Keiki Health & Safety: The Island Basics
Keiki Health & Safety: The Island Basics
Living here means ocean, sun, and the occasional vog day. A few habits keep the keiki safe through all of it.
Water safety (the big one)
Drowning is fast, silent, and happens in shallow water. The single best habit: assign a Water Watcher — one adult whose only job is eyes on the keiki, no phone, no chat, trading off so someone is always watching.
- Choose lifeguarded beaches and ask the lifeguard about conditions before you go in. List: https://oceansafety.hawaii.gov/list-of-lifeguarded-beaches/
- Respect shorebreak. Waves breaking right on the sand cause serious neck and back injuries even in knee-deep water. For littles, pick a gentle, protected shoreline.
- Never turn your back on the ocean; never swim alone.
Sun and reef-safe sunscreen
Hawaiʻi law (Act 104, since 2021) bans the sale of sunscreens with oxybenzone and octinoxate. Use mineral sunscreen (zinc oxide or titanium dioxide) — better for the reef and gentle on keiki skin. Reapply every two hours and after water. Hats, rash guards, and shade beat lotion; keep babies under 6 months out of direct sun entirely.
Vog days
Vog (volcanic smog from Kīlauea) can drift across the islands. It hits sensitive groups hardest — keiki, kūpuna, and anyone with asthma. On hazy days, check air quality and keep affected keiki indoors with windows closed.
- AirNow: https://www.airnow.gov/air-quality-information-hawaii-residents-visitors/
- Hawaiʻi DOH Clean Air Branch + Vog Dashboard: https://vog.ivhhn.org/current-air-quality
Worth doing once
- Take an infant/child CPR class (American Red Cross or a local hospital). An hour now, priceless later.
- Wash hands often, preschool season brings RSV and hand-foot-mouth.
Sources: Hawaiʻi Ocean Safety, Hawaiʻi DOH, USGS (vog). Confirm current conditions and figures before each use.