Dangers of cords

Shading Places make customers aware of the dangers of cords hanging from blinds. Safety campaigners urged parents to check window blinds in their children’s bedrooms yesterday after the daughter of one of Britain’s richest men was found hanged in her cot.

Alexandra Lucy Hoegh, aged 2, was discovered by her mother Dana after getting caught up in the cord of a blind as she was playing at the family’s £12 million home in Notting Hill, west London.

Paramedics were called and took the child to hospital but doctors could not save her and she was pronounced dead. Mrs Hoegh was treated for shock.

Her husband Morten, 39, is chairman of Hoegh LNG, a Norwegian oil and gas shipping company valued at more than £3 billion. His personal fortune is estimated at £175 million and he has featured in the Sunday Times Rich List.

The couple married in 2005 and also have a six-year-old son and a daughter, aged five. Police said that the death on Monday was being treated as “non-suspicious”.

Mrs Hoegh, 37, ran into the street holding her unconscious daughter.

A neighbour told The Sun: “The woman was in a total state, sobbing and wailing. She didn’t know what to do. It’s a real tragedy.”

The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA) said that it knew of 12 cases of deaths caused by blind cords since the beginning of 2010.

“They are all eerily similar, involving a child of around 18 months who is expected to be asleep in their room and they have died as a result of getting entangled in loop cords,” spokesman Michael Corley said.

“Those who have lost children or nearly lost children all say that it happens very, very quickly. The windpipes of children of that age are not fully formed and are easily crushed. It can often be noiseless and fairly instant.”

He said that parents should avoid fitting blinds in toddlers’ bedrooms or keep cots away from windows. Where they could not afford to replace blinds, they should fit wall cleats to tie loop cords away from the reach of children.

Mr Corley said that RoSPA had given away 250,000 cleats as part of a campaign to highlight the dangers of blind cords. New safety standards were also being introduced next year that will require manufacturers to include safety features on blinds to reduce the risk of choking.

The British Blind and Shutter Association said it has been working closely with the British government and the European Union to make child safety standards for internal blinds more stringent. Revised safety standards and currently being consulted upon.

Remote Control Shutters

Remote controlled shutters in a contemporary style. These shutters are controlled via a wireless handset, rechargeable batteries and a discrete solar cell to keep the batteries topped up. Great for bedrooms or hard to reach stairwells. The shutters were designed with “t” bars separating each panel and larger louvres for a great look. The louvres can be set to one of ten positions using the handset to give the required privacy or shading level. Handset can be set to operate shutters independently or zoned to operate more than one shutter.

Cafe Style

Sometimes “Cafe Style” is the appropriate solution with the top section of a window left uncovered. Often used with Victorian sash style windows but here with a traditional casement window.

Cafe

Gable End Blackout Blind

Complex gable ended bedroom window needed blackout solution whilst retaining the open view. Solution was a remote controlled blind with blackout duette fabric in purple. Property in Horton Heath

Plantation Shutters Transform Plain Windows

Larger louvres for that more contemporary look. This customer in Winchester wanted maximum light during dull days, shading during bright days  but also a high level of privacy

Privacy was a key consideration for customers in Winchester. Larger louvres were specified with a “hidden tilt wand” giving a very contemporary look to brown PVC windows.