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The Childrens Clinic Reminds Parents of
Importance of Booster
Seats
Every year children suffer needless injury.
Children
ages 4 to 8 who use booster seats are 59 percent less likely to be injured in a car crash
than children who are restrained only by a safety belt, according to a study by
Childrens Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP).
According to NHTSA, motor vehicle traffic crashes
were the leading cause of death for every age 3 through 33.
A
positive relationship between drivers using safety belts and children being restrained
shows 92 percent of the children who were transported by belted drivers were restrained
compared to only 62 percent of the children transported by unbelted drivers.
Thats why Dr. Stuart Landry at the
Children's Clinic of SWLA
is joining with the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), the Ad Council and others around
Valentines Day this year to commemorate Child Passenger Safety Week (Feb. 12-18).
The primary goal this year is to remind all parents and other adults responsible for
children traveling in motor vehicles -- if the kids are under 49 tall, they
need to be in a booster seat.
Only an
estimated 10 percent to 20 percent of children ages 4 to 8 use booster seats.
Landry said that as children grow, how they sit safely
in a car, truck, van or SUV changes. For maximum child passenger safety, parents and
caregivers simply need to remember and follow the 4 Steps for Kids:
1.
Use rear-facing infant seats in the back seat
from birth to at least one year of age and at least 20 pounds;
2.
Use forward-facing toddler seats in the back
seat from age one and 20 pounds to about age four and 40 pounds;
3.
Use booster seats in the back seat from about
age four to at least age eightunless the child is 4 9 or taller; and
4.
Use safety belts in the back seat at age
eight or older or taller than
4 9.
It is imperative to remember all children under age 13 should
ride in the back seat.
Many parents are under the false
impression that children who have outgrown child safety seats can move right into regular
safety belts, but nothing could be further from the truth, said Landry. So
this year on Valentines Day, and during Child Passenger Safety Week, we are working
hard to remind all parents, grandparents, and child care providers to use a booster seat
to raise their kids to the right height in the car.
If
theyre under 49 tall, put them in a booster seat.
Some parents or caregivers may regard
booster seats as a hassle to use or a pain to convince their children to use. But Landry
said that protecting the ones you love means
getting past the temporary complaints and perceived hassles.
Use a booster seat because you
love them, said Landry.
For more information about Child
Passenger Safety Week and the proper use of booster seats, visit www.boosterseat.gov. |