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Shutting children in their rooms for safety

55 replies

griffy · 28/05/2003 09:30

Advice needed please. We're moving to a new house tomorrow, which is completely open-plan downstairs - living/dining/kitchen.

DS is 2Y5M, sleeps in a 'big bed' and his bedroom is on the first floor - next to ours - with an easily openable door. Up another floor is the bathroom. We can't fit stairgates because the bannisters/newel posts just won't allow it (but also they'd be no good, since he now climbs over stairgates!).

So, I've decided that we're going to have to lock him into his room at night and have a baby monitor on. In your opinions is this right? DP is very uneasy about closing him into his room, but I just can't let him have unmonitored access to the kitchen/bathroom while I'm perhaps asleep - or during the early evening maybe out in the garden.

I was thinking of a bolt, so that the door didn't tantalizingly open just a bit for him, but my nursery manager told me a horrific story of two children at a previous nursery to hers who had died in a housefire, because their bedroom room was bolted, and with the heat the bolt expanded and couldn't be opened. How awful for them and their families - hearing that story made me shiver, so I've ruled out the bolt.

I then thought about a plastic drawer catch, but a colleague at work has suggested a plastic slip bolt (like a big plastic hook and eye?).

What do others think/do about this?

OP posts:
GeorginaA · 30/05/2003 16:59

Jimjams Parenting sure isn't how they sold it in the brochure, is it?

griffy · 02/06/2003 10:26

Well guys - thanks for all this brilliant advice! The 'moving experience' is now over and I'm back at work. Here's what happened in the end on the door safety front...

I couldn't find the plastic gadget that I wanted, so we moved in without it. On the first night, I put him into his room and told him to stay there. I set up the baby monitor and explained that it was a machine for calling mummy, so if he needed anything he could just call me. He trialled it several times (sounding like a supermarket tannoy - calling MUMMEE, calling MUMMEE). It's been fine. It doesn't even seem to have crossed his mind to leave his room.

So, that's that then - problem solved (for now)!

OP posts:
GeorginaA · 02/06/2003 12:41

Excellent griffy! Isn't it nice when all your plans aren't actually needed?!

I have an update too ... ds is now not even bothering to try the door and is going to bed happy and not even quietly whinging. He's woken up a couple of times in the night but either only had a short whinge (without moving from his bed) or played happily until he fell asleep again. This morning started at 7.20am so we all feel much more refreshed!

Going to unlock his door after I've gone to bed this week and see if he still stays in his room and if that goes well not bother with the bolt at all the week after.

griffy · 02/06/2003 13:11

Well done GeorginaA - it sounds as if your strategy is paying off. Isn't a night's sleep worth a fortune?!

OP posts:
sb34 · 02/06/2003 13:13

Message withdrawn

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