Additional Car Safety Tips

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  • Stephanie Tombrello

    Executive Director, SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A.

    http://www.carseat.org/   
     

    SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A. the national, non-profit organization dedicated to child passenger safety. Our mission is to help reduce the number of serious and fatal traffic injuries suffered by children by promoting the correct, consistent use of safety seats and safety belts. Founded in 1980, SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A. is nationally recognized for program excellence, training, and up-to-date technical materials. We provide consultation to advocates, parents, business leaders, the media, and professionals working in the fields of health care, traffic safety, and education. Stephanie M. Tombrello, L.C.S.W., Executive Director of SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A., has been involved in child passenger safety since 1970. While shopping for a car seat for her infant daughter, she was shocked to learn that most of the models available in stores were unsafe. Stephanie and several other early pioneers in the field successfully petitioned the federal government to require crash testing for child restraints. She also wrote the petition which resulted in the federal requirement for manufacturers to provide shoulder belts in the rear seats of all post-1989 passenger vehicles.In 1980, Stephanie founded a grassroots organization in the Los Angeles area which evolved to become SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A. Under her leadership, the organization has become the premier resource for child passenger safety in the nation. Stephanie is a nationally certified Child Passenger Safety Technician-Instructor and was appointed in 1995 to the National Blue Ribbon Panel on Child Restraint & Vehicle Compatibility.

  • Additional Car Safety Tips

    In this video, SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A. Executive Director Stephanie Tombrello explains how to buckle up the expectant mother to protect her unborn baby, how to select the appropriate safety seat for a newborn or older baby, how to prevent injuries from air bags, how to install rear-facing safety seats correctly, and the safest location in the car for the baby. She shows common types of car seat misuse and explains how to keep a fussy baby buckled up. The final segments include a one-minute car safety check and additional safety tips for the whole family.

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    Protecting your special needs baby in the car

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  • Transcripts

    Stephanie Tombrello: Hello, I am Stephanie Tombrello, Executive Director of SafetyBeltSafe U.

    S.

    A. Today we are talking about how to protect our youngest travelers in the car. Now we are going to talk about a few important car safety tips.

    It's very tempting when a coworker or relative, calls you with the news that they have a safety seat that they have been using, and they would like you to use it for your new baby. However you need to know a lot before you take a used seat. First of all every safety seat has its birth date on it, and it's recommended that not use seats that are more than six years old, so you need to know the date of manufacture of the seat.

    Also there are what are called safety seat recalls. If the person who owns the seat didn't register it with the safety seat company, or didn't hear about the recall for some reason, you may be taking a seat that has a problem.

    Finally, because about 90% of people, who use safety seats for their children, make errors usually inadvertently. You can't just take the word of the person and own the seat about the right way to use it.

    You need to have the full instructions. Many times it's a good idea to get a new seat anyway because technology is always improving and there are lots of new features in the newer seats. When parents and other adults are taking children in the car they often like to take some toys along.

    Also they would like to do airings and pickup things from stores. Sometimes they don't think about what would happen if they were crashed and some one hit the car, and these toys and groceries can become missiles. Remember at 30 miles an hour, everything that's unrestrained is going to move in the direction of the crash, at 30 times its weight. So always think about storing objects such as groceries, tools, sports equipment properly in the car.

    If you have a separate trunk use that, if you don't look into getting proper kind of netting or barrier to keep the missiles away from your family. Be sure that if you can't afford a built-in DVD or other entertainment system that you not place an ordinary television set in your car. Those become tremendous missiles, and we have had children who were killed because their car was hit and the television set flew through the car.

    Never leave a young child alone in the car. There are many reasons for this. First of all the heat build up in the car is very quick and young children have a hard time coping with heat. So don't leave a child alone in the car. Secondly you can leave them at the time when it's the cold time in the air, and they can become hypothermic. So that's a risk. You may think that you are only going for a minute, but sometimes what happens is someone else gets into your car while you are taking that one minute running into the post office and takes your car with your child in it.

    On the other hand, we have situations when with slightly older youngsters where they get into the car by themselves, and if they are used to getting into the front seat they will generally try to get into the front seat and play with the steering wheel. We like to think that anyone who is transporting our children is going to do the same kind of good job that we intend to do.

    However, many times relatives, caregivers, babysitters, daycare providers don't have the appropriate training in child passenger safety to know how to do it properly. Be sure that you know how your child is being transported when that youngster rides with someone else. There are many aspects of keeping your family safe in the car. We have covered the basics of how to protect our youngest travelers in the car.

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