Every year, tens of thousands of children are rolled over, caught in power windows, and even unintentionally left in vehicles to die. But these incidents are preventable as they are upsetting. This is what every parent needs to know now.
· Never leave children alone in the car. A recent survey by the National Safe Kids Campaign found that 20% of parents ages 18-24 considered it ok to leave kids unattended in a car. What’s more 1/2 the parents surveyed said they don’t always lock cars parked at home. Kids ‘N Cars, a San Francisco-based non profit, has compiled more than 1200 cases in which kids were injured while left alone in cars. Besides putting a car in motion, children have also been burned by lighters, injured by windows, and trapped in trunks. One in four cases was fatal.
· Store your car keys in a secure place. Children pay close attention to what you do and know full well what those keys are for and how to use them. Keep your keys inaccessible to your kids.
· If you have a trunk, use it. Most people don’t understand the violence of a crash, If you are going 35 miles per hour and get in a crash, everything in your car is still going 35 miles per hour until it hits something. That something could be you or your child. Partners for Child Passenger Safety says that 15% of kids in a collision come into contact with things inside the care. These include loose object, other occupants, even dogs. Store all loose objects even groceries or clothes in the trunk.
· Use a booster seat. Only 5% of kids who should be in belt-positioning booster seats are actually using one, says principal investigator of Partners for Child Passenger Safety. But standard seat belts are not designed for kids, and lap belts alone have the potential to be even more harmful. A child who is restrained only by a lap belt (or who has pushed the shoulder belt behind his back because its uncomfortable) often gets injured when his head slams into his own knees or the back of the front seat. For seat belts to operate properly, a child over 40 pounds must be in a booster seat, which elevates him enough so the belt crosses his shoulder and hips in the right place. Kids generally need that seat until they weigh 80 pounds.
· Don’t breastfeed while in the car. Children who are unrestrained in a car become projectiles in a crash and are often ejected from the vehicle says SafetyBeltSafe USA, a public-service group based in CA. A child is going to hit something or someone in the car or worse you could crush your own child as you try to hold on to him. If your child is hungry or fussy, stop driving and find a safe place to park before you calm her. Don’t try pulling over on the highway shoulder, collisions occur there all the time, find a rest area or parking lot. Never sit in the front seat holding your baby, and never put an infant car seat in the front seat. If your air bag discharges your child could be killed.
For more tips: http://www.parents.com/toddlers-preschoolers/safety/car
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