HealthLinks: Keeping Children Safe

Practis Blog

Keep your website, newsletter, and social media content fresh and engaging with these Healthwise HealthLinks. The copy promotes timely health themes by highlighting topics in the Healthwise Knowledgebase. Use the copy below on your website homepage or condition-specific pages, and create links to the related Healthwise Knowledgebase topics. You can also place the copy in emails, newsletters, or any other patient materials.

Take picnicking precautions

It’s lunchtime on a hot summer day and your family is ready to dig in. But should you be worried about food poisoning? How long has that potluck potato salad been sitting out? Is it a problem if your chicken sandwich was sunbathing beside you at the beach? Follow these simple guidelines to ensure food safety so you don’t spoil your summer with food poisoning.

[Create a hyperlink to Food Safety: Serving on your website. DOCHWID=te5069]

Tips for stopping swimmer’s ear

Splashing around on a hot day is all fun and games until someone gets swimmer’s ear. Swimmer’s ear is an inflammation or infection of the ear canal, the passage that leads from the outer ear to the eardrum. Swimmer’s ear can be very painful, and it commonly occurs in—you guessed it—people who have been swimming. Find out what to do if swimmer’s ear strikes and learn how to prevent it from taking hold.

[Create a hyperlink to Swimmer’s Ear (Otitis Externa) on your website. DOCHWID=za1096]

Too much fun in the sun?

Sometimes kids have so much fun that they don’t know when to stop. Too much fun in the sun can lead to heat exhaustion. Heat exhaustion can be serious, and you may need to call your doctor. Watch this short video to learn tips for avoiding heat exhaustion, when you can take care of your child at home and how, and when to get help.

[Create a hyperlink to Here’s Help: Mild Heat Exhaustion in Children on your website. DOCHWID=aci2313]

Take the sting out of insect stings

Insect stings usually cause minor discomfort, and most will heal on their own without a visit to the doctor. But there are a few things you can do to take the sting out of insect stings. One is removing the stinger quickly to minimize the amount of venom you receive. Learn what else to do—and what not to do—after an insect sting.

[Create a hyperlink to Care of an Insect Sting on your website. DOCHWID=tp22237spec]

Social Media Teasers

  • Don’t spoil your summer with food poisoning! Follow these simple guidelines to ensure food safety in summer’s heat.
    [Create a shortened URL to Food Safety: Serving DOCHWID=te5069]
  • Swimmer’s ear can be caused by—you guessed it—swimming. Learn more about this often-painful condition and how to prevent it.
    [Create a shortened URL to Swimmer’s Ear (Otitis Externa) DOCHWID=za1096]
  • Too much fun in the sun can lead to heat exhaustion. Watch this video for tips on avoiding heat exhaustion and when to call your doctor.
    [Create a shortened URL to Here’s Help: Mild Heat Exhaustion in Children DOCHWID=aci2313]
  • To help take the sting out of insect stings, remove the stinger right away. Learn more about what to do—and what not to do—after a sting.
    [Create a shortened URL to Care of an Insect Sting DOCHWID=tp22237spec]
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