Child Passenger Safety
If you regularly drive
around with child passengers, have you done everything possible to make sure
they’re safe? Are you familiar with what is involved in keeping children safe?
If you’re not, here are some tips on protecting children, the persons most
vulnerable to injuries during car accidents.
While you might think it
would be safe to comply with your state’s child safety or restraint law, you
would be wrong in many states. A National Safe Kids campaign review of the
states’ child restraint laws found them to be inadequate. Based upon the
guidelines of its own model child restraint law, nearly every state
inadequately protects its children by falling short in the following areas:
Here are some considerations for protecting young auto
passengers:
Infants - Should be in well-constructed and
padded infant carrier that should be located in a rear seat. Infant seats
should be designed to face the rear of the seat and NOT the front of the
passenger area. Infants must be protected from the chance of being thrown
forward into hard surfaces.
Toddlers - Should be in well-constructed,
padded child carriers that, while facing forward, should only be placed in the
rear passenger seats. Again, this is to minimize the chance of hitting hard
surfaces (such as a dashboard or a windshield) and to avoid air bags that are
designed to protect adults.
Pre-schoolers - May move from child carriers to
well-constructed and padded booster seats. The purpose of the boosters is to
make sure that the seat belts fit properly. As with child carriers, these
restraints should be installed in rear passenger seats.
Older
children - Around
age 12, it should be safe to allow children to ride in a car’s front seat.
HOWEVER, the age guideline assumes that a child has become tall and heavy
enough to be properly secured by regular restraints. Be careful that shoulder
straps either fit these children properly or are properly tied-down so they
don’t represent a hazard. Also, be realistic. Age is a secondary consideration
to body size. If a child’s small build results in a poor fit for regular seat
belts and shoulder straps, continue placing the child in the rear with a secure
seat belt.
A disconcerting fact from the National Safe Kid campaign
survey is the high incidences of children who are allowed to ride in cars
without restraints or while improperly secured. This sad fact results in
hundreds of thousands of serious injuries and deaths. Every passenger in a
vehicle should use restraints that are appropriate for his or her age and size.
Don’t depend on a law; depend on what’s needed to keep everyone safe.
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