Most Car Seats Are Used Incorrectly – Find Out If Yours Is Correct
Get a Free Car Seat Inspection During National Child Passenger Safety Week –
Sept. 18-24, 2022
Most parents think they are using their car seat correctly, but unfortunately, most car seats are
used incorrectly. For a car seat to best protect your child, it must be the one that fits your child,
your vehicle, and one that you will use correctly every time you travel. National Child Passenger
Safety Week is a good time to get a free car seat inspection to make sure that your car seat fits
your child and is installed correctly in your vehicle.
Car crashes continue to be one of the leading causes of death for children under age 13.
Making sure your children are protected on every trip is even more critical now than in the past
as crash data from the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration shows that the
risk of being in a crash is even higher with vehicle fatalities in the first quarter of 2022 up by 7%
over 2021.
Securing your children properly in age- and size-appropriate child safety seats — in the back
seat of your vehicle — is the most effective thing you can do to protect them in the event of a
crash. In fact, in motor vehicle crashes, child safety seats reduce the risk of fatal injury by 71
percent for infants and by 54 percent for toddlers.
That’s why Texas A&M AgriLife Extension Agent Fallon White in Orange County is urging
parents, expectant parents, grandparents and other caregivers to have their car seats checked
during National Child Passenger Safety Week – September 18-24, 2022. Inspections are free
of charge and done by nationally certified child passenger safety technicians. Click here to find a certified child passenger safety technician near you.
Here is a list of the most common mistakes that technicians see when they are inspecting car
seats and how they can be avoided.
5 Most Common Car Seat Mistakes
- Selection Errors:
Most children leave the hospital in a rear-facing only infant seat or a rear-facing convertible
seat. Children should remain rear-facing until they reach the maximum height or weight limit for
the rear-facing convertible seat. Most convertible seats go to at least 40 pounds rear-facing,
while there are some that go to 45- and 50-pounds rear-facing. At 40 to 50 pounds, it could
accommodate an average 3-to-4-year-old.
Children should ride in a forward-facing harnessed seat until they reach the height or weight
limit for the seat. The average forward-facing seat goes to at least 40 pounds in the harness,
with many available that go to 50, 65, 70 or even 85 pounds.
When the limit of the forward-facing seat has been reached, caregivers can consider a booster
seat if the child is at least 4 years old, 40 pounds, and mature enough to stay correctly seated
and buckled for the entire trip. Booster seats should be used until the child correctly fits the seat
belt. This is usually sometime between 8 and 12 years old when the lap and shoulder belt fit
correctly.
Seat belts can be used when the child can sit up straight, bend their knees at the edge of the
vehicle bench, touch the floor, and have a good fit of the lap belt over the upper thighs and the
shoulder belt across the middle of the shoulder and flat against the chest. - Direction Errors:
Most parents are turning their child forward-facing too soon. Parents are understandably
anxious to see their child forward-facing so that they can better interact with them. However,
research shows that rear-facing is the safest way for a small child to travel. Rear-facing helps to
align the child’s head, neck and spine and spreads the crash forces over the child’s body rather
than concentrating them in any one area. The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends
keeping a child rear-facing until they reach the maximum weight or height limit for the rearfacing convertible. Do not worry about the child’s legs against the back of the seat. Their joints
are flexible and they can sit comfortably that way. - Harnessing Errors:
Many children are riding with a loose harness system that is not at the correct position in
relation to the child’s shoulders. For rear-facing seats the harness should be at or or below the
child’s shoulders, and at or above for forward-facing seats. The plastic chest clip that comes on
all harnessed seats needs to go across the chest armpit to armpit to make sure that the straps
are properly positioned on the child’s shoulders.
Test the webbing at the child’s shoulders to make sure it is snug. If you can pinch up any of the
webbing, it is too loose. Proper harnessing helps to prevent movement, which in turn helps to
protect the child from injuries. Do not put on bulky jackets under the harness. - Installation Errors:
Installing a car seat using the vehicle seat belt requires the car seat to be locked and stay
locked. Vehicles made in 1996 and newer are required to have a way to lock in a car seat in
every position except the driver’s seat. Most vehicles have a shoulder belt retractor that — when
gently pulled all the way out — will change from locking in an emergency to locking all the time
for a car seat. Some car manufacturers put the locking mechanism in the latch plate instead of
the shoulder belt.
Vehicles model 2003 and newer have LATCH (Lower Anchors and Tethers for Children)
installed in at least two seating positions. The lower anchors and the tether take the place of the
seat belt and should not be used together with the seat belt unless both the car seat and vehicle
instructions allow this. Neither LATCH nor the seat belt are safer than the other. Whether
installing with the seat belt or the lower anchors, the tether is important to reduce forward head
movement.
Check the car seat at the belt path to make sure it is secure. It should not move more than 1
inch side-to-side or front-to-back when tugged on at the belt path. - Skipping a Free Inspection
It is important to read the car seat manual as well as your car owner’s manual to make sure you
are using the car seat correctly and installing it correctly in the vehicle. In addition, have your
car seat inspected by a certified child passenger safety technician.
Watch the video – 5 Most Common Car Seat Mistakes – https://vimeo.com/535890960
(English) or https://vimeo.com/456716811 (Spanish).
Remember: All child passengers under age 13 should ride securely restrained in the back seat,
where they are safest — every trip, every time!
Social Media