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Devices locate kids, parents find peace of mind
Published in Saudi Press Agency on 04 - 10 - 2009


With a computer or cell phone and an
electronic tracking device, you can locate a missing pet,
follow the path of a stolen car, find a skier buried in an
avalanche and rescue a hiker lost in the woods, AP reported.
So what about a child snatched by a stranger?
About 800,000 children are reported missing in the U.S.
each year. The vast majority are runaways, followed by
parental abductions, said Ernie Allen, president of the
National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. About
58,000 children are kidnapped by strangers, and 99 percent
of those come home fairly quickly, often victims of sexual
abuse.
Then there are the approximately 115 children a year like
Jaycee Dugard, who are snatched then murdered, ransomed or
kept for several years.
Ever since Dugard's recovery in August after nearly two
decades of allegedly being held in a Northern California
backyard, parents and others have written on blogs and
commented online to articles about ways to protect
children.
There are technological tools that give parents some peace
of mind, from clip-on alarms to GPS locators that can be
dropped in a backpack or stuffed in a teddy bear, but
experts caution that the gadgets are not without their
limitations and can even raise safety concerns of their
own.
«Tracking devices can be useful to parents,» said Allen.
«Our concern is that they will be viewed as more than they
are.»
Myths about successful child-tracking items include
implantable GPS-enabled microchips, but industry experts
say they do not exist on the market. And there are
concerns, such as whether electronically tethering children
makes them anxious for their safety or makes parents lazy.
Companies that sell locators say they do not substitute
for keeping an eye on your children and they do not prevent
kidnappings or guarantee recovery after an abduction.
«This is not tag and release,» said Todd Morris, CEO of
BrickHouse Security, which makes the BrickHouse Child
Locator and distributes many other brands. «But even the
best parent, with the best intentions, can find it hard to
keep track of their kids all the time.»
The BrickHouse unit is among a number of gadgets that
beep, vibrate or light up to help guide a parent toward a
missing child. These gadgets are in two parts, with the
main device held by the parent and a small alarm attached
to the child, usually on a piece of clothing.
When a child is out of sight, the parent presses his
device to activate the child's alarm. The gadgets usually
work up to about 200 yards (180 meters).
Some of these devices have monitors allowing parents to
set parameters for how far their children can roam before
an alarm goes off. Others have panic buttons the child can
press if he feels in danger. Few have GPS technology.
On a recent vacation to SeaWorld, Joe Nesbitt, a computer
technician in Las Vegas, turned around after tending to one
of his children to find another gone.
«She was out in the open park. I was terrified,» he
said.
Nesbitt had clipped a BrickHouse Child Locator tag to his
2-year-old daughter's shoe, and when he activated it,
arrows on his device led him to within inches (centimeters)
of the girl, who disappeared after crawling through a
tunnel in a children's play area.
Nesbitt said he went through the tunnel to find her, but
she had climbed up some netting out of sight.
«If I hadn't had the tracker, I would've really, really
freaked out,» he said.
Nesbitt said he bought the locator for around $200 after
seeing it on a TV commercial.
Other gadgets on the market use GPS technology, which rely
on satellite signals, that allow parents using a Web
browser to monitor the location of an enabled device, often
a cell phone, within 50-100 yards (45-90 meters).
BrickHouse, AmberAlert GPS and Zoombak all sell GPS
trackers that are smaller than a deck of cards. Wireless
carriers also offer locator services that hook up family
cell phones.
But even the manufacturers are quick to recognize the
limitations of their devices. Batteries only last so long,
prices can reach hundreds of dollars, weather can interfere
with GPS signals and some devices may be tricky to use.
«What you see on the market is that there are various
products at every level,» said Barry Wallace, chief
executive of Intelent Technologies, Inc., which makes the
Giggle Bug, a $20 clip-on alarm that looks like a ladybug.
«But what people don't understand is it is not
one-size-fits-all.»
A concern with some locators that are attached to a child
or sewn into his clothing is danger to the child should an
abductor try to pull it off.
«We also don't want children's first reaction to
kidnapping situations be, 'How do I activate this thing?'
That's valuable seconds not trying to get away,» Allen
said.
Though the trackers are not illegal, some parents are
concerned about what effects these surveillance devices
could have on a child's sense of independence or level of
paranoia.
Psychologists identify some potential risks.
«I think my concern would be more the perceived lack of
trust ... if you're telling them you can't regulate
yourself to make safe decisions of where you're going,»
said Stuart Lustig, a professor of child psychiatry at the
University of California, San Francisco.
But he said some parents who take comfort in the tool
could project an air of calm on the child.
Nesbitt said the device makes him feel like he is making
an extra effort to keep his children safe.
«You hope that it never happens to you, but it could,»
he said. «I don't want to be that guy who says, 'If I only
would've.»'


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