
It’s a pool party! How to stay safe around the pool with friends this summer
10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.
It’s summer so kids’ playdates and birthday parties might start moving from the playground to the pool.
I research how to prevent drowning. I’m also a mum of two kids living in a house with a pool. So water safety is always front of mind.
Drowning deaths are at a record high in Australia. For pre-schoolers, this often happens in backyard pools. Although school-aged children have a much lower risk it’s still important to be vigilant.
Here are some key questions to ask and things to consider before you accept an invitation to a pool party or host your own.
With these tips, you’ll be able to navigate pool safety while ensuring the kids have heaps of fun.

Not everyone knows how to swim
First, think about your child’s swimming ability. Have they learned to swim? Do you know how their ability stacks up against their peers? Check their skills against the recommended minimum national swimming and water safety benchmarks for their age.
Perhaps some top-up lessons or some intensive lessons over summer might give their skills a boost ahead of a busy swim season.
As important as swimming skills are, so too is knowing how to be safe around the water. Have you talked to your kids about water safety? Are they mindful that others may not be able to swim as well as they can and may not be comfortable disclosing this to their friends?
Have you discussed how dangerous it can be to hold each other down under the water or hold their breath to swim to the end of the pool repeatedly? It can lead to someone blacking out.
It’s also not just about drowning. Knowing about water depth, the dangers of diving into shallow water, and not running around a wet and slippery pool can help avoid injury.
It’s not just about the kids
You also have a more direct role in keeping everyone safe. If you’re hosting a playdate and planning to include a swim, have you checked with the child’s parents? Ask about children’s swimming abilities or fears.
Before everyone hits the water, discuss your pool safety rules and expectations with the kids, including your own. My kids, and their friends, are very used to my “lifeguard lectures” by now.
An important part of playing lifeguard is supervision. If your kids’ friends are weak or poor swimmers, regardless of their age, you should be in the water with them. This is usually more fun anyway.
For older kids and more confident swimmers it’s still best to supervise from a distance (maybe poolside) and be dressed ready to get into the water in an emergency.
If you’re expecting more than a couple of kids, you might need more than one adult to ensure adequate supervision (and keep your stress levels down). Ensure each person’s supervision responsibilities are clear to avoid tragic miscommunications, such as: “I thought you were looking after them.”
Have you refreshed your CPR skills lately? Does your pool have a CPR sign you can refer to? Is your pool fenced and compliant? Does the gate close and lock on its own?
What about at someone else’s house?
Are you confident in your child’s ability to swim and be safe around the pool, if you’re not there? Have the hosts asked about your child’s swimming ability and any concerns? If not, you should be proactive and flag them.
Remember that eveyone’s definition of “can swim” is different. Would the hosts mind if you stayed to help supervise?
If you’re going to do the “drop and run”, will the adults hosting be supervising? How vigilant will they be? Will the adults be drinking alcohol?
Having the conversation early can ensure all parents involved are aligned on matters of water safety.
We’re heading to the local pool instead
Many of the same rules apply if you’re meeting up with friends for a swim at your local pool.
Conditions here are more controlled with depth markers and safety equipment. But none of this replaces good swimming skills and safe behaviours.
Although lifeguards are on hand to help should anything go wrong, they are not a substitute for active parental supervision and shouldn’t be treated as babysitters.
In fact, reports of aggression and verbal and physical abuse of lifeguards are increasing, so please be respectful and keep your cool.
Keep yourself safe too
Kids aren’t the only ones who can get into trouble in the water. Adult drownings in a variety of different waterways are also on the rise.
So if you’re hitting the pool this summer, avoid alcohol around the water. You can even be impaired the day after heavy drinking.
Older adults can also be at risk of drowning in backyard pools due to medical incidents, such as a heart attack, or accidentally falling into the water.
If you keep all these issues in mind, we can all have a safe and enjoyable summer by the pool.
Amy Peden, NHMRC Research Fellow, School of Population Health and Co-founder UNSW Beach Safety Research Group, UNSW Sydney
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Don’t Forget…
Did you arrive here from our newsletter? Don’t forget to return to the email to continue learning!
Recommended
Learn to Age Gracefully
Join the 98k+ American women taking control of their health & aging with our 100% free (and fun!) daily emails:
-
How Isometric Exercises Can Transform Your Body
10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.
We’re usually encouraging everyone to move more, but we’ll make an exception for isometric exercises:
Full-body workout without going anywhere
You don’t have to do all 8, but it’s a great way to ensure getting all the benefits:
- Isometric bridge: strengthens glutes, core, and lower back to improve posture and reduce pain; perform by lifting your hips into a straight line and holding, and progress to harder variations using single-leg or weighted holds.
- Dynamic isometric plank: builds core, glute, shoulder, and back strength, with the option to add instability (leg lifts, weight shifts, or balance ball) for improved torso stability and posture.
- 90° isometric pushup: builds upper body strength and endurance by holding a 90° elbow bend, boosting joint stability and muscle fiber recruitment; vary with one-leg support, weighted vest, or lower hold.
- Superman hold: targets your posterior chain to help fix any back imbalances and posture issues; lie face down and lift limbs while keeping core engaged, with optional weights or short holds for beginners.
- Isometric lunge: builds leg strength, balance, and coordination by holding at the lowest lunge point; can be intensified with weights or balance-challenging variations like closing eyes (once you are confident, of course; please be safe).
- Side plank with hip lift: strengthens your obliques and stabilizes your torso, to reduce back pain and improve waist definition; hold side plank while lifting hips, adding weight or an arm raise for difficulty.
- Tiptoe isometric hold: strengthens calves to improve mobility and prevent injuries; hold the tiptoe stance without letting your ankle collapse, progressing to single-leg, weighted, or step-based variations.
- Static bar hang: boosts grip, shoulder, and core strength while decompressing the spine and improving posture; hang with shoulders engaged, progressing to leg lifts or a one-arm hang.
For more on each of these plus visual demonstrations, enjoy:
Click Here If The Embedded Video Doesn’t Load Automatically!
Want to learn more?
You might also like:
Take care!
Share This Post
-
Is Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, right? Can dancing or twerking really bring on labour?
10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.
Meghan, Duchess of Sussex is back in the news this week in a podcast discussing her viral “baby mama” video.
The video was made four years ago when she gave birth to daughter Lilibet, but only released recently. It shows the duchess in hospital, heavily pregnant, dancing and twerking to bring on labour. Her husband, Prince Harry, dances too.
She wrote on Instagram:
Both of our children were a week past their due dates […] so when spicy food, all that walking, and acupuncture didn’t work – there was only one thing left to do!
The video follows the trend of other celebrities sharing similar videos of themselves dancing while heavily pregnant.
So does the Duchess of Sussex have a point? Can dancing really bring on labour?
First, how about dancing during pregnancy?
Exercise is recommended during pregnancy, and while some higher-impact exercises may need to be moderated, it carries minimal risk for healthy women and their babies. In fact, evidence shows regular exercise during pregnancy is associated with a variety of benefits.
Exercise can lead to a lower risk of gestational diabetes, caesarean section, the use of forceps and vacuum during birth and perinatal mental health problems, as well as quicker postpartum recovery.
While pregnant women might more often gravitate towards a brisk walk, some laps in the pool, or a group exercise class, dancing is a good option too. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists has even listed dance as one of the forms of exercise found to be safe and beneficial during pregnancy.
The movements of dance involve the hips and pelvic area (especially twerking) which may help the baby get into a more optimal position and tone the pelvic floor, though the evidence for this is lacking.
Choose any form of dancing you like – even belly dancing. In a small qualitative study with two pregnant women, belly dancing was found to be joyful and empowering, boosting feelings of wellbeing.
You can dance any time during pregnancy but you may need to adapt your dance moves as the pregnancy advances and your growing belly gets in the way.
If you have risk factors such as bleeding it’s best to be cautious and discuss any planned dancing with your health-care provider.
Music can also play an important role in mental health, as well as reducing pain, blood pressure and heart rate. So the combination of exercise with music, in the form of dance, could have added benefits.
Exercise is recommended during pregnancy – so why not try dancing? sandsun/Shutterstock What about dancing to induce labour, and during labour?
Meghan is not the first woman to report dancing to induce their labour, but this is all anecdotal. There’s no scientific evidence to show dancing is an effective way to bring on labour.
There is perhaps slightly more evidence suggesting benefits once labour has started.
Many women seek non-pharmacological options (not involving medications) during labour. Especially early in labour, dancing may decrease the intensity of pain and lead women to feel more satisfied and in control of their labour.
In one study, 60 women were randomly allocated to either dance during labour, or not. The dancing group had significantly lower pain scores and higher satisfaction than the control group.
And again, music can lower levels of pain in early labour. So combining relaxing music with some movement could be a good thing.
Dancing to your comfort levels during labour could be helpful due to the combination of pelvic movements, being upright, moving the body rhythmically and changing the position of the body frequently.
Evidence shows being upright and moving during labour is beneficial as it enables the pelvis to open up fully to let the baby through and reduces the length of labour.
Being upright and moving could also help transfer some pressure from the baby’s head onto the cervix, which can stimulate prostaglandin, a key chemical involved in progressing labour.
It’s been suggested dancing during labour could help get the baby into a better position for delivery and therefore help labour to proceed more smoothly and quickly. But ultimately we don’t have reliable evidence to substantiate these hypotheses.
So, did Meghan induce her labour with dance?
It’s unclear if dancing helped to induce the duchess’ labour as she was in hospital and may have later had a medical or surgical induction.
Labour can be medically induced with hormones, by using a balloon-shaped catheter placed in the woman’s cervix to open it up, or by breaking the bag of water around the baby.
Alternatively, Meghan’s labour may have eventually begun naturally without her dancing having played a role if she chose to wait another few days.
However, the joy on her face and connection and support of her husband Prince Harry is a good way to increase oxytocin, a hormone that stimulates contractions. This could have helped too.
Meghan may have been on the right track, but we need more research before we can confidently recommend dancing to bring on or during labour.
In the meantime, while there’s no evidence to show dancing is effective for inducing labour, it’s highly unlikely to have any downsides – and it may contribute to a more positive childbirth experience. So, if you feel inclined, I say dance away.
Hannah Dahlen, Professor of Midwifery, Associate Dean Research and HDR, Midwifery Discipline Leader, Western Sydney University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Share This Post
-
How Olives Can Help Protect Your Brain
10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.
Olives boast a special molecule that’s neuroprotective in several ways, as well as being structurally identical to dopamine metabolite:
Introducing hydroxytyrosol
Things that start with “hydroxy-” and/or end in “-ol” are often not astonishingly healthy, but this one is!
It’s approved as safe by the FDA, EFSA, and the AESAN at typical dietary levels of up to about 51 mg per day.
Hydroxytyrosol (HXT) is a phenolic compound (polyphenol, specifically a simple phenolic alcohol belonging to the family of secoiridoid-derived polyphenols found in olives and olive oil. It’s one of the key antioxidant compounds responsible for many of the health benefits associated with extra virgin olive oil.
As for its established benefits: it’s antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer, anti-diabetic, antimicrobial, cardio-protective, neuroprotective, cognition-enhancing, and immune-modulatory.
Most recently, a research team from Spain (Dr. Lorena Martínez-Zamora et al.), investigated specifically its neurovascular and neuroimmune effects, in other words, how it relates to the health of the brain’s blood vessels, and the brain’s clean-up crew.
What they found:
❝HXT protects endothelial and neural cells by lowering oxidative stress, maintaining nitric oxide availability, stabilizing the blood-brain barrier, and improving neural connectivity. A key pathway is Keap1-Nrf2-ARE activation, which boosts mitochondrial antioxidant defences and limits oxidative DNA and protein damage. HXT also dampens brain inflammation by reducing microglial cytokine release and suppressing NF-κB/MAPK and NLRP3 inflammasome signalling—mechanisms implicated in Parkinson’s disease.❞
Translating from sciencese:
The cited human trials link HXT or HXT-rich olive oils to better vascular function, reduced inflammation, and improved cerebral blood flow. That’s correlation, though. In terms of causality, what’s been established is that daily intakes around 7–15 mg improve endothelial cell health, while single doses of 30–60 mg improve protection against free radicals.
Furthermore, HXT-rich olive extracts have been shown to improve memory, psychomotor speed, and attention–memory coupling in older adults, and supported mitochondrial health.
And where it mentioned Parkinson’s disease, that bit is because HXT is structurally identical to the dopamine metabolite DOPET, and thus helps regulate healthy dopamine levels.
You can read about this in full, here: Novel Ingredients: Hydroxytyrosol as a Neuroprotective Agent; What Is New on the Horizon?
Protection against stroke?
This is the part that’s not yet proven, but looks very promising.
Hydroxytyrosol might help protect against stroke, due to how it protects the brain’s blood vessels, most notably:
- Boosting the body’s natural antioxidant defences through the aforementioned Nrf2 pathway, helping arteries stay flexible and resilient under stress
- Keeping blood vessels healthy by preserving nitric oxide, which is vital for supporting healthy blood flow, and prevents the buildup of damaging plaque
- Dialing down overactive immune responses in blood vessel walls, reducing the slow-burning inflammation that often leads to stroke
In fewer words: hydroxytyrosol acts like a molecular shield—keeping the brain’s circulation strong, stable, and better protected against both blockages and bleeds.
For how all this ties together, see also the closely related: What’s Your Vascular Dementia Risk? ← includes actual numbers and a risk calculator tool and things like that
Want to learn more?
Check out:
- Black Olives vs Green Olives – Which is Healthier?
- All About Olive Oil (And: Is “Extra Virgin” Worth It?)
- Olive oil is healthy. Turns out olive leaf extract may be good for us too
Enjoy!
Share This Post
Related Posts
-
Blueberries vs Gooseberries – Which is Healthier?
10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.
Our Verdict
When comparing blueberries to gooseberries, we picked the gooseberries.
Why?
Surprise! Probably. We’re betting that blueberries will get a strong majority vote in our “this or that” quiz, on account of their admittedly well-earned reputation for being very healthy.
However…
In terms of macros, blueberries have slightly more carbs while gooseberries have about 2x the fiber; an easy first-round win for gooseberries.
In the category of vitamins, blueberries have more of vitamins B2, B3, and E, while gooseberries have more of vitamins A, B1, B5, B7, B9, and C, scoring another win in this round.
Looking at minerals, blueberries have more manganese and zinc, while gooseberries have more calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, phosphorus, potassium, and selenium, winning tidily in this round as well.
In other considerations, both are great for polyphenols but blueberries do have more, so that is a point in blueberries’ favor.
Still, adding up the sections makes for a clear overall win for gooseberries, but do enjoy either or both, as diversity is best!
Want to learn more?
You might like:
Enjoy!
Don’t Forget…
Did you arrive here from our newsletter? Don’t forget to return to the email to continue learning!
Learn to Age Gracefully
Join the 98k+ American women taking control of their health & aging with our 100% free (and fun!) daily emails:
-
The Kindness Method – by Shahroo Izadi
10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.
Shahroo Izadi here covers everything from alcohol addiction to procrastination to weight loss. It’s a catch-all handbook for changing your habits—in general, and/or in whatever area of your life you most feel you want or need to.
She herself went from yo-yo dieting to a stable healthy lifestyle, and wants to share with us how she did it. So she took what worked for her, organized and dilstilled it, and named it “the kindness method”, which…
- promotes positivity not in a “head in the sand” sense but rather: you have strengths, let’s find them and use them
- offers many exploratory exercises to help you figure out what’s actually going to be best for you
- plans support in advance—you’re going to be your own greatest ally here
Basically it’s about:
- being kind to yourself rather than setting yourself up to fail, and “judging a fish by how well it can climb a tree”
- being kind to yourself by being compassionate towards your past self and moving on with lessons learned
- being kind to yourself by getting things in order for your future self, because you need to treat your future self like a loved one
In fact, why not buy a copy of this book as a gift for your future self?
Click Here To Order Your Copy of “The Kindness Method” on Amazon Today!
Don’t Forget…
Did you arrive here from our newsletter? Don’t forget to return to the email to continue learning!
Learn to Age Gracefully
Join the 98k+ American women taking control of their health & aging with our 100% free (and fun!) daily emails:
-
A Very Accessible New Way To Regenerate Your Gut
10almonds is reader-supported. We may, at no cost to you, receive a portion of sales if you purchase a product through a link in this article.
In fact, a plurality of ways:
Polyamines to the rescue
Polyamines are small molecules (by which we mean: small even by molecular standards) made of more than one amino acid. They occur naturally in our bodies, and in many of the foods we eat.
We’ve written about some polyamines before:
- Firstly: Spermidine For Longevity
- Recently: Spermine vs Alzheimer’s & Parkinson’s!
No, not all polyamines have sperm-themed names, but that’s just where several important ones were first identified. What can we say; apparently scientists just loved looking at that stuff in the 1800s!
Another important polyamine has the delightful name putrescine, whose name comes from…
The smell of death: evidence that putrescine elicits threat management mechanisms
Scientists (Dr. Nadja Gebert et al.) have identified why these polyamines and more should ideally form a good part of our diet.
Specifically, they found that after intestinal damage, the body increases its own polyamine levels, such as spermidine and putrescine to support protein homeostasis and regeneration. Upon testing further, they found that boosting the polyamine metabolism with dietary interventions and/or oral supplementation (which one might consider a dietary intervention in any case) restores regenerative capacity in aged intestinal cells.
In other words, the aging intestine remains capable of repair at the molecular level—it just needs the right molecular trigger to kick-start its regenerative capacity again.
And there’s more! Per the study authors,
❝By analyzing proteins and metabolites in intestinal tissue and conducting experiments to show how the intestine recovers after damage caused by 5-fluorouracil, we were able to determine that the reduced regenerative capacity of older intestinal cells is not an unavoidable effect of aging. Rather, it is directly related to a disruption in proteostasis.
Aging is not an irreversible process. If we understand how cells lose their balance—and how we can restore it—we may not be able to stop aging, but we can significantly mitigate its effects on our bodies.❞
You can read the paper in full, here: Polyamines sustain epithelial regeneration in aged intestines by modulating protein homeostasis
And if you’re wondering how to get more polyamines in your diet, then here you go:
Top 12 Food Sources Of Each Of The Most Important Polyamines
And if you’d rather go for a supplement-based approach then check out:
The Orchid That Renovates Your Gut (Gently) ← along with where to get it!
Want to learn more?
For a much more detailed overview of healing your gut, you might like this book that we reviewed a little while back:
Heal Your Gut, Save Your Brain – by Dr. Partha Nandi
Enjoy!
Don’t Forget…
Did you arrive here from our newsletter? Don’t forget to return to the email to continue learning!
Learn to Age Gracefully
Join the 98k+ American women taking control of their health & aging with our 100% free (and fun!) daily emails:








