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More: Auto Safety Tips
Child Airbags
Airbags have inflated in millions of crashes, saved thousands
of lives, and prevented many serious injuries. But like some
other public health successes, airbags can cause unintended
results. Nearly all of these were minor injuries like bruises
or abrasions that are more than offset by the lives saved.
But some airbag injuries have been serious, and included some
deaths. These occur when someone is on top of, or very close
to, an airbag as it begins inflating. Infants in rear-facing
restraints and unbelted or unrestrained children in the front
seats of vehicles with passenger airbags are at the greatest
risk.
- DO put children in the back and use the appropriate
restraints for youngsters' sizes, as the law requires in
all 50 states.
- DO make sure the restraint is tightly secured with
a safety belt and the child is buckled snugly into the restraint.
Put rolled towels or foam inserts around an infant's head
to keep it from flopping from side to side.
- DO secure your child in a restraint according to
the instructions.
- DO use a booster seat for toddlers who have outgrown
their child restraints and can use the adult lap/shoulder
belts provided in vehicles.
- DO position the lap belt low and snug across a
child's hips. Don't let it rise over the abdomen where the
belt itself could become a hazard.
- DO make sure older children ride restrained in
a back seat. Only if there are too many children for all
to ride in back should one of them be allowed up front with
a passenger airbag.
- DON'T put an infant in a rear-facing restraint
in the front seat of a vehicle that has a passenger airbag.
Only if a vehicle has been equipped with a switch to turn
off the passenger airbag is it appropriate to put an infant
restraint up front.
- DON'T put a safety belt's shoulder portion behind
a child or under the arm. It compromises protection. If
necessary, use a booster seat.
Remember:
- If there's an on/off switch for your passenger airbag,
remember to switch off the bag if an infant is riding in
front and check the airbag's status every trip.
- Riding unrestrained or improperly restrained in a motor
vehicle is the greatest hazard for children.
- The safest place for kids to ride is in back.
- When it comes to buckling up, what's good for kids is
good for adults, too. So use your own lap shoulder belt.

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