Hot playground danger: Kids could get third-degree burns from equipment

As record heat continues to scorch the midsection of the country and the South, FOX Weather hit the playground to find out exactly how hot the swings, slides and benches actually get. Even our expert was surprised by how hot the equipment got on a cloudy day.

“There’s some knobs for the kids to grab, and I’m getting some temperatures here of 118 to 125 degrees,” Lieutenant Kristian Garcia of the Miami-Dade Fire and Rescue Department said as he ran his thermal gun over the surface. “Today’s cloudy, so the temperature should have exceeded 140 on a regular hot, sunny day.” 

He found the artificial turf at 145 degrees, the swing at 119 degrees and a kid’s bench over 130 degrees. The air temperature was only 91 at the Miami playground.

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Unsuspecting kids who flock to playgrounds and during recess don’t realize the hidden danger. And children are more susceptible than adults to burns, according to the Royal Children’s Hospital.

Even surfaces currently in the shade can be hot. Dark-painted surfaces and metal retain heat. This table below was 149 in the sun. Garcia then took the temperature in the shade. The surface was still 125 degrees, hot enough for a first-degree burn.

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FOX Weather’s Jason Frazer looked into how much hotter common play surfaces get in the sun versus the shade on a 100-degree day:

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Blacktop surfaces and asphalt get even hotter in the sun. A study by researchers at the Wuhan University of Technology in China found that asphalt pavement is generally 75 degrees warmer than the air temperature. 

That means the 90-degree day in Miami could net blacktop temperatures of 160 degrees. The blacktop at Frazer’s park on a 100-degree day could reach 175 degrees, which means instantaneous burns.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology posted the following skin temperatures and the associated damage:

Most adults will suffer third-degree burns at 150 degrees for 2 seconds or 130 degrees for 6 seconds, according to the Arizona Department of Child Services.

A first-degree burn only damages the outer layer of skin, the epidermis. It is painful, red, dry, without blisters, and rarely means long-term damage, according to Johns Hopkins Medicine.

Second-degree burns damage the epidermis and part of the dermis layer. A superficial second-degree burn is painful, blisters and may scar. Blisters may weep, leaving the skin open to infection. Deeper second-degree burns are less painful because the nerves are damaged. They will form more scars and weeping blisters, according to a study published in the National Library of Medicine.

A third-degree burn destroys both the epidermis and the dermis. The site is dry and numb because the nerve endings are destroyed. 

Garcia agrees that most parents and teachers won’t have a thermal gun at the playground. But, there are some easy steps and cautions that they should take before letting the kids play.

“We could simply put our hands over these possible hot surface areas. If we have toddlers, maybe take a knee and feel the surface of the Astroturf,” Garcia suggested. “We could scan the playground and possibly tell the kids, ‘Hey, these surfaces are going to be hot,’ or we could avoid these playgrounds in the middle of the day.”

He suggests hitting the playground in the early morning or after a rain shower.

Some school districts have heat plans. The Miami-Dade School District said that they stop outdoor activities when the thermometer hits 92. 

   

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