Where Are All the Children Seated and When Are They Restrained? 971550
The restraint usage and seating location of children in crash-involved passenger cars were estimated using National Accident Sampling System (NASS) data. Whether drivers of cars were restrained or not appears to play a dominant role in whether child passengers were likewise restrained or not.
Most infant passengers were restrained irrespective of driver restraint usage. In contrast, the restraint usage of older children was dramatically influenced by the driver's restraint usage. If the driver was restrained, restraint usage by children dropped only slightly. If, however, the driver was unrestrained, restraint usage by children dropped by an order of magnitude This precipitous drop in restraint usage appears to have occurred by the age of five or six. Thereafter, the restraint usage of children riding with unrestrained drivers remained low and relatively constant.
Unrestrained drivers-who had a considerably greater fraction of unrestrained child passengers-were likely to compound an already unsafe situation by placing their unrestrained child passengers in the front seat more frequently. Since the latest available NASS data are for the 1995 calendar year, it is too soon to know whether the recent wide-spread publicity urging that children be placed in the back seats of vehicles is being heeded.
Citation: Edwards, J. and Sullivan, K., "Where Are All the Children Seated and When Are They Restrained?," SAE Technical Paper 971550, 1997, https://doi.org/10.4271/971550. Download Citation
Author(s):
Jack Edwards, Kaye Sullivan
Pages: 10
Event:
SAE Government Industry Meeting and Exposition
ISSN:
0148-7191
e-ISSN:
2688-3627
Also in:
Child Occupant Protection 2nd Symposium Proceedings-P-316, SAE 1997 Transactions - Journal of Passenger Cars-V106-6
Related Topics:
Children
Child restraint systems
Infants
Vehicle drivers
Seats and seating
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