A fall on the playground, an insect bite in the garden, or a burn from a hot stove – even if you keep a close eye on your little explorer and regularly check their environment for potential hazards, minor and major accidents can still happen. We’ll tell you which emergencies occur most often in the everyday lives of babies and toddlers, and how you can stay calm and respond correctly, even in critical situations.
React in case of emergency
If your child is not in a life-threatening situation, the first tip is always: “Stay calm.” Comfort and reassure your child to prevent panic. Then you can contact your pediatrician by phone or, outside office hours, the medical on-call service. You can reach them at the following numbers:
Germany: 116 117
Austria: 141
Switzerland: 144
The doctor can assess whether a visit to the emergency room is necessary or help you find out which practices offer emergency services.
If you suspect your child is in a life-threatening situation, the top priority – no matter how difficult it may be – is still to stay calm. If it isn’t immediately obvious, first check whether your child is unconscious. Talk to them and pinch them gently. Then contact emergency services at 112 (Germany) or 144 (Austria and Switzerland) and provide the following information:
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Wo Where did the accident happen?
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Was What happened?
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Wer Who is affected? (Child's age)
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Which Are any injuries visible?
The control center will dispatch emergency services and, after asking any questions, will give you detailed instructions for the next steps.
Also check your child's breathing. If they are not breathing, begin resuscitation measures :

1. Place your child on their back on a firm surface, with their chin pointing upward and their airways clear. For children under one year old, the head should be in the so-called neutral position; for children over one year old, tilt the head slightly backward and lift the chin.
2. Cover your baby's mouth and nose with your mouth. For toddlers, cover only your child's mouth with your mouth while holding their nose. Breathe into your child evenly for one second. Watch to see whether their chest rises and falls during this time and whether they begin breathing independently.

3. If this is not the case, begin chest compressions after five rescue breaths. For infants, press with both thumbs on the lower half of the sternum at a rate of 100 to 120 times per minute, pressing the chest one-third (about four centimeters) deep 15 times. For children over one year old, press the chest one-third (about five centimeters) deep in the same rhythm with one or two hands. Alternate between chest compressions and two rescue breaths until emergency services arrive. If you are alone and have not yet called emergency services, perform the emergency measures for one minute, then call the emergency number and continue resuscitation until they arrive.

Aside from life-saving immediate measures, the next steps depend on the type of emergency.
Important: Any resuscitation measure is better than none! In an emergency, don’t be afraid of doing something wrong, whether it’s your own child or someone else’s.
We have summarized additional common emergencies in babies and toddlers, along with the appropriate measures, for you.
Common emergencies in babies and young children
Causes:
Caused, for example, by swallowing medications, cleaning agents, or toxic plants.
Symptoms:
Symptoms vary widely and may also appear several hours after poisoning.
They range from stomach pain, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, fatigue, and malaise to unconsciousness and cardiac arrest.
Immediate measures:
If you suspect poisoning, call emergency services immediately.
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Also call the poison control center for additional instructions:
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Germany: 01761 19240
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Austria: 01406 4343
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Switzerland: 145
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Stay calm until the doctor arrives, care for your child, and follow the poison control center’s instructions.
Only induce vomiting after consulting a doctor or the poison control center—for example, if your child has taken medication or tablets and only a few minutes have passed since ingestion. Other poisons could damage the mucous membranes or esophagus. The easiest way to induce nausea is by inserting a finger into your child's throat to stimulate the uvula.
If your child is unconscious, place them in the recovery position and begin resuscitation measures in case of respiratory arrest.
Save any remaining poison, its packaging, or vomit if possible. This can help emergency services with later treatment.
Causes:
Caused by contact with hot liquids or surfaces.
Symptoms:
Symptoms range from swelling and redness to blistering and open wounds.
Immediate measures:
Remove hot or wet clothing from your child’s body immediately to prevent a so-called “afterburn” caused by the fabric. This also helps prevent painful fibers from sticking to the wound surface later, especially with more severe burns.
Cool the affected area with lukewarm water for a maximum of 30 minutes, depending on the extent.
For more severe burns, never place your child completely under the shower, as they could cool down too quickly.
Do not apply any remedies or compresses to burned areas. The emergency doctor may use a special sheet to cover the burn site.
For minor, superficial burns, consult a pediatrician for further treatment. Even seemingly superficial burns—especially on the face or scalp—are often underestimated, and the true extent may only become apparent a few hours later.
In the case of more severe burns, or burns on the face, hands, feet, or genital area, take your child to the hospital as quickly as possible for treatment.
Causes:
Babies and toddlers are more sensitive to heat than adults and heat up more quickly.
Too much sun on the head and neck irritates the meninges.
Symptoms:
Your child’s head is red and hot, while the rest of their body has a normal temperature.
They may have headaches, restlessness, nausea, or vomiting.
Your baby is crying and doesn’t want to drink.
Immediate measures:
Bring your child into the shade immediately and elevate their head and upper body.
Cool the head and neck with a cold pack wrapped in a cloth, and give your child water to drink.
Stay with your child at all times to observe and calm them. If they lose consciousness, experience hallucinations or severe pain, or if their condition does not improve after 20 minutes despite the measures taken, call emergency services.
Causes:
If your child exerts themselves physically in high temperatures, a lack of fluids and salts can lead to heat buildup and heatstroke.
Symptoms:
Your child's skin is red, hot, and dry all over their body.
They have a fever, often over 40 degrees Celsius.
Your child's breathing is shallow and rapid.
It can lead to vomiting, hallucinations, seizures, and unconsciousness.
Immediate measures:
Notify emergency services immediately.
While you wait, move your child into the shade, undress them, and cool their body with wet cloths or wrapped cold compresses.
Only give them something to drink if they are conscious and do not feel nauseous.
Causes:
In spring and summer, your child may be stung by bees, wasps, or other insects.
Especially on outdoor trips, there is also a risk of tick bites.
Symptoms:
Swelling, redness, and itching at the injection site.
If your child has an allergic reaction, it may also cause difficulty breathing, hives all over the body, rapid heartbeat, tingling in the extremities, fever, nausea, or chills.
A tick bite is characterized by a black insect embedded in your child's skin. A slight redness, similar to a mosquito bite, may develop around the bite area.
Immediate measures:
Most insect bites do not require treatment; the swelling will go down on its own within two to three days.
Cooling or special gel helps with itching.
If the stinger from a bee or wasp sting is still embedded in your child's skin, carefully remove it with tweezers. Do not squeeze the stinger, to prevent more venom from entering the skin.
Allergic symptoms may indicate anaphylactic shock, in which the body reacts hypersensitively to allergenic substances, sometimes with severe symptoms. In this case, notify emergency services immediately.
If your child was bitten in the mouth, or if the bite becomes very red or inflamed over the next few days, take them to the pediatrician.
Ticks usually bite in areas where the skin is particularly thin. Therefore, after a trip into nature, check your child's entire body for ticks.
If you discover a tick, remove it only with a special tick removal tool or tick card, and never press on the head to prevent it from tearing off. If the head cannot be completely removed, it is sufficient to monitor the area. The head usually does not need to be surgically removed.
Wash or disinfect the bite site after you have completely removed the tick.
Ticks are, among other things, carriers of Lyme disease. Infection can occur approximately 8 to 12 hours after a bite, so you should always remove ticks as quickly as possible. Ticks are no longer sent to a laboratory, because even an infected tick does not necessarily mean that your child has contracted the disease. Therefore, you do not need to keep the tick after removal.
If circular redness around the bite site develops in the days or weeks afterward, contact your pediatrician. Antibiotic treatment is usually necessary then.
Transmission of TBE, a viral meningitis, also occurs via ticks. Similar to Lyme disease, some areas in Germany and Europe are more affected. Symptoms include high fever, headaches, and neurological deficits. A vaccination against TBE is possible from the age of one year.
Causes:
Thin blood vessels, which can tear due to dry heated air, colds, or allergies when blowing the nose, are usually harmless triggers of nosebleeds.
Nosebleeds can also be triggered by a fall.
Symptoms:
Nosebleeds can occur once or regularly.
Immediate measures:
Nosebleeds are generally harmless if they stop within 10 to 15 minutes and occur no more than once a week.
Sit your child upright with their head bent forward, and place a wrapped cold compress or a damp cloth on the back of their neck.
Let the blood flow out, and gently press the upper nostrils together with two fingers without blocking their nose.
Once the bleeding has stopped, gently rinse your child's nose with water. You may also use a soothing nasal ointment, but they should not blow their nose.
If the nosebleed lasts longer, is very severe, or your child is feeling unwell, call emergency services.
If your child has nosebleeds very frequently, ask your pediatrician about possible causes.
Causes:
Falls are a common cause of injuries in babies and toddlers.
Symptoms:
Often, falls leave only harmless bumps.
If the area where your child fell is swollen and an abnormal posture is visible, a bone may be broken.
Vomiting, lethargy, apathy, headaches, or incessant crying in babies may indicate a concussion.
Immediate measures:
You can cool harmless bumps with a cold compress.
In the event of a fall onto the forehead or the back of the head, you and your child will hopefully escape with just a fright. Babies' heads are still elastic and can absorb falls better because the skull sutures have not yet fused.
However, especially if your child is still under one year old, you should take them to the pediatrician. Together, you can decide whether monitoring in the hospital is necessary. Some symptoms may not appear until up to 48 hours later, so careful observation during this time is very important.
If your child loses consciousness after a fall, even briefly, call emergency services immediately.
If you suspect a concussion, you should also have an older child examined by a doctor as soon as possible.
If you suspect a fracture, depending on the severity and location, take your child to the hospital or call emergency services. While you wait, it’s best not to lift your child, but to keep them in their current position. In case of acute pain, you can give them pain medication in an age-appropriate dose to bridge the waiting period.
Causes:
Foods your child cannot chew sufficiently, or other objects they explore with their mouth and accidentally swallow, can enter the airways of babies and young children.
Symptoms:
Your child suddenly starts coughing heavily without having a respiratory infection.
Their face turns red, and they gasp for air.
Immediate measures:
As long as your child is coughing, oxygen can still reach their airways, and small objects often dislodge on their own.
If your infant keeps coughing, lay them face down on your forearm or over your thigh. Pat five times between their shoulder blades with the flat of your hand. Hold your baby's head firmly to prevent it from being thrown around.
If the foreign object still has not dislodged, turn your baby around and, while they are lying down, press on their chest with two fingers five times, about one-third of the chest depth. Repeat this until the swallowed object is released.
If your child is older than one year, place them over your thigh and pat five times between their shoulder blades with the flat of your hand.
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If the swallowed object does not dislodge this way, you can use the so-called Heimlich maneuver for older children:
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Stand behind your child, wrap your arms around them, and place your hands over their stomach area.
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Now pull your arms quickly toward you five times. Repeat the thrusts until the foreign object is expelled.
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If your child turns red and shows signs of suffocation, call emergency services immediately.
If your child stops coughing and starts breathing again but has not coughed up the object they swallowed, take them to the doctor or hospital quickly in an upright position. The object has likely slipped into one of their lungs and must be removed via bronchoscopy. Otherwise, there is a risk that it will be coughed up again. In this case, the Heimlich maneuver should not be performed, as the foreign body could enter the upper bronchial system or even the larynx area, leading to an acute choking situation.
Causes:
Electric shocks can occur when babies or young children accidentally touch electrical outlets or other power sources.
Symptoms:
This can lead to muscle cramps, anxiety, pain and burns, irregular heartbeat, unconsciousness, and respiratory arrest.
In high-voltage accidents over 500 volts, for example in connection with high-voltage lines, utility poles, or streetcars, immediate deployment of emergency services or special units is required.
Immediate measures:
If your child's muscles spasm, they may not be able to detach themselves from the power source.
Unplug the device or turn off the fuse to disconnect the circuit without putting yourself in danger.
If that is not possible, stand on a non-conductive surface and push your child away from the power source with an object made of wood, leather, or rubber.
Notify emergency services immediately.
Check whether your child is conscious and, if necessary, begin life-saving first aid measures.
Causes:
During play and exploration, babies and toddlers can quickly sustain minor or major injuries.
Symptoms:
Depending on the type of injury, there may be redness, bleeding or bruising, and pain.
A festering wound and swollen lymph nodes are signs of infection.
Immediate measures:
For a scrape, it is usually enough to clean it with water and then protect it from germs with a plaster. Only if the above-mentioned signs of inflammation occur should you consult your pediatrician.
If your child sustains a laceration, first press a compress or a clean cloth against the wound to stop the bleeding. If possible, apply a pressure bandage and have the wound treated by a doctor as soon as possible.
A crush injury should be cooled with lukewarm water. If your child is in pain, you can give them an age-appropriate dose of pain medication. For severe pain or bleeding, contact your doctor.
Treat a bite wound initially depending on whether it is a superficial, open, or laceration-contusion wound. Afterward, it should be treated by a doctor in any case, as both human and animal saliva contain many bacteria and can cause infection.
Depending on the severity of the injury, the tetanus vaccination status must also be checked and updated if necessary.
Causes:
Pseudocroup is an infection-related swelling of the mucous membranes. This affects airflow in the respiratory tract and causes soft cartilage tissue in the trachea—especially the area below the larynx—to swell.
Because the windpipe is narrower in babies and young children, pseudocroup usually occurs only in children up to five years old. Only a few older children still have pseudocroup attacks, which are usually much milder.
The cough is favored by damp, cold weather and mostly viral infections of the upper respiratory tract.
Symptoms:
Typical signs are a strong, barking cough and a whistling sound when breathing in, known as stridor.
Symptoms often begin suddenly at night, sometimes accompanied by fever.
Classic shortness of breath is not present in most cases.
Immediate measures:
Although it sounds frightening, pseudocroup is usually harmless.
Keep a cool head and calm your child. This helps prevent panic, which could lead to more severe breathing difficulties.
Cold air causes the mucous membranes to swell and helps the coughing fit pass. Sit with your child at an open window or by an open refrigerator or freezer until the symptoms subside.
If there is no improvement after 10 to 30 minutes, or if your child develops blue lips, call emergency services.
In cases of severe symptoms, corticosteroids (in the form of syrup or suppositories) or inhalation with adrenaline may be necessary. These measures must be prescribed by a doctor and can sometimes only be carried out in a practice or children's hospital. For frequent pseudocroup attacks that do not improve with conservative measures, you may, after prior consultation and training by your pediatrician, administer corticosteroids to your child independently at home.
In everyday life with a baby or toddler, you likely encounter many moments that could potentially pose a danger to your little explorer. A specialized first aid course for children gives you the opportunity to learn first aid measures hands-on, so you can act confidently in an emergency. Even if you hope you’ll never need them, knowing how to respond when quick action is required provides reassurance. We therefore encourage you to see this article primarily as a supplement to, or inspiration for, a first aid course.
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