Car Booster Seats Make Gains in Insurance Testing

Posted by Benji Riggins on September 14, 2010 under Safety | Be the First to Comment

Car booster seats have made strides in ensuring a proper fit for children in the back seat, according to a review by the insurance industry.

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety gave its top marks to 21 of 72 booster seats it evaluated for properly restraining children, or about 30 percent, according to results released Wednesday. Last year, the Institute only handed out its “best bet” citation to nine of the 60 seats it reviewed, or 15 percent.

Booster seats are used by children between the ages of 4 and 8 and elevate kids so seat belts fit them better. Seat belts are meant to be routed across a child’s upper thigh and cross over the middle of the shoulder to provide protection in a crash.

A 2009 study by the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia found that children ages 4 to 8 who ride in booster seats in the back seat are 45 percent less likely to sustain injuries in crashes than children wearing only seat belts. The government recommends booster seats for children over 40 pounds until they are 8 years old or 4 feet, 9 inches tall.

The Virginia-based Institute focuses on how well the seat belt fits on an average booster-age kid in most vehicles. It doesn’t conduct vehicle crash tests to evaluate booster seats because the seats don’t restrain children in a crash, seat belts do.

Harmony Juvenile Products had five “best bet” booster seats, more than any other manufacturer. Dorel Juvenile Group had five seats that rated either “best bet” or “good bet,” the second-highest designation.

Booster seats built by Britax, Clek, Combi, Dorel, Evenflo and Recaro had “best bet” booster seats for a second straight year. Seats by Chicco, Cybex, Graco, Harmony and The First Years joined the “best bet” ranks in 2010.

In addition to the 21 seats that received the top rating, seven seats received the Institute’s second-highest rating of “good bet” and 36 were in the middle category because they didn’t consistently fit belts well on most children in most vehicles.

The Institute said consumers shouldn’t assume that boosters in the “in-between” group will fit children in every vehicle. Parents should try them out to see if the lap and shoulder belts fit their kids properly and keep looking until they find a good match.

The Institute did not recommend: Eddie Bauer Deluxe, Eddie Bauer Deluxe 3-in-1, Evenflo Express, Evenflo Generations 65, Evenflo Sightseer, Harmony Baby Armor, Safety 1st All-in-One, and Safety 1st Alpha Omega Elite.

Dorel Juvenile Group, which manufacturers the Eddie Bauer and Safety 1st seats, said in a statement that it evaluates and continues to evolve “current products to enhance their performance with new technologies and designs.”

Michael Noah, a senior vice president with Harmony Juvenile, said the company was pleased with the overall results and said the Baby Armor seats had performed well in testing conducted by third-party laboratories for the company. Evenflo did not immediately respond to the Institute tests.

Anne McCartt, the Institute’s vice president for research, said parents should be wary of lap belts that ride up on the tummy and shoulder belts that either fall off the shoulder or rub against a child’s neck.

By Ken Thomas
September 9, 2010

Read more: http://www.insurancejournal.com/news/national/2010/09/09/113096.htm#ixzz0z8dv56Uf

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New crash tests raise questions about booster seat safety

Posted by Benji Riggins on January 12, 2010 under Safety | Be the First to Comment

New crash tests from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety are raising questions about the safety of child booster seats.

After the tests, only 25 percent of the booster seats got a “good” or “best” rating from the Insurance Institute. Eleven booster seats are not recommended because the belts don’t provide a good fit.

Officials said children 4-8 years old in booster seats are 45 percent less likely to suffer serious injuries in accidents.

However, even kids in booster seats who aren’t properly belted in are at risk. Seat belts that cross the stomach can cause abdominal injuries. Plus, belts that cross the neck or are too low on the chest can cause spine and head injuries.

Twenty five states have laws requiring a booster until the age of eight. Three states — Florida, Arizona and South Dakota — don’t require booster seats at all.

Crash tests show seat belts alone do not protect a child, which is why safety experts say even booster seats that don’t get the top safety recommendation can still protect kids.

Officials said age is not the most important factor. It’s actually based more on the child’s height and how well they fit into adult seat belts.

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