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Safety research carried out by Holden and the Monash University Accident
Research Centre (MUARC) stresses the importance of restraining children who are
between five and 10 years of age in belt-positioning child booster seats until
the adult seat belt alone fits them correctly.
The research project focused on five to 10 year-olds because the vehicle
occupant fatality and injury rates for these children are higher than for
younger children.
Between 1998 and 2002 - according to MUARC - an average of 148 children aged
10 years and younger were killed or seriously injured each year in car crashes
on Victorian roads.
Of these, 62 per cent were aged five to 10 years; 32 per cent were aged one
to four years; and six per cent were under 12 months of age.
The Holden/MUARC research project was based on a series of crash simulations
conducted at Holden's proving ground using a crash test dummy representative of
a six year-old child. The tests showed the dangerous forward movement that can
occur during a crash when a child is wearing the car's seat belt alone, rather
than being properly restrained in a booster seat.
Holden Innovation Chief Engineer, Dr Laurie Sparke, said the research
provided further confirmation that using booster seats can help to prevent or
lessen serious injury to children in a crash.
"While the majority of parents now use a baby capsule and forward-facing
child seat as a matter of course for younger children, many may not realise that
restraining their five to 10 year-olds with seat belts alone can be an unsafe
practice. The car's seat belts are designed to protect adults, not children," Dr
Sparke said.
In preparation for the tests, Holden engineers positioned the dummy on the
rear seat to imitate the way that children sit when restrained by adult seat
belts alone.
In frontal crash testing, the dummy's hips slid forward on the seat so that
the lap belt rode high on the soft abdomen, rather than on the lower hips and
upper thighs, where it should have been. The dummy also lurched forward,
demonstrating the risk of injury to a small child riding improperly restrained
without a booster seat.
"Belt-positioning booster seats are the best way to help protect older kids,
but based on international research, it is likely that only 12 per cent of
children who should be restrained in booster seats are actually using them,"
said Dr Judith Charlton, Research Fellow at the Monash University Accident
Research Centre.
"MUARC recommends that children who are over 100 centimetres in height and
more than 18 kilograms in weight should be correctly secured in belt-positioning
booster seats until they reach the stage where adult lap and shoulder belts fit
them properly. This is usually when they're between eight and 10 years old,
approximately - although there's no ‘right age' for this, because it's dependent
on the size of the child," Dr Charlton said.
A child should use an adult seat belt only when he or she can sit against the
back of the rear seat with the knees bent comfortably at the edge of the seat.
The lap belt should rest low and snug across the hips and not across the stomach
and the shoulder belt should be centred on the shoulder and chest.
Booster seats help younger children who have outgrown child seats to sit high
enough to enable them to sit all the way back against the seat, without having
to slouch, and with their knees bent over the edge of the seat. This allows:
- the lap belt to fit more snugly over the bony pelvis, rather than the soft
abdomen, and
- the shoulder belt to remain better positioned over the shoulder and chest,
rather than riding up into the chin and face.
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