Just 40 percent of children
aged 4 to 8 use car safety seats or booster seats at
least occasionally -- meaning that most children risk
being thrown from the car in the case of an accident,
according to a recent study released.
The study, published
in the Annals of Emergency Medicine, shows that many
people driving children do not have booster seats, and
feel the risk is acceptable because they are making
only short trips.
"Emergency physicians
cringe when we see a child riding unrestrained in a
vehicle because we know if it crashes, the child will
be hurled like a missile," Dr. Herbert Garrison of East
Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina, wrote
in a commentary on the survey.
"The result for the child
may be severe injury or death."
For the survey, the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration interviewed 6,000
randomly chosen Americans over the age of 16 in 2003,
asking questions about safety belts, child safety seats,
air bag crash injuries and other issues.
The survey found that
21 percent of children aged 4 to 8 rode in a booster
seat even occasionally, while another 19 percent rode
in a front-facing child safety seat at least on occasion.
State laws vary on when
and how children should be in safety seats but children
up to about 40 pounds should ride in child safety seats.
After that, experts recommend
booster seats to make sure smaller children fit properly
into safety belts.
Half the parents and
caregivers who put the child into a booster seat only
occasionally said the child was only in the vehicle
a very short time. Another 41 percent said no seat was
available and 34 percent said the child did not like
the seat, the NHTSA survey found.
Motor vehicle crashes
are the most common cause of childhood death in the
United States.
"Children ages 4 to 7
who ride in booster seats are 59 percent less likely
to be injured in a crash than children restrained by
only a safety belt," Garrison wrote.