Rome News-Tribune

Booster Seat and Seat Belt Safety for Big Kids

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Regardless of age, all passengers need to be buckled in. Follow specific guidelines for your child’s height, age and weight to determine the best child safety restraint. For children ages 5 to 9, who are under 4 feet 9 inches tall and less than 80 to 100 pounds, a car seat or booster seat is a must for the best protection.

Top Tips

Use a car seat with a harness or booster seat with the vehicle lap and shoulder safety belts until your child passes the Safety Belt Fit Test.

Vehicle seat belts are designed to fit an average sized adult. To get the best protection from a seat belt, children usually need a booster until they are about 4 feet 9 inches tall and weigh between 80 to 100 pounds. Many children will be between 8 and 12 years of age before they meet these height and weight requiremen­ts.

Use a booster seat correctly in a back seat every time your child rides in a car.

Older kids get weighed and measured less often than babies, so check your child’s growth a few times a year.

Be sure to correctly install your booster seat. Booster seats are not installed the same way car sears are. Booster seats sit on the vehicle seat and are used to properly position the adult seat belt for an older child.

A booster seat uses no harness. It uses the vehicle’s lap and shoulder belts only. Be sure the seat belt is properly buckled.

For children who are riding in booster seats, never place the shoulder belt under the child’s are or behind the child’s back.

Be sure all occupants wear safety belts correctly every time. Children learn from adult role models.

Tell all drivers who transport your child that a car seat or booster seat use is a much when your child is in their vehicles.

Treat seat belts as you would any cord or rope do not allow children to play with them at any time.

When your child reaches 4 feet 9 inches an between 80 to 100 pounds, use the Safety Belt Fit Test to determine if the child is big enough to use the adult seat belt without a booster. Use the Safety Belt Fit Test on every child under 13.

The Safety Belt Fit Test

Have your child sit in a back seat with his or her bottom and back against the vehicle’s seat back. Do the child’s knees bend at the seat’s edge? — If yes go on

— If not, the child must stay in the booster seat

Buckle the seat belt. Does the lap belt sty on the hips or high on the thigh?

— If yes go on

— If it rests on the soft part of the stomach, the child must stay in a booster seat

Look at the shoulder belt. Does it lie on the collar bone or shoulder?

— If yes go on. If it is on the face or neck, the child must remain in a booster seat.

— Never put the shoulder belt under the child’s arm or behind the child’s back. Do not allow children to play with the shoulder portion of the seat belt. Treat it like any cord

Can the child maintain the correct seating position with the shoulder belt on the shoulder and the lap belt low across the hips, or high on the thigh?

— If yes, the child has passed the Safety Belt Fit Test.

— If no, the child should return to a booster seat and re-test in a month.

 ??  ?? Rita Smith, Safety Advocate
Rita Smith, Safety Advocate

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