Safety training call after baby's nursery death

The parents of a baby who was killed at a nursery are calling for mandatory safe sleep training to be introduced in all nurseries, among a raft of other safety measures.
Nine-month-old Genevieve Meehan died from asphyxiation when she was tightly swaddled, strapped to a beanbag, and left unattended at the Tiny Toes nursery in Cheadle Hulme, Stockport, on 9 May 2022.
Nursery worker Kate Roughley was later jailed for 14 years for manslaughter.
Genevieve's parents, Katie Wheeler and John Meehan, have now launched a campaign to improve safety standards in early years settings, with extra training provided where necessary.
The couple have previously described as "horrifying" figures obtained by the BBC that show there were almost 20,000 reports of serious childcare incidents in England's nurseries in the past five years.
The latest figures for serious incidents in the year 2023-24 are 40% higher than five years previously.

Ms Wheeler said when police reviewed CCTV footage at the nursery following Genevieve's death they "discovered multiple examples of harm being caused to children over a short period of time".
The family is now calling for:
- Compulsory CCTV in nursery settings
- Unannounced inspections by Ofsted to be routine in early years settings
- Review of CCTV footage during Ofsted inspections
- Clear, statutory safe sleep guidance for early years settings
- Mandatory safe sleep training for all nursery staff and Ofsted inspectors and
- Clear statutory guidance as to the use of sleep products in early years settings
The family are calling for people to write to their local MPs to support their calls.
Writing on their campaign website, Ms Wheeler said: "Like many other working parents, we enrolled Gigi at a nursery. We trusted that she would be kept safe. We never imagined that she would come to harm whilst in the care of trained professionals.
"The way in which Gigi was put down to sleep carried a high and obvious risk of death. Her death was entirely preventable.
"Gigi is not the only child to die in a nursery in the last five years. It is incomprehensible that other families are suffering the same heartache that we are and we want to ensure that no child dies or comes to harm in a place where they are meant to be safe.
"Gigi deserved to live a long and fulfilling life but instead she has suffered and died in a way that no child or person ever should," Ms Wheeler said.
"The system failed Gigi and urgent reforms are needed."
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