
New Study Shows Dramatic Shift of Children to Backseat
A
study shows that a dramatic shift in behavior
by parents to place children in a back seat of
vehicles, coupled with increased use of child
safety seats and safety belts, resulted in an
18 per-cent reduction in overall fatalities among
children ages 0-12. Front seat fatalities declined
by 46 percent. The study of child fatality trends
appears in the upcoming issue of the National
Safety Council's Journal of Safety Research (Volume
36, Number 4).
"This is the clearest evidence we've seen
that the national public health campaigns begun
in 1996 to get children properly restrained in
a back seat are working, and paying off,"
said Phil Haseltine, Executive Director of the
Air Bag & Seat Belt Safety Campaign of the
National Safety Council. "More children are
surviving in motor vehicle crashes because of
these efforts."
The study examined fatality trends between 1992
and 2003 using the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration's (NHTSA) Fatality Analysis Reporting
System (FARS) data, police-reported crash data,
the NHTSA National Occupant Protection Use Surveys
(NOPUS), and earlier NHTSA child fatality studies.
In response to increases in child fatalities from
traffic crashes, including deaths associated with
passenger air bags, the automobile and insurance
industries, government and safety advocates undertook
major campaigns to move children ages 12 and under
from the front seat, and to increase child safety
seat and safety belt use. The study's authors
credit these collective public health actions
for the reduction in front seat deaths, and the
resulting decline in fatalities overall.
"This study is indeed good news. But we must
never let our guard down, especially in educating
new parents," said NHTSA Administrator Jeffrey
Runge, MD. "We need to constantly remind
them that kids under 12 always should be properly
restrained in the back seat on every trip."
According to the study, the immediacy and magnitude
of the post-1996 reductions in front-seat deaths
among younger children - particularly infants-provided
the strongest evidence of change associated with
programs implemented in 1996. The analysis showed
the shift to be more immediate among younger children,
although older children also experienced a significant
decline in total deaths after 1998.
"Getting children to ride in a back seat of cars has demonstrated one of the most remarkably successful changes in societal behavior in recent decades, rivaling changes in attitudes toward smoking and drunk driving," said National Transportation Safety Board Acting Chairman Mark Rosenker. "In this case, we are directly saving the lives of hundreds of our children every year."
One of the principal efforts launched in 1996 to get children properly restrained in a rear seat was the Air Bag & Seat Belt Safety Campaign, funded by a private coalition of auto and insurance companies and occupant restraint manufacturers, in partnership with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, the National Transportation Safety Board and scores of safety organizations, including law enforcement agencies at all levels. The Campaign implemented a massive public education program to make parents aware of the dangers of placing children in the front seats of vehicles equipped with passenger air bags, and the importance of properly buckling up children on every ride. Other factors that likely contributed to the fatality reductions include reduced force air bags and increased safety belt use.
Study co-author, Dr. James L. Nichols said, "These findings show that the public and private sector resources expended since 1996 have prevented hundreds of deaths among young children." The study, entitled: "The Impact of a Nationwide Effort to Reduce Air Bag-Related Deaths among Children: An Examination of Fatality Trends among Younger and Older Age Groups," was also authored by Donna Glassbrenner, PhD and Richard P. Compton, PhD, of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.
"The message of these findings for parents is simple: Old air bag, new air bag, no air bag-children are safer in back," said Haseltine.
The Campaign continues to spread its safety messages through a partnership with the National WIC Association, which coordinates health and wellness programs under the Federally administered Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC); a television PSA that airs in thousands of hospitals nationwide on the Newborn Channel; and a three-quarter page ad that appears in today's edition of USA Today.
The Air Bag & Seat Belt Safety Campaign, a program of the National Safety Council, is a public/private partnership of automotive manufacturers, insurance companies, child safety seat manufacturers, government agencies, health professionals and child health and safety organizations. The goal of the Campaign is to increase the proper use of safety belts and child safety seats and to inform the public about how to maximize the lifesaving capabilities of air bags while minimizing the risks. For more information on air bag and seat belt safety, go to www.kidsinback.org.
(Source: Kids In Back)
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