One More Thing
Driving Today: One More Thing
One More Thing
By Luigi Fraschini for Driving Today
Many parents are diligent about preparing their vehicle for a summer vacation. They have the oil, fluids, belts and hoses checked; they make certain the tires are in good condition and inflated to the proper pressure, and that's the way it should be. But parents need to add at least one more item to their safety checklist before they take to the highways this summer: child safety seats. Fewer than one in six child seats is installed correctly, according to new data from AAA, and that's a frightening statistic.
"Parents make detailed plans to get the oil changed, stop home newspaper delivery, and even pack snacks before a big family car trip, yet many don't take five minutes to check that their young passengers will be safe," said Bella Dinh-Zarr, PhD, AAA director of traffic safety policy. "By adding this to their pre-trip 'checklist', parents can travel with the peace of mind that comes from knowing that their little ones are safe."
Those recommendations come in the wake of troubling new data from AAA that indicates, despite waves of publicity, parents are still doing a poor job of installing child safety seats. An analysis of more than 1,100 safety seat inspections in the new AAA Safety Seat Database showed that 85 percent of seats were installed or used incorrectly. The top five mistakes parents made were: not installing the seat tightly (64 percent of previously installed seats); harness straps not snug on child (28 percent); retainer clips not at armpit level (19 percent); locking clips used incorrectly (19 percent); and harness threaded incorrectly (11 percent).
Parents and other caregivers should make it their business to take five minutes to address these top five mistakes made in using child safety seats:
- Check that the safety seat is installed tightly. Grab the child seat where the seat belt threads through it and pull. It should not lift up more than one inch or move more than one inch from side to side. If it does, it is not tight enough. (The seat can be installed more tightly by using your body weight to depress it against the seat cushions when fastening the seat belt. Sticking your knee into the seat can work wonders.)
- Be sure the harness straps are pulled tightly to the child. The harness should be snug and lie flat on the child so that no slack can be pinched in the straps. While the straps needn't be so tight that they make the child uncomfortable, they need to be tight enough to restrain the child immediately in event of an accident.
- Position the retainer clip at the child's armpit level when the harness is snug. An improperly positioned retainer clip causes the harness straps to fit incorrectly.
- Check that the locking clip is in the right place and is threaded correctly. These locking or retainer clips can be tricky to install, but correct installation is crucial to your child's safety. Child safety seat manuals and car owner's manuals give specific information about using retainer clips. For additional help, parents should contact the child seat manufacturer or attend a child safety seat check.
- Harness straps must not be twisted and should be routed through the appropriate slots for the direction that the seat is facing. Rear-facing seats should have the straps at or below the child's shoulders; forward-facing seats should have the straps at or above the child's shoulders.
- When in doubt, don't just assume everything will be okay. Answers to your child seat questions are out there from the child seat manufacturers, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, and from AAA. For more information on child safety seats and help finding a local child seat check, go to www.aaapublicaffairs.com, then select "For Kids' Sake."
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ATWEC Technologies Product Sales Surge in Florida
MEMPHIS, Tenn., Feb. 23, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- ATWEC Technologies, Inc. (OTC Markets: ATWT), a US-based child safety company, today announced that it has experienced a sharp sales increase in Florida, selling its Kiddie Voiceâ„¢ safety systems to daycare centers located in Palm Beach County, for their buses and daycare vehicles.
In August 2011, the Palm Beach County Board of County Commissioners approved a new requirement for child safety alarm devices in vehicles used by child care centers. The deadline for meeting this requirement is September 1, 2012, but the County is encouraging schools to install the devices by April 1 in order to receive a reimbursement of $150 per vehicle, paid by the Children's Services Council.
The Company's ...
Around Madison: Check for child safety
The Madison County Pilots Club will sponsor a Child Safety Seat Check Day on Sept. 19 in the parking lot of Ingles supermarket in Hull.
Keeping Kids Safe
The auto industry, spurred on by child-safety experts (those kids are smart) and consumer advocates, has made great strides in adding useful safety equipment to our arsenal of protective devices. The three-point seatbelt, child-safety seat, booster seat and airbags have all made automobiles a safer place for us and our children. All of this becomes largely pointless, though, if we don't require that our children use the safety devices provided for them and if we fail to install and use these devices properly.
Child Safety and Cars
If you follow your state laws regarding child safety seats, your children must be safe in your car, right? Oh, how wrong you are. Many safety experts agree that no set of state laws currently provides for the comprehensive efforts necessary to protect children as well as they might be protected. Further, many state laws leave some children woefully unprotected even though proper measures are clear. But if you answered "yes" to our original question, you are among the majority of parents in the United States.
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