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Car booster
seats cut injuries in kids as old as 7
By Linda Carroll
Last Updated: 2003-06-03
17:03:24 -0400 (Reuters Health)
NEW YORK (Reuters Health)
- Studies have shown that booster seats can reduce injuries in
children who are 4 years old and younger, and researchers said
Tuesday that the benefit can be extended to children as old as 7.
Children ages 4 through 7
who were belted into a booster seat were half as likely to be
injured in a car crash as those who wore only a seat belt, according
to a study published in the Journal of the American Medical
Association.
And booster seats
virtually wiped out injuries to the abdomen and spine, according to
the study's lead author, Dr. Dennis R. Durbin of the Children's
Hospital of Philadelphia.
"This is the first
real-world evidence showing that booster seats do provide an
important incremental safety benefit over seat belts alone for
children aged four through seven," Durbin said in an interview with
Reuters Health.
"What we are hoping is
that the results of this study will help both parents and
legislators establish a new sense of what 'normal' should be in this
group of kids. It should no longer be normal to have only a seat
belt."
Durbin and his colleagues
scrutinized data from 3,616 crashes that involved vehicles covered
by State Farm Insurance Co. The researchers interviewed the parents
of the 4,243 children who had been involved in the crashes.
Durbin's team looked only
at crashes involving children who were seated in the back seat of
the vehicle.
While injuries were
reduced across the board by booster-seat use, the results were most
dramatic when it came to injuries to the abdomen, spine and lower
extremities, Durbin said.
This result doesn't
surprise Durbin, who said that these are the types of injuries that
result from poor-fitting seat belts.
Copyright 2002 Reuters.
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