Country music star Granger Smith and his wife Amber Smith want to raise awareness about drowning prevention and water safety three years after their son River fatally drowned in their backyard pool.
“Why did we not know that we had the number one killer of children in our backyard from ages 1 to 4 of accidental death? The number one killer was in our own backyard and we didn’t know it,” Amber told “Good Morning America” in an interview that aired Friday.
Granger Smith and Wife Endorse Controversial Drowning Prevention Technique For Infants
Drowning is a leading cause of death for children in the United States and the second leading cause of unintentional injury death after motor vehicle crashes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
“More children ages 1-4 die from drowning than any other cause of death except birth defects,” the agency states on its website.
Earlier this year, the Smiths posted a YouTube video of their youngest son, Maverick, learning how to swim through a method called ISR.
ISR stands for Infant Swimming Resource but is also known as infant swim rescue and refers to a “self-rescue technique” that’s taught to children as young as 6 months old. Children are reportedly taught to survive in the water by finding air and even crying to alert someone nearby that they need help.
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According to ISR’s website, “children ages 6 months to 1 year learn the ISR Self-Rescue skill of rolling onto their backs to float, rest and breathe. They learn to maintain this position until help arrives.”
The footage received mixed reactions online, with some criticizing it as “mean” while others saying that despite it being “hard to watch,” it is also “life-changing.”
ISR and similar programs have been inundating social media for some time now, showing clips of children being tossed into pools by themselves. Doctors’ groups have yet to endorse such dramatic lessons and Dr. Sarah Denny, a pediatrician and spokesperson for the American Academy of Pediatrics, said there isn’t any scientific research available focusing on ISR techniques specifically.
“One size doesn’t fit all for kids. But there is some data that shows that starting swim lessons between ages 1 and 4 can have a protected effect against drowning,” Denny told the outlet. “At this time, there is no data to support any benefit of ISR.”
The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that parents enroll children as young as 1 in swimming lessons.
“Research shows that formal swim lessons for children age 1 and older reduce the risk of drowning. Swim lessons are an important layer of protection to prevent drowning, in addition to pool fencing, close supervision and lifeguards while swimming, life jackets on boats and lakes, and CPR training,” Denny said in a statement released by the American Academy of Pediatrics in June.
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Granger and Amber Smith told the outlet how at the end of the day, they wanted Maverick to learn how to be in the water, and received the formal training that River did not have.
“Of course, he’s uncomfortable in that water, but he’s also uncomfortable [when we’re] putting him in a car seat and buckling him up. But we don’t listen to him crying and say, ‘I guess we won’t buckle him because he’s uncomfortable right now,'” Granger Smith said.
“The key layer that we’re missing is teaching our children survival skills,” Amber Smith added. “It’s like you can have all those other layers, but if they break through those other layers and barriers, can they survive in the water? Can they find the air? And that’s what River needed … to be able to roll over and float and find the air and make a sound for us to hear him. And he didn’t have those skills.”