WATCH: Texas dad breaks the glass in a last-ditch effort to get the crying newborn out of the car in the sweltering heat!

The stressful video captures the Texas parents urgently breaking the glass to liberate the toddler who was left inside the sweltering hot car on July 19 in Harlingen, southern Texas.

The family unintentionally left the keys inside the car, which was parked outside an H-E-B, and the youngster was left inside.

A bystander captured the scene on camera as people gathered around the car to get the infant out. The crowd can be seen using various things to collectively smash the windshield before a guy rushes inside and extracts the infant through the shattered window.

According to the TikToker who recorded the remarkable rescue, the time a lady entered the car through the shattered front window to reach the infant and transfer the child to the guy was not seen in the video, according to Fox News.

How long the youngster remained in the car before being rescued is unknown.

According to Harlingen Police Department Sgt. Larry Moore, the parents unintentionally locked their infant inside the vehicle with the keys at approximately 10:30 on Wednesday morning. After the infant was saved, the police were contacted. EMS came to the scene and examined the infant in good condition. No fees are anticipated.

The temperature inside a car may increase by 20 degrees in just 10 minutes, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). The heat index was over 100 degrees on the day the kid was discovered stranded in the car last week.

According to highway safety authorities, children should never be left alone in a vehicle, regardless of whether the windows are down or the air conditioning is on.

Tragically, the NHTSA reports that about 40 kids a year, or roughly one kid every ten days, passed away from heatstroke after being left inside or becoming stuck in a hot automobile.

53% of child fatalities in hot cars are the result of someone leaving a youngster in the vehicle. Children under the age of two account for 54% of the deaths.

The US Police advise anyone who notices children confined inside a car to call 911. When children are confined to a warm car, particularly on hot days, it is quite easy for them to become unwell rapidly.

Dr. Brian Birch, a pediatrician at St. Luke’s Children’s Hospital, stated: “A child’s core temperature can rise three to five times more quickly than an adult’s. That temperature increase has the potential to quickly result in death or severe neurological or brain damage.