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Parents Surrender in Booster Seat Battle
Excerpt
By Jennifer Thomas, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Most
parents know young children should ride in booster seats. However,
many don't know at what age it's safe to graduate a child to a
seat belt.
A new study finds parents are unsure about when it's safe for kids
to leave behind the booster seat, a platform-type seat for older
children that helps the lap and shoulder portions of their seat
belt fit properly. It also finds parents who are least likely to
use booster seats are those who'll bargain with their kids over
anything -- even safety -- to avoid a fuss.
According to safety experts,
the time to let a child use a seat belt is when the belt fits
across the shoulder and low across the hips. This occurs when
the kid is about 80 pounds, 4 feet 9 inches tall, and at least
8 years old.
So, now that you know,
you'll insist your 7-year-old sits in a booster seat, right? After
all, motor vehicle crashes are the leading cause of death among
children aged 4 to 14 years old, according to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration.
Not necessarily, say
the authors of the new report, which appears in the October issue
of Pediatrics.
A major barrier to using
booster seats isn't just knowledge, it's parenting attitude and
style. Older children can give their parents a very hard time
about sitting in a booster seat, especially if their friends or
siblings don't have to, or if they've already been using a seat
belt, says Dr. Flaura Winston, senior study author and director
of TraumaLink: The Interdisciplinary Pediatric Trauma Research
Center at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
Many parents, wary of the tantrums, will simply surrender.
"Parents say, 'We
fight about what time he goes to bed. We fight about whether he
eats his peas. I just can't bear to fight with them about something
else,'" Winston says.
Researchers say this
parenting attitude -- that safety is negotiable -- is a big hurdle
in increasing usage of booster seats.
Researchers conducted
focus groups and telephone interviews with 111 parents and children
about their knowledge and attitudes toward booster seats.
They found parents who
drew a distinction between "negotiable" rules ? such
as bedtime, bath time or eating their vegetables -- and "non-negotiable"
rules ? such as riding in a car seat -- were the most likely to
use booster seats.
Parents who considered
all those things on the bargaining table were less likely to use
booster seats.
"One key difference
between parents who use booster seats and parents who use seat
belts for their children is negotiability," Winston says.
"Parents who used booster seats drew a distinction between
safety, which was non-negotiable, and child actions like eating
habits and naps
For these children, booster seats were accepted
as the only option."
Winston says she tells
parents to insist on only the most important issues, and safety
is one of them.
"Parents are bombarded
with messages about how to be a good parent," she says. "We
can make it a lot easier for them. They need to pick their battles.
Safety should be non-negotiable. But if a child refuses to eat
their peas, well, you can give them a vitamin instead. That's
not something to worry about."
Parents who didn't insist
on booster seats also perceived less risk of a getting into a
serious car crash than parents who did use booster seats. They
tended to make comments about "driving a safe car" or
"being a safe driver," according to the study.
These parents also justified
their use of seat belts rather than booster seats by citing state
law. Most states require kids be in booster seats only until age
4, although about 13 states have since adopted more strongly worded
laws.
Inconvenience and cost
were other reasons cited for not using booster seats.
Stephanie Tombrello,
executive director of SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A., says booster seats
are available for as little as $20. Some weigh just a few
pounds and can easily transported if the child is going to be
in someone else's car.
Tombrello's organization
has created a curriculum for kindergarten to third grade that
teachers can use to introduce older kids to the idea of the booster
seat. What many parents don't realize, she says, is that kids
are actually more comfortable in the booster seat than when using
an adult seatbelt.
The booster seat props
them up so they can see out of the window. It lets them sit with
good posture and with their knees bent. It helps the seat belt
fit properly, rather than having the lap belt cut across their
midsection and the shoulder portion in front of the face.
Many children will try
to compensate for the discomfort by putting the shoulder belt
under their arm or behind their back, she says. In even a low-speed
crash, this puts pressure on the wrong areas of the child's body
and is very dangerous.
"For children, the
difference in comfort is just unbelievable when they're in a booster
seat," she says.
What To Do
For more information
about buying booster seats and properly using them, visit
SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A. or the
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia.
Reference
Source 101
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