Montreal Gazette

Alert systems could prevent hot car deaths

Quebec coroner calls for warnings in all vehicles in report on infant boy’s death

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Two years after a baby died of heatstroke when he was forgotten in a car on a sweltering day, a Quebec coroner is calling for all vehicles sold in Canada to be equipped with an alert system to prevent similar tragedies.

Denyse Langelier said existing technology such as weight sensors, cameras or alert messages could save lives, but there is no rule in place requiring manufactur­ers to install them.

In an age when cars are equipped with an increasing array of hightech gadgets, she said there’s no reason they can’t also come with a reliable system to remind parents of their children’s presence.

“We have alerts if someone is in the front seat next to us, if someone is in front of us, and the manufactur­ers aren’t capable of finding a mechanism or system for their base-model cars?” she said.

“I think there will have to be an effort that is made so that they are installed, that it gets done.”

Langelier made the recommenda­tion as she released her report on the death of a baby left in a hot car north of Montreal in August 2016. The 11-month-old infant was found lifeless in a car seat several hours after his father forgot to drop him off at a daycare in St-Jérôme.

According to the report, the father left home with his three children at about 7 a.m. on Aug. 17. But after dropping off the two older children at camp, he went home instead of to the daycare.

The mistake was only noticed at about 4:30 p.m., after the father went to pick up the child and realized he’d been left in the car.

The report concluded the child died of hypertherm­ia on a day when the temperatur­e outside ranged from 25 C to 28 C. The death was ruled accidental.

Langelier said her report is the second of three coroner’s investigat­ions into hot car deaths in the province. The third was opened only weeks ago, after a six-monthold baby boy was found dead by his father who forgot him in the car while he was at work in Montreal.

But Langelier said similar incidents occur far more often, even if they’re never reported, because they’re caught in time.

Forgetfuln­ess is a “natural mechanism,” she said, and parents can easily get distracted or switch to autopilot if they ’re tired or their routines change.

“It’s important for parents to be sensitive to that and not to think it couldn’t happen to them,” she said.

She said every car needs to be equipped with a “passive” system that can’t be turned off.

Possibilit­ies include apps to text parents, dashboard messages and weight sensors that go off if a driver forgets something in the back seat.

Transport Canada has conducted studies using motion sensors or carbon dioxide detectors to detect breathing, but has thus far concluded they aren’t reliable enough, according to the coroner’s report.

Langelier acknowledg­ed the agency won’t certify anything before it’s proven to be fail-safe, which means it may be a long time before rules can be put in place.

In the meantime, she’s urging parents to devise their own systems to ensure their children aren’t forgotten.

Those can include placing a cellphone or lunch bag in the back seat, having partners call each other to check in or setting an alert on their phones to ring at drop-off time.

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