS WHEN USING THIS TYPE OF PRODUCT~

Reevaluate this product! Is there something they can do so that in a case like this will force the child's face upward? I am no engineer and have no expertise in the life-saving device industry, but I believe that if I had not seen my daughter face-down the way she was, this product would have been a contributor to her death rather than a device that helped save her life.


Reply



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by JamesB37 Posted Fri June 27, 2008 @ 3:53 PM

~BE CAUTIOUS WHEN USING THIS TYPE OF PRODUCT~
This is the message I intended to all.

I wrote this letter to hopefully get the word out to other
moms/dads/grandparents/babysitters/aunts/uncles/friends to be very
cautious and DO NOT 'assume' such as I did that this device would keep
your child safe in/around water. "False sense of security" is the
perfect phrase for what I felt. I take absolutely 100% responsibility
of what happened that day and can assure you as well as my daughter
that I will never allow that to happen again. I have gone through my
own emotional torment over this and wish I could have been more
careful at that moment, but all I can do now is take this as a
learning experience, pass the word, and thank God I can still tuck my
daughter in at night.

The fact that she was face down and trying to turn herself over and
could not because the suit wouldn't allow her to is my concern about
this product. This life suit, life-preserver, whatever you want to
call it, (it was not a pair of floaties) was the appropriate size for
her. It was intended for children up to 33 lbs- my daughter is 30lbs!
There wasn't any adjusting to it. I couldn't take anything out or add
more into it. It was all one piece sewn together. I don't know whether
the suit is designed to automatically make the child's face go up,
that's why I am asking Speedo to reevaluate it to possibly make it do
so- because it didn't with my child. All I know is it did help her
stay afloat but what good is that if she can't get her face out of the
water?

Reply


"I take absolutely 100% responsibility of what happened that day" by Donno Fri June 27, 2008 @ 10:08 PM
by cissy Posted Wed June 25, 2008 @ 3:08 PM

Never Ever rely on any type of device to save your children. Being
complacent and assured around water is the main reason we lose young
lives. My children were in "swimming classes" at 9 months old. If
nothing else I introduced the Don't Panic rule. Both have gone on to
be able to swim, but more importantly comfortable in the water.
Lessons available through the Red Cross. Thank the Good Lord all is
well.

Reply
by Michelle O. Posted Tue June 24, 2008 @ 5:04 PM

I had these for my kids - didn't really like them though. If I
remember correctly, their purpose is to just assist the child in
staying afloat - a product to help them master swimming, not to save
them if they don't know how to swim. They call them a teaching
tool.

Your warning to other parents is a good one though. I can see where
someone could easily get a false sense of security if they didn't
really know much about this product.

Thank goodness your daughter is ok.

Reply


I have to think the original packaging has those warnings by Donno Tue June 24, 2008 @ 5:46 PM

by Richard S. Posted Tue June 24, 2008 @ 11:25 AM

While I am glad you are concerned about your child's safety and
warning people about a potential product's hazzard, I do have to
comment on this.

The blow up floaties that go on a child's arms when they are in a pool
are not an approved floatation device as these can be easily popped.
The only approved floatation device is a life vest that goes over a
child's head and buckles around the waist.

It is up to the parents to make sure their kids are safe when in the
water. If your child does not know how to swim do not assume
"floaties" will be enough protection for you child. It is up to you to
make sure they are safe. If your child can not swim it is better to
have them wear a life vest than the arm "floaties".

I am pretty sure Speedo does not market this suit as a substitute for
a life vest.

Reply
by BKarg Posted Tue June 24, 2008 @ 8:04 AM

I owned one of these suits for my daughter many years ago and if I
remember right the floating "inserts" could be added or taken out to
adjust for the childs swimming ability. It sounds to me that the
previous child that wore it may have been more of an accomplished
swimmer and it was adjusted as such. I am happy she is okay, chaulk
it up as a learning experience and move on.

Reply


speedo suit... by dulynoted Tue June 24, 2008 @ 12:29 PM


I just read the letter again by ♪♪Venice♪♪ Tue June 24, 2008 @ 5:37 PM

by Teresa B. Posted Tue June 24, 2008 @ 1:02 AM

Maybe its just me and my over protectiveness of my kids when they were
children and now of my grandchildren one of which is almost 2. There
is NO way in this world that I would have allowed either one of my
kids or my grandaughter to get near a pool with out me holding thier
hands when they were that young. I took my kids to the Red Cross and
had them trained to swim when they were 5 & 6, Before that I never
let them near the pool unless I was able to physcially hold on to
them.

My scare came when my daughter was around 18 months old. We were at
the beach in Florida and I had taken her in the water which was around
knee to waist deep for me. The waves were strong that day, and I had
just put her feet in the water when a huge wave knocked me over and I
lost hold of my baby. I kept trying to grab her, she had floaties on
her arms but the wave kept carring her to shore. Those few seconds
that passed before I was able to get her in my arms again seemed like
an eternity. She came out well and good and is now an accomplished
swimmer who is teaching her daughter to swim.


I realize mom did not have a suit, but I think I would have been
sitting next to the child on the side of the pool not at a near by
table.

Reply


Parents do get... um... comfortable by RedheadwGlasses Tue June 24, 2008 @ 1:15 PM

You can come babysit my kids anytime, Red!! n/t by Final Score: Boys-3, Girls-1 Tue June 24, 2008 @ 3:56 PM

Non-parent? by SZ Thu June 26, 2008 @ 12:49 AM


by dulynoted Posted Mon June 23, 2008 @ 6:09 PM

This has been bothering me so I went on the Speedo web site and cannot
find anything about a "Speedo Life Suit" but there was something
called a "Bubble Float Suit" and is available in childrens sizes 2-3
and up to 5-6.
Its almost like a scub one piece suit and has floatation devices in it
to keep the child afloat. However it does go by size.

Also my niece was very tiny, thin for her age and had a hard time
finding flotation deviceed to fit her when they took her out on their
boat. She was so lightweight that when they put a vest on her, she
would fall over because of the weight...maybe this is what happened
with your child...not sure but I do not think its Speedo's fault
really. I just think it was a suit that did not fit her right.

Reply

by Donno Posted Mon June 23, 2008 @ 5:33 PM

I have to ask - was this suit for your age child? Also, is this
device designed to be automatically make the child go face up? I
doubt it. It sounds like something that should be used with adult
supervision, so you should always be near your child in case anything
like this occurs.

I'm so thankful this incident ended positively and no harm came to
your child.

ps I would always treat something new like this carefully until your
child is comfortable on her own in the water. In other words, if she
goes in the water, go in with her and see how it acts before leaving
her to her own actions.

Reply

by Casmly Posted Mon June 23, 2008 @ 3:19 PM

Let me say first that I am sorry to hear that your daughter had this
experience. That being said...

I never would have purchased my son one of these, but his grandmother
did when she was without a suit for him. I tend to use this suit
every time we are at the lake now, just in case he happens to hit a
drop off or go out a little too far. Often times I'm watching from
the beach instead of in the lake, so the suit would buy me a bit of
time and keep him afloat so that I knew exactly where he was. I can
understand how this suit might make it difficult for a child to flip
over if they happen to hit the water chest first. HOWEVER, I'm sure
that most likely, the label does not in any way market this item as a
life saving devise. Adult supervision is the only way to make sure
children are safe around water. I kind of equate all of these
floatation devices with baby walkers...many accidents may occur each
year, but it's usually because an adult has a false sense of security
when using them.

Reply


But isn't not being able to flip over very dangerous by ♪♪Venice♪♪ Mon June 23, 2008 @ 5:26 PM


Still thinking... by ♪♪Venice♪♪ Mon June 23, 2008 @ 5:43 PM


Mine had plenty of warnings... by Casmly Mon June 23, 2008 @ 6:34 PM


I wonder by ♪♪Venice♪♪ Mon June 23, 2008 @ 8:16 PM


by Wolf Posted Mon June 23, 2008 @ 2:47 PM

I looked at thoes for my son. Because you (I think) didn't have one
with the packaging still on it, you did not know that thoes are for
kids that know a bit about how to swim. I think the are a 'Stage 3'
which is says, something about being used only on kids that have had
some swiming but still need a little help. It does NOT say anywhere
(That I saw) on the packaging that it is a life saving device. It
does say "use only with adult supervision" (did I spell that right?)
Sounds like you where there and that's good. Just because it "looked
safe" and said "Life suit" does not mean it is a "Life SAVING" device.

Reply

by dulynoted Posted Mon June 23, 2008 @ 1:07 PM

I agree with Red...the size of the suit must fit the size of the child
for it to work correctly Sounds like it was too heavy for your child
and made it difficult for her to manuever in it.
Otherwise these would have been pulled off the market as being unsafe
for what they were inteneded...as a life preserver type suit.

I imagine you will get the same reply from the company. That the suit
must fit the child.

Reply

by RedheadwGlasses Posted Mon June 23, 2008 @ 12:36 PM

That sounds awful! Thank goodness you were right there. My only
question/comment would be are you sure the suit was meant to fit a
child of your daughter's size? I would think that fit is a crucial
element.

Other than that, it sounds like a well-intentioned product that needs
to be investigated further.

How scary that must have been for you! I'm very glad your daughter is
okay.

Reply






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