A child can drown in seconds. Doctors want more families to be prepared
[July 06, 2026]
By MIKE STOBBE
NEW YORK (AP) — Doctors and others are sounding an alarm: More U.S.
children have been drowning in recent years.
“When drowning occurs, seconds matter,” said Dr. Rohit Shenoi, the lead
author of a recent American Academy of Pediatrics warning. “Quick rescue
and resuscitation can mean the difference between life, death and
lifelong disability.”
About 4,000 to 5,000 Americans drown each year. Most are adults who die
in natural bodies of water, such as lakes, ponds or oceans.
But statistically speaking, drowning is a much larger danger to
children. It’s the No. 1 cause of death for kids ages 1 to 4, and one of
the top killers of children ages 5 to 14. The drowning rate is higher
for white kids in the younger group, but much higher for Black, American
Indian and Alaska Native children in the older group.
Drownings of very young children sometimes occur in bathtubs. But most,
like Stewie Leonard's, occur in swimming pools.
A family tragedy leads to a foundation for water safety
The Stew Leonard’s grocery chain offers a Disney-like shopping
experience, featuring food-promoting animatronic characters like a
dancing banana, a mooing cow and singing avocados. But several of its
stores also have an animatronic creature that seems out of place: a
life-jacketed duck named Stewie who sings about how not to drown.

The duck is named for the son of Stew Leonard, the grocery chain’s chief
executive. The boy was 21 months old when he drowned during a family
vacation on the island of St. Martin in 1989.
More than a dozen adults and kids had gathered at a birthday party for
Stewie's older sister, who was turning 3. Stew Leonard was outside
hanging balloons and his wife was inside baking a cake.
“I saw Stewie outside and I assumed that he (Leonard) was watching him,”
said his wife, Kim, noting that other relatives also were in the area of
the pool.
“We never communicated with each other; ‘You’ve got him?’” said Kim
Leonard, now 65. “When everyone’s watching, nobody’s watching.”
“There were a couple of balloons floating in the water,” Leonard, 71,
recalled. “And you know after a few minutes, sort of everybody was like,
‘Where’s Stewie?’ Unfortunately I was the one who found him. He was face
down in the pool.”
His death led the couple to start a foundation that pays for children’s
swimming lessons and promotes drowning prevention.
Why are more kids drowning?
Unintentional child drowning deaths in the U.S. fell from around 2,000 a
year in the 1980s to below 1,000 a year by the early 2000s, thanks in
part to public awareness campaigns, expanded access to swimming lessons,
and adoption of pool fencing laws. Between 2000 and 2019, health
officials saw a 38% drop.
But then the trend reversed, with the number of child drowning deaths
rising from 756 in 2019 to 865 in 2024, the most recent year for which
complete data is available. The bulk of them were children younger than
5. The child drowning death rate also increased slightly, from 1.1 to
1.2 per 100,000 children.
What happened?
The COVID-19 pandemic interrupted swimming lessons and lifeguard
training programs, and contributed to a national lifeguard shortage.
Meanwhile, some data suggests an increase in swimming pool construction
and increases in unsupervised swimming, said Tessa Clemens, the CDC
Foundation’s senior director for drowning prevention initiatives.
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 Kym Roberts studies drownings in
Australia — where child drownings have been either level or
decreasing in recent years. She said “drowning in young children is
often associated with falls into water and lapses in direct
supervision.”
Some possible good news: Preliminary U.S. data for last year
suggests child drownings declined. But it's not clear whether that's
the start of a trend, and the deaths still remain higher compared to
before the COVID-19 pandemic, Clemens said.
Pediatricians push for standards and regulations
Inventors have recognized a need for child water safety measures,
and recent years have seen the emergence of immersion alarms that
sound if the wristband a child is wearing goes underwater. But
manufacturers of such devices note they can serve as an extra
warning system, but should not be considered a primary way to keep
children safe.
The federal government's top public health agency, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, laid off Clemens and the rest of the
staff of its drowning prevention program last year. But new guidance
and drowning prevention support continues to come out of other
organizations, including the CDC Foundation and the American Academy
of Pediatrics.
A CDC Foundation program has paid for basic swimming and water
safety skills training for over 35,000 students since 2024. The
program operates in 11 states with higher drowning rates: Alaska,
Arizona, California, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Louisiana, Michigan,
New York, Oklahoma and Texas.
Ways to prevent drowning
The AAP says research shows that policies can make a difference,
including lifeguard standards, life jacket regulations and
requirements that swimming pools be completely surrounded by fences
with self-closing, self-latching gates.
Stew Leonard emphasizes two other approaches — swimming lessons for
young kids and complete focus by caregivers when young children are
around water.
“I mean, I love ballet. I love karate. I love tennis lessons. You
know, all the activities that kids can do,” he said. “But the only
thing you can do to save their life is put them in swimming
lessons.”

His foundation has funded over 250,000 swimming lessons for children
and opened two swimming schools — one of them across the street from
his company's headquarters in Norwalk, Connecticut.
Also, “shut your cellphones off when you're around the pool,
watching the kids. Don't sit there reading a book. Don't sit there
talking to your friends, neglecting your child that's near the
water,” he said.
“This happens in the blink of an eye.”
___
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