Misuse Of Child Safety Seats Increases Risks By Ten Times For School Age Children
Main Category: Pediatrics / Children's HealthArticle Date: 21 Jun 2008 - 0:00 PDT
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Beth Bruce has heard a lot of reasons from parents why their school-aged children aren't using booster seats. "We're just going on a short trip." "My child is too big." "He feels like a sissy." "I don't want to argue with her."
"There are whole scenarios parents will give us," says Dr. Bruce, of Dalhousie University's Faculty of Health Professions and Department of Surgery. "But what we don't know is why those things convince them to put their children at risk."
School-aged children in Canada are 10 times more likely than children in other age groups to die or sustain severe injury in road crashes. Misuse of safety seats and failure to use of booster seats use are primarily responsible for these high rates of automobile deaths and injuries.
Dr. Bruce was recently awarded $438,000 from AUTO21 Network of Centres of Excellence to improve our understanding of parents' use of booster seats. Using a booster seat correctly reduces risk of injury by 70 per cent and death by 90 per cent.
"We'll be looking at the challenges parents face in adhering to national booster seat guidelines for their children," said Dr. Bruce. "Strategies for working with parents who are unaware or resistant to booster seat recommendations will be identified and tested in order to mitigate the high rates of serious injury and death in this age group."
A national 2006 Transport Canada study reported that at least 70 per cent of Canadian children aged four to nine years were not in a booster seat. In Nova Scotia the rate is 65 per cent. Of those Nova Scotia children who were not in a booster seat and were involved in a car crash, 83 per cent suffered an injury requiring hospital treatment.
Since January 1, 2007, it is the law in Nova Scotia for children that are under 145 cm (4' 9") or under age nine to be in a booster seat while traveling in a vehicle. A booster seat protects a child's small body in a crash and raises them up so the adult seatbelt fits properly.
"It seems people are aware of the legislation, but they're still not complying," says Dr. Bruce.
Children from birth to the age of one year are safest in rear-facing child safety seats. Over the age of one and 10 kg (22 lb) and babies can move to a forward-facing car seat with a tether strap. Many children outgrow the forward-facing car seat at approximately four-and-a-half, graduating to a booster seat.
"People have gotten the message with the younger children but not so much with the older children, which is why we're doing the research."
The AUTO21 Network of Centres of Excellence currently supports more than 300 researchers working on 54 auto-related research and development projects at 43 Canadian universities and institutions. An annual $11-million budget of public and private sector funding supports research in six key areas, including health; safety and injury prevention; and societal issues.
Dr. Bruce's work is also supported by Safe Kids Canada, Canadian Paediatric Society, Magna International, Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia Child Safety Link, and the Nova Scotia Department of Health Promotion and Protection.
Dalhousie University
Room 218, Second Fl., Henry Hicks Academic Admin Bldg.
Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 3J5
Canada
http://www.dal.ca
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MLA
13 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/112275.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/112275.php.
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