Sunday, September 6, 2009

Air Bag Safety - The Air Bag that Saves Your Life Can Kill Your Child


The air bag that saves your life can kill your child!

Air bag safety -
Buckle everyone!
Children in back!



Air bags save lives.
They work best when everyone is buckled and children are properly restrained in the back seat. Children riding in the front seat can be seriously injured or killed when an air bag comes out in a crash.

An air bag is not a soft, billowy pillow. To do its important job, an air bag comes out of the dashboard at up to 200 miles per hour — faster than the blink of an eye. The force of an air bag can hurt those who are too close to it.

Drivers can prevent air bag-related injuries to adults and children by following the critical safety points:

Child Safety Points

Children 12 and under should ride buckled up in a rear seat.

Infants in rear facing child safety seats should NEVER ride in the front seat of a vehicle with a passenger side air bag.

Small children should ride in a rear seat in child safety seats approved for their age and size.

If a child over one year old must ride in the front seat with a passenger side air bag, put the child in a front facing child safety seat, a booster seat, or a correct fitting lap/shoulder belt — AND move the seat as far back as possible.



Adult Safety Points

Everyone should buckle up with both lap and shoulder belts on eve ry trip. Air bags are supplemental protection devices.

The lap belt should be worn under the abdomen and low across the hips. The shoulder portion should come over the collar bone away from the neck and cross over the breast bone.

The shoulder belt in most new cars can be adjusted on the side pillar to improve fit.

Driver and front passenger seats should be moved as far back as practical, particularly for shorter statured people.

Air bags can be dangerous to children 12 and under. Passenger-side air bags inflate at speeds up to 200 miles per hour (mph) -- faster than the blink of an eye. That blast of energy can severely hurt or kill children 12 and under who are too close to the air bag during inflation.

If a child is unbelted, too small for the lap and shoulder belt to fit properly, or incorrectly restrained or positioned in a child safety seat, there is a danger that the child will be too close to the dashboard during the instant that the air bag inflates. This could result in serious injury or death. Pre-crash braking and steering are the usual reasons they move too close to the dashboard. This turns a minor 10 mph crash into a 140 mph head impact with the air bag.

The safest place for children 12 and under to ride is in the back. An infant in a rear-facing safety seat must never be placed in the front seat of a motor vehicle with a passenger-side air bag. During a forward impact, the rapidly inflating air bag could strike the safety seat with enough force to seriously injure or kill the infant. Infants, under one year of age and about 20 pounds, must ride in rear-facing child safety seats placed in the back seat of the vehicle. They are especially at risk in cars with passenger side air bags.

Never place an infant facing forward — the child's head and neck muscles cannot tolerate the crash forces.

Forward-facing convertible safety seats are used with toddlers over the age of one and weighing 20 pounds. These seats typically place the child at least several inches closer to the dashboard than the normal adult seating position, and therefore should be placed in the back seat.

Car booster seats should be used with children who have outgrown their convertible safety seat but do not fit correctly in a lap/shoulder belt. They should be securely restrained in the rear seat.

Older children, who fit correctly in a lap/shoulder belt, should be securely restrained in the vehicle’s rear seat through age 12.

In summary, all children 12 years old and under are safest when properly restrained in the back seat of the vehicle. Children are up to 29 percent safer riding in the back seat versus the front seat, whether the vehicle has an air bag or not.

Join Forces With Others in Your Community to Get the Word Out. The goal is to ensure that everyone knows that children are safest when they are belted properly in the back seat of a car — especially when that car is equipped with a passenger-side air bag.

The most effective way to get this message out is by building a communication network through community partnerships!

Your community’s partnership possibilities are endless. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is currently cooperating with the auto industry, insurance agencies, and air bag manufacturers, as well as several health and safety groups throughout the United States, to bring national attention to the issue of air bag safety.

The goals of the Campaign are to inform the public about how to maximize the lifesaving capabilities of air bags while minimizing the risks and to increase the proper use of safety belts and child safety seats.

The centerpiece of this effort is the national mobilization of public safety and law enforcement agencies to deliver the “ABC” message. The Campaign also encourages alliances with children’s, safety, religious, and other community-based organizations and corporate partnerships to reach employees and consumers.

The Air Bag Safety Campaign has developed a one-page envelope stuffer that briefly outlines the advantages of air bags and the safety benefits of securing children in the back seat. It promotes the “ABC” message and the safety points listed below.

An infant should never be placed in a rear-facing child safety seat in the front seat -- the position of the seat is too close to the deploying air bag.


Children riding in the front seat are also at deadly risk if they are improperly belted, completely unbelted, out of position, or too small for the safety belt to fit correctly. In a crash, or during pre-crash braking, they can easily slide forward on the seat, and the inflating air bag could hit them in the head or neck.

Experts advise that the safest way for children to ride is buckled up in age- and size-appropriate safety seats in the back seat.Children are up to 29 percent safer riding in the back seat versus the front seat, whether the vehicle has an air bag or not.

Drivers and all adult passengers, particularly people of short stature, should make sure they are properly belted and that the front seat is moved back as far as practical.

The following information is designed to give basic air bag safety tips and answer the most commonly asked questions addressing air bag safety issues.

If you, or someone you know, receives calls concerning air bag safety, use this sheet as a quick, accurate reference. For more information or answers to other air bag-related questions, contact the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration's (NHTSA) Auto Safety Hotline at 1-800-424-9393 or http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov.

Basic Safety Tips
The back seat is the safest place for children of any age to ride.

Never put an infant (less than one year old) in the front of a vehicle with a passenger-side air bag.

Infants must always ride in the back seat facing the rear of the car.

Make sure everyone is buckled up. Unbuckled occupants can be hurt or killed by an air bag.


Questions and Answers

Q: Should I put a rear-facing infant restraint in the front seat of a vehicle with a passenger side air bag?

A: No. Unless the vehicle is equipped with a cut off switch for the air bag and the air bag is shut off, under absolutely no circumstances should a parent place a rear-facing infant restraint in front of an air bag.

There is an extremely high risk of severe injury or fatality in this situation, and a child should never be subjected to this risk.

Even if the air bag is shut off or there is no air bag, the safest place for all children 12 and under is in the rear seat.

Many parents are concerned about having an infant rear-facing in the rear seat. However, the American Academy of Pediatrics stresses that a healthy baby buckled correctly in a rear-facing child seat is as safe as a baby placed in a crib for a nap or overnight sleep. The risk of serious injury in a crash is much greater than the risk of a healthy baby having a life-threatening health problem during a car ride.

If no rear seat is available in which to place the rear-facing child restraint, and another mode of transportation is available, consider using that alternative.

Q: Should I put a forward-facing child safety seat in the right front seat with an air bag? Will the child be safe if the air bag deploys?

A: NHTSA recommends placing all children 12 and under in the rear seat. That is the safest place. If no option exists other than seating a young child in the front seat, several steps must be taken.

First, the child needs to be properly restrained in the child seat.

Second, the vehicle seat needs to be pushed all the way back, to maximize the distance between the child and the air bag.

Q: My child is too old for a child seat. Should I allow my child to ride in the front seat with an air bag? Will the child be safe if the air bag deploys?

A: NHTSA recommends placing all children 12 and under in the rear seat. That is the safest place. If no option exists other than seating them in the front seat, several steps need to be taken.

First, the child needs to be properly restrained. This means a booster seat plus a lap/shoulder belt or a lap/shoulder belt alone for larger children, depending on the size of the child.

Second, the vehicle seat needs to be pushed all the way back, to maximize the distance between the child and the air bag.

Third, the child needs to be sitting with his or her back against the seat back, not wiggling around or leaning forward, with as little slack as possible in the seat belt in order to minimize forward movement in a crash.

Q: I’m a short person, so I sit very close to the steering wheel. What can I do to avoid serious injuries from the air bag?

A: It is important to remember that the number of drivers killed by air bags is small and that many more drivers are saved by air bags than are killed by them. A majority of the drivers killed by an air bag were not using their safety belts.

Others were positioned too close to the steering wheel at the time of the air bag deployment. All drivers need to be properly belted and sit as far away from the air bag as possible to allow the air bag to deploy.

Air bag risk is minimal if a driver can sit 10 to 12 inches or more away from the steering wheel. Short drivers should move the driver’s seat rearward to allow space between the driver’s chest and the steering wheel, and the seat back should be tilted back slightly.

To the extent possible, the driver should hold the steering wheel from the sides so that his or her arms aren’t between the driver and the air bag. This arm positioning reduces the risk of arm and hand injuries.

While NHTSA has not analyzed the ease of use or safety implications of pedal blocks or extenders, it is aware that they are available for use by short stature drivers.

Q: Is it safe for short adults to be seated in the front passenger seat of a vehicle equipped with a passenger-side air bag?

A: Yes. However, all passengers should be properly restrained, regardless of size. All front seat passengers (adults and children) should move the seat as far rearward as possible, and recline the seat back slightly.

In order to allow the air bag to deploy safely, front seat passengers should avoid leaning or reaching forward and should remain seated against the vehicle seat back, with as little slack in the belt as possible to minimize forward movement in a crash.

Q: Is it safe for elderly people to be seated in front of an air bag?

A: Elderly people, like all other drivers and front seat passengers, should be properly restrained and should move the seat as far rearward as possible, being careful to remain seated against the vehicle seat back and keeping the arms away from the area in which the air bag will deploy.

Q: I am pregnant. Is it safe for me to be seated in front of a air bag?

A: NHTSA is currently reviewing the effect of air bags on pregnant women. NHTSA currently recommends that pregnant women wear their seat belts. The shoulder portion should be positioned over the collar bone.

The lap portion should be placed under the abdomen as low as possible on the hips and across the upper thighs, never above the abdomen.

Also, pregnant women should sit as far from the air bag as possible.

For more information or answers to other air bag-related questions, contact NHTSA’s Auto Safety Hotline at 1-800-424-9393 or http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov.

If you would like further information on air bag safety, NHTSA has two educational videos and two brochures that address the issue of air bag safety and children.

Orders for these items should be mailed to:

Campaign Safe & Sober
400 7th Street, S.W.
NTS-21
Washington, DC 20590

Orders may be faxed to:
(202) 493-2062 or (202) 366-2766


For more information, check out the NHTSA web site at http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov.

Help Educate Your Community on Air Bag Safety

Air bags — when combined with lap and shoulder safety belts — have saved many lives and prevented many injuries in motor vehicle crashes. Recently, there have been questions raised about the safety of air bags.

The facts, however, speak for themselves.

There have been over 800,000 air bag deployments, saving over 1,500 lives. To date, completed investigations of air bag crashes show that many of the air bag injuries were due to the driver sitting too close to the air bag module or passengers riding unbuckled or incorrectly secured. The latter includes infants in rear-facing child safety seats that are placed in the front seat or small children incorrectly placed in a lap/shoulder safety belt.

Since 1996 alone,over eight children have died. Many people who transport children in cars do not understand how air bags work. They fail to fully appreciate the threat passenger-side air bags pose to young children and do not realize why they must take steps to protect children up to 12 years of age.

The bottom line: children and air bags do not mix. Air bags could seriously injure or even kill children who are in the front seat.

In addition, short stature adults are also at risk when positioned too close to the air bag module, especially when unbuckled.

There have been over 20,000 air bag deployments in which the driver was under five feet tall. In these cases, there have been nine fatalities -- all of whom were positioned too close to the air bag or unbelted. Air bag risk is minimal if a driver can sit 10 to 12 inches or more away from the steering wheel.

To decrease the number of injuries and deaths caused by the combination of air bags and improperly restrained children, as well as those attributed to motorists being improperly secured, drivers must be made aware of correct safety procedures.

You can help by educating your community on air bag safety!

I have represented clients where airbag deployments should never have occurred, i.e., the owners manuals indicated that the deployment of the airbag should have been deployed in only severe frontal impacts, however, the collisions involved inpacts or collisions that were considered low impact involving speeds of less than 8mph. Hence, it is imperative that you place yourself and passengers (particularly children) in an appropriate distance away from the air bag in case the air bag is deployed.

Remember - children should always be placed in the back seat. With those vehicles with side air bags, the children should be instructed to keep their heads away from the side door in case of deployment to avoid injury or death.
_________________________________________

CONTACT INFORMATION: If you or a family member have been injured or damaged due to the fault or responsibility of someone else, an industrial accident or by a dangerous or defective product, drug or toxic substance, contact Alan Morton for a no obligation, free consultation.

For additional information contact:

Alan L. Morton
MORTON LAW OFFICES, CHARTERED
1005 North Eighth Street
Post Office Box 420
Boise, ID 83701-0420
Telephone: 208.344.5555
Toll Free: 866.946.1669 [866.WIN.1.NOW]
Facsimile: 208.342.2509
Email: amorton@mortonlawyers.com
Website: www.mortonlawyers.com

No comments:

Post a Comment