|
Put Kids in Back Seat of Car
Safety advocates are praising smart
air bags, which turn themselves off or deploy softly if they sense
a driver or passenger is too small. But they say it's still a
lot smarter for drivers to put small passengers in the back seat.
Automakers, in compliance with
new federal standards, will begin phasing in the new air bags
next Monday, installing them in 20 percent of new vehicles. The
new systems, which have weight sensors in the front seats to detect
whether drivers or passengers are too small to withstand the force
of an air bag, will be in all new vehicles by Sept. 1, 2006.
Advocates and federal safety officials
applauded the change Wednesday but also issued a warning.
"We want to make sure parents are
clear: Old air bag, new air bag, no air bag, kids are safer in
the back seat properly restrained," said Ellen Engleman, chairwoman
of the National Transportation Safety Board.
According to the National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, there have been 231 confirmed deaths
due to air bags since 1990, including 144 children.
While air-bag deaths have been
steadily declining since 1998 as more drivers put children in
the back seat, a NHTSA survey last year found that 15 percent
of infants, 10 percent of 1- to 3-year-olds and 29 percent of
4- to 7-year-olds were still riding in the front seat.
The Air Bag and Seat Belt Safety
Campaign estimates that the lives of 1,700 children have been
saved since 1996 because they were sitting in the back seat. The
group's survey was based on accident data from 1996 through 2001.
Automakers agree that the advanced
air bags are not the answer for small children.
"This is just a safety net, not
a primary means for keeping our children safe," said Scott Schmidt
of the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, which represents
ten automakers.
Automakers were allowed to meet
the regulations in several ways. They could install air bags that
would not deploy if sensors showed the occupant was too small,
or they could install air bags that would deploy at a lower speed
if the occupant was too small.
NHTSA estimated it would cost about
$127 per vehicle for the new air bag technology, but said
it could save automakers money in the long run because they wouldn't
have to replace air bags that deploy unnecessarily.
NHTSA announced the new rule in
May 2000 after Congress required it in 1998.
So far, Ford Motor Co. is the only
automaker in the Big Three who is installing the technology in
cars. The 2004 Ford Taurus and Mercury Sable have advanced air
bags, said Jim Boland, manager of advanced safety for Ford.
General Motors Corp. has advanced
air bags in its 2003 and 2004 pickups and sport utility vehicles,
spokesman Jim Schell said. DaimlerChrysler AG is installing the
technology in the 2004 Jeep Liberty and Dodge Durango, spokeswoman
Angela Ford said.
___
On the Net:
NHTSA, http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov
Air Bag and Seat Belt Safety Campaign,
http://www.nsc.org/airbag.htm
Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers,
http://www.autoalliance.org
Reference
Source 102
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|