In Colorado in 2003, 46 child passengers under the age of 16 died in motor vehicle collisions. Of the victims, 33 (72 percent) were riding completely unrestrained. While it is easy to assume most of these tragedies resulted from terrible highway collisions, the truth is the majority of car accidents happen within 25 miles of home, and 60 percent of them happen on roadways where the speed limit is 40 miles per hour or less.North American statistics consistently show that over the past 35 years, motor vehicle collisions are the leading cause of mortality and morbidity among children ages 1 to 14. Each year, twice as many children are injured or killed while inside automobiles as children injured or killed outside an automobile.Many parents lack the knowledge of appropriate child-car safety procedures. A survey recently noted that only 46 percent of parents surveyed knew that a child weighing 40 to 60 lbs. should travel in a booster seat, and only 59 percent knew that state saw requires child-safety seat use for children up to 4 years of age, weighing up to 40 lbs.State laws detail how child safety seats should be used from birth:
- Infants must ride in a rear-facing child safety seat until they are at least 1-year-old AND weigh at least 20 lbs. These are minimum requirements. The longer you keep your child in a rear-facing position, the safer he will be. In a front-end collision (the most common), the stress in a forward-facing position can cause more injury to the neck and spine than rear facing.
- Children ages 1-to-4 years old who weigh between 20 and 40 lbs. should be restrained in a forward-facing child-safety seat.
- Children who are over 40 lbs. or at least 4 years old should be properly restrained, with a child-safety belt-positioning device, in a child-booster seat until they are 6 years old or 55 inches tall.
- A child who is at least 6 years old or at least 55 inches tall must be properly restrained with a seat belt.
- A child is placed in a restraint not designed for his/her size and weight.
- The restraint is not properly anchored to the vehicle.
- The restraint is not properly applied to the child.
- Child can sit all the way back against the rear of the car seat
- Child’s knees bend comfortable at the edge of the seat
- Belt crosses the shoulder between the neck and arm
- Lap belt is as low as possible touching the thighs
- Child can stay seated like this for the whole trip