Tragedy struck anyway.
Last June, as the family was about to head to an Alabama beach for an evening crab hunt, 3-year-old Levi somehow slipped out of their vacation house and found his way to the pool. In what seemed like an instant he was face down in the water, and couldn't be revived.
"We weren't neglectful, but somehow we failed to keep him safe," Nicole said. "Everybody knows about statistics, but the reality is nobody thinks it's going to happen to them."
Nicole, who lives in Bristol, Tennessee, has channeled her grief into activism, speaking out about a leading cause of preventable death among children: drowning.
"There's such a stigma that it's even hard to say the word," she said. "People say it's about 'water safety.' No, it's about drowning. We have to stop tiptoeing around it."
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, drowning is the No. 1 cause of unintentional death between ages 1 and 4, and the No. 2 cause between ages 5 and 9. The latest national data show 702 U.S. children under age 15 drowned in 2017.
The figures are not broken down by ethnic group, but minorities may be at even greater risk. The USA Swimming Foundation reports 64 percent of African American children and 45 percent of Hispanic children have low or no swimming ability, compared to 40 percent of white children.
The American Academy of Pediatrics recently updated its recommendations for preventing drowning in children, ranging from vigilance at bath time and emptying buckets and wading pools immediately after use to teaching children to swim and encouraging teenagers to learn CPR.
"We've got to do a better job," said Dr. Sarah Denny, lead author of the new guidelines. "Drownings continue to happen. Parents must be aware of the risks and take action to prevent drowning."
Denny, a pediatrician at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, is particularly concerned about young children.
"Toddlers are curious, they're newly mobile, they're exploring their environment and they have no concept of the risk of water," she said.
She stressed that "layers of protection" are key to avoiding tragedy. Those layers include secure fences around pools, close supervision when children are around water, risk assessment and planning for children at every age level, and education, from the pediatrician's office to public service announcements.
One current announcement features Olympic gold medal skier Bode Miller and his wife Morgan, whose 19-month-old daughter Emmy drowned in a pool in California ; on the same day that Levi Hughes died in Alabama.
"You have to be vigilant, as if it's a lion waiting to snatch your child," Morgan says in the video message.
Nicole Hughes wants to encourage that vigilance with a "Water Guardian" tag, complete with lanyard, that adults can hand off to one another to emphasize the responsibility of supervising children in the water. They're available from her new foundation Levi's Legacy.
"It's another layer of protection," she said. "But the most important goal is just awareness."
If a drowning emergency should occur, "every second makes a difference," said Dr. Vinay Nadkarni, a critical care expert at The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
His recommendations start with calling 911 immediately. Get the victim to a safe area "and assess for signs of life. If they're not breathing normally, start CPR."
For drowning victims, the American Heart Association recommends CPR with chest compressions and rescue breaths.
"Prevention is the best cure," but a devastating accident can still happen, Nadkarni said, which makes knowing CPR no less important than a good fence.
"If you do not know CPR," Nadkarni said, "you should not have a pool."
A new study offers some sobering news about weight-loss surgery.
ReplyDeletePeople who undergo a gastric bypass procedure called Roux-en-Y are three times more likely than those in the general population to die of drug- or alcohol-related causes, according to researchers at the University of Pittsburgh.
The reason isn't clear, but laboratory studies have shown that Roux-en-Y surgery changes the way the body reacts to drugs and alcohol.
"The effect is purely physiological, not psychological," said Dr. John Morton, chief of bariatric and minimally invasive surgery at Yale School of Medicine, who reviewed the findings. "Gastric bypass surgery removes 95% of the stomach. Alcohol receptors exist in the stomach and the liver, so by removing so much of the stomach, people lose the first pass at metabolizing alcohol."
Morton was not involved in the study but has published research on the topic.
For this study, the Pitt researchers followed nearly 2,500 adults who had weight-loss surgery at one of 10 hospitals across the United States. About eight out of 10 were women and 86% were white. Their median age was 46, meaning half were older, half younger. The patients were followed for seven years.
During that time, 10 of the study participants died of causes directly related to drug or alcohol use.
That included six accidental drug overdoses; one intentional drug overdose; one overdose where intent was unknown; and two from alcoholic liver disease. All 10 had had a Roux-en-Y bypass, which reduces the stomach size and shortens the intestine.
As with other forms of "bariatric" (weight-loss) surgery, having a smaller stomach makes people feel full sooner, so they lose weight.
To compare patient death rates with those in the general population, researchers used a formula called "person-years." It measures the number of people studied and number of years each participated in the study.
On average, there were 89 deaths per 100,000 person-years among Roux-en-Y patients, compared to 30.5 per 100,000 in the general population, the investigators found.
Study co-author Wendy King said, "Our study primarily focused on those who had Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery; it did not examine differences in drug- and alcohol-related mortality among those who had undergone" another type of weight-loss surgery called sleeve gastrectomy.
"New evidence suggests that sleeve gastrectomy may also alter the way alcohol is metabolized in the body, so there is more work to do," she added. King is an associate professor in the department of epidemiology at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health.
The nation's most popular weight-loss surgery, sleeve gastrectomy, also removes a portion of the stomach, although not as much as Roux-en-Y gastric bypass. A third type of bariatric surgery is gastric banding, which ties off the upper portion of the stomach.
Because their stomachs hold less, people who undergo bariatric surgery tend to feel the effects of alcohol sooner and after fewer drinks. Researchers said that's why it is important for patients to pay attention not only to how alcohol makes them feel, but also whether it interferes with relationships and daily activities.
The findings highlight the need for more education, diagnosis, treatment and tracking of alcohol and drug use as part of post-surgery care, the study authors said.
The researchers also called on primary-care doctors to be more aware of these risks as they treat patients who have had weight-loss surgery, and for more long-term follow-up. The deaths uncovered in the study occurred about five years after surgery.
Morton underscored the importance of awareness.
"Substance abuse education needs to be embedded in the pre-op process, and more counseling needs to be provided after surgery," he said. "But people also need to remember that they are having bariatric surgery to lose weight and improve their health, and consuming alcohol doesn't fit with those goals."