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Protecting your most precious cargo: Texas Children’s shares best practices for keeping kids safe in the car

    

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Pager: 832-824-7243, no. 6266

   
 

 

Texas Children's specialists encourage parents to work with a certified child passenger safety technician to ensure their child's car seat is installed correctly.

HOUSTON (Feb. 13, 2006) – The birth of a new baby is reason to celebrate, but it also can cause great anxiety for the new parents.  Installation of the car seat – for many – can be the greatest challenge, but one of the most critical of responsibilities for the new mom and dad.

Child restraints, including car seats, child seats and booster seats – when installed correctly – save lives.

“According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, four out of five children’s safety restraints are installed incorrectly,” said Susan Hirtz, manager of Texas Children’s Center for Injury Prevention. “Children are exposed to the risk of injury and death everyday when they are not properly restrained while riding in vehicles.”

The most common mistakes parents and caregivers make in the installation of car seats include:

  • Not using the right type of child safety seat according to the child’s weight and height.
    For instance, an infant under the age of 1, should be restrained in a rear-facing car seat. Infants require complete support for the head and neck.  This is necessary because in comparison to the rest of the body, a baby’s head weighs so much more and the neck is weak. If a child is properly restrained in a rear-facing car seat during a crash, the crash forces will settle on the strongest part of the baby’s body – the shoulders and back.
  • Installing the seat too loosely.
    The seat should not move more than an 1 inch when grabbing the seat at the belt path and moving side to side or forward. The parent should put weight on the seat and pull the safety belt as tight.
  • Not using the correct belt path. 
    Car seats can be cumbersome and a little confusing; parents need to make sure they are using the correct belt path when installing a child passenger seat.
  • Not using the harness clip correctly. 
    The harness clip snaps the vertical and horizontal straps together. It should be at armpit level – many parents have it at the child’s belly. That is too low.

“Infants and children depend on adults to make safe decisions for them,” said Javier Valdez, a health educator with Texas Children’s Center for Childhood Injury Prevention. “If a parent has the slightest bit of doubt about how they’ve installed a car seat, I strongly encourage them to have a certified child passenger safety technician take a look at it.  It could save your child’s life.”

 
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