NDPA launches The Clothes They Wore campaign
The National Drowning Prevention Alliance launches a new campaign from agency Doner.
A new campaign from Doner and the National Drowning Prevention Alliance has just launched.
70% of childhood drownings happen during non-swim times and is the #1 killer of children between the ages of 1-4. That’s more than double the number of swim-time drownings, with preliminary data in the state of Florida showing the incidence upwards of 80-90%.
Shockingly, this danger has gone widely unnoticed and continues to rise. As a kickoff to summer, parents are conditioned to keep an eye on their children during swim times. But the biggest danger of child drownings occur at unexpected times when it seems nearly impossible.
To raise awareness around this reality, the National Drowning Prevention Alliance with agency partner Doner, announces a new campaign, The Clothes They Wore. This campaign relives the tragic stories told from the parents who lost a child to non-swim time drowning in hopes of preventing it from happening to others. Each story features the wet clothes of the children to prove that most child drownings don’t happen in a swimsuit.
Five long-form films sit at the centre of the campaign.
Credits
powered by- Agency Doner/Detroit
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- Director Roy Ritchie
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Credits
powered by- Agency Doner/Detroit
- Director Roy Ritchie
- Color Company Cathel Color Company
- Music Company Storefront Music
- Chief Creative Officer Colin Jeffrey
- Executive Creative Director Justin Bilicki
- Creative Director Anthony Moceri
- Group Creative Director Jeffrey Beck
- Executive Producer Pamela Shelby
- Producer Greg Kort
- DP Roy Ritchie
- Senior Editor Tony Guastella
- Senior Finish Editor Scott Bakkila
- Audio Mixer Clint Stuart
Credits
powered by- Agency Doner/Detroit
- Director Roy Ritchie
- Color Company Cathel Color Company
- Music Company Storefront Music
- Chief Creative Officer Colin Jeffrey
- Executive Creative Director Justin Bilicki
- Creative Director Anthony Moceri
- Group Creative Director Jeffrey Beck
- Executive Producer Pamela Shelby
- Producer Greg Kort
- DP Roy Ritchie
- Senior Editor Tony Guastella
- Senior Finish Editor Scott Bakkila
- Audio Mixer Clint Stuart
The parents’ stories lead to the five layers of protection to help prevent these tragedies from happening again:
Barriers and Alarms: Proper fencing, barriers, and alarms that restricts a child’s access to pools and other water bodies, as most drownings happen during non-swim times.
Close, Constant, and Capable Adult Supervision: A water watcher should be designated anytime children are in, on, or around a pool or natural body water.
Water Competency: Parents should make swimming a child’s first sport, because participation in formal swimming lessons, children aged 1-4 can reduce their risk of drowning by as much as 88%.
Life Jackets: Ensure children wear appropriate life jackets when in, or around natural bodies of water or when boating.
Emergency Preparedness: Learn CPR with rescue breaths and have ready access to a phone to call 911.
The Clothes They Wore builds on NDPA’s 2023 Drowning Doesn’t Look Like Drowning campaign focused on how drowning is silent. The campaign is live today, July 2, through video, print, social, OOH, digital, and experiential.
“Drowning is the leading cause of death for children aged 1-4 in the United States, but it doesn’t have to be this way. Drowning is 100% preventable, and by learning the facts, parents can make informed safety decisions for their families. Remember that most toddler drownings occur during a non-swim time and if the child is missing, check the water first,” said Dr. Adam Katchmarchi, CEO of the National Drowning Prevention Alliance. “Childhood drowning is 100% preventable and parents need to know the true facts about drowning. It happens quickly, silently, and when we least expect it.”
“We cannot underscore enough the importance of this campaign and the awareness it will help build for drowning prevention and the NDPA,” said David DeMuth, CEO Doner. “We admire the courage parents showed in sharing their stories, and we hope the work we helped create will spark conversation and more importantly, save lives.”
“This is my cry to parents to urge you to learn from our pain and our heartache. We share this message for others.” Christina Martin (Gunner’s mom)
“If parents will be brave to hear our message and effect change for their families, we’ll make a difference.” Kelly Helbig (Jack’s mom)