As another toddler is lost in a tragic driveway accident, a mum makes her plea for caution and change
An average of one child per week is hit by reversing vehicles at home in Australia and now it’s happened again. Sadly it is usually a parent driving the vehicle and often the toddler runs out of the house without either parent knowing.
A toddler has died after being hit by a car reversing in his home driveway on Friday afternoon. The boy died at Westmead Children’s hospital from head injuries. Police say he walked behind the car at the home in Wahroonga at about 2pm on Friday, Jan 17. The family also has a young daughter.
Police are preparing a report for the coroner.
Peter and Emma Cockburn know all too well the pain this family is suffering. They lost their daughter Georgina in a driveway accident. Now they are raising awareness to prevent further tragedies like this one.
Here’s their story:
thMy husband came home from work, reversed his tool trailer and ute into our garage, and ran over our youngest daughter Georgina. She was 15-months-old.
Georgina had crawled through the internal access door between the house and garage. My husband could not see her at all behind his vehicle. We lost her there and then.
We had designed and built our home with four children and their safety in mind. We fenced the children’s outdoor play area, we had living and playroom areas well away from the garage...we were in the process of teaching our children about car safety. How could this have happened to us?
In the time that followed, our research about these accidents led us to find they happen all too often, so much so that medical and government agencies gave them a name - LSVR’s - Low Speed Vehicle Runovers.
In Australia over the last decade, an average of seven children die and 60 are seriously injured each year. The majority of these accidents happen to children under five years old.