A
The back seat is safer than the front. The center belt often
works best for a safety seat. Older children should use booster seats with
lap/shoulder belts for best protection until about age 7-8. Some booster
seats go to 100 lbs.
|
Tip #2 Where should your
child ride?
Basic Safety Facts to Remember:
- Everybody needs a safety belt or safety
seat!
- Anyone who rides loose can hurt those who
are buckled up by being thrown against them. People riding without belts
or safety seats can be hurled out of the car and seriously
hurt.
- The back seat usually is safer than the
front, because head-on crashes are the most common kind
(A).
- There must be one belt for each person.
Buckling two people, even children, into one belt could injure both.
Each child safety seat needs a safety belt
to hold it in
place.
- If no shoulder belt is available, it's much
safer for anyone (except small babies who can't sit up) to use just a
lap belt than to ride loose. Keep the lap belt low and snug across the
thighs. Other options should
be pursued, i.e., having shoulder belts
installed or using harness/vest devices for children.
- Children who have outgrown safety seats are
better protected by lap/shoulder belts than by lap belts alone. So if
several children are riding in back, and there are shoulder belts there,
let the older ones use the shoulder belts. Put the child riding in the
car seat in the middle where there is only a lap belt
(A).
- Infants must ride facing the rear of the
car. In this position, the safety seat cushions the head and
back.
- Infants must ride facing the rear of the
car, even if they are out of the driver's view in the back seat. Parents
should feel just as comfortable in this situation as they do when they
put their babies down for a nap and leave the room. If a baby has
special health needs that require full-time monitoring, ask another
adult to ride with the baby in the back seat and travel alone as little
as possible.
- Always read the instructions that come with
the safety seat. Also read the section on safety belts and child seat
installation in your vehicle owners manual (B).
Does your car have an air bag for the
front passenger seat?
An infant or child could be seriously injured
or killed by an inflating air bag. See the other side for details.
A passenger air bag can seriously harm
a child riding in the front seat of the car.
Many new cars have air bags for the right front
seat. Air bags work with lap/shoulder belts to protect teens and adults.
To check if your vehicle has air bags, look for a warning label on the sun
visor or the letters "SRS" or "SIR" embossed on the dashboard. The owner's
manual will also tell you.
An inflating passenger air bag can kill a baby
in a rear-facing safety seat. An air bag also can be hazardous for
children age 12 and under who ride facing forward. This is especially true
if they are not properly buckled up in a safety seat, booster seat, or
lap and shoulder belt.
In a crash, the air bag inflates very
quickly. It would hit a rear-facing safety seat hard enough to kill the
baby. Infants must ride in the back seat, facing the rear
(C). Even in the back seat, do not turn your
baby to face forward until he or she is about one year of age and weighs
at least 20 pounds. Look for a seat that meets the higher
rear-facing weight limit for heavier babies not yet one year of age.
If there is no room in back and you have no
alternative, a child over age one who is forward facing may have to ride
in front. Make sure the child is correctly buckled up for his or her age
and size and that the vehicle seat is moved as far back as possible.
Fasten the harness snugly, and make sure a child using a lap and shoulder
belt does not lean toward the dashboard. Read your vehicle owner's guide
about the air bags in your car.
WARNING: If the
front right seat has an air bag, a baby in a rear-facing safety seat must
ride in the back seat. All children age 12 and under should ride in
back.
Remember: One Person - One Belt
- Never hold a child on your lap because you could crush him in a
collision. Even if you are using a safety belt, the child would be torn
from your arms in a crash.
- Never put a belt around yourself and a child on your lap.
- Two people with one belt around them could injure each other.
- The cargo area of a station wagon, van, or pickup is a very
dangerous place for anyone to ride. Anyone riding in the bed of a pickup
truck, even under a canopy, could be thrown out!
|