Talk:Child safety seat
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Legal requirements for child car seats and restraints in New Zealand was nominated for deletion. The discussion was closed on 11 January 2013 with a consensus to merge. Its contents were merged into Child safety seat. The original page is now a redirect to this page. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected article, please see its history; for its talk page, see here. |
The contents of the Infant car seat page were merged into Child safety seat on April 16, 2012. For the contribution history and old versions of the redirected page, please see its history; for the discussion at that location, see its talk page. |
History
[edit]Note: We need a history of Child Safety Seats.
- History link provided, someone should take this information and integrate it into the article. --Ecksemmess 00:45, 30 August 2006 (UTC)
- The first cars were manufactured and sold not in the early 1900's but already in the 1880's.--Big Bene (talk) 12:02, 15 June 2015 (UTC)
Too much Canada
[edit]Mind you, I'm fond of the place, but the main article's awfully, er, Canadacentric--laws regarding child safety seats in different regions should be linked externally. Pity I'm not the man for it.Nhrenton 18:52, 5 December 2006 (UTC)
Balls
[edit]We didn't have any of this when I was a kid. back then rear seats didn't have those uncomfortable shoulder straps, windows rolled down all the way, and you could pull the belt out enough to fit an adult without it 'catching' and constricting you if you try to use it. Let's just admit it, cars are deathtraps. No amount of inconvenience is going to fix that.. and anyway if you get in an accident you might as well be dead because you can't afford car repairs -and- food.
Car seats Save Lives
[edit]Edited my prior comments in response to balls. Mommy0406 05:31, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
Information needed
[edit]- There are now sections to put in both US and Canadian laws and links if somebody can add them.
- There's a request for a section about child safety seat history, however I don't see the link for it, so this is a new section that will need to be researched and written. I'm unfamiliar with the history so will let someone else start that one.
- Also, does anyone have pictures that are public domain to add to the article? It would be nice to have a picture of each of the different kind of seats to place in the section where each is described.
Mommy0406 05:27, 18 March 2007 (UTC)
A responsability
[edit]How you present information can be wery important and in this case can aument fatal injuries instead of saving lifes. People alot of times only looks for quick information and act from what they quickly finds, so it is important that on a page like this you give the best recommendations possible first and most clearly. Hope you know that the best recommendations today is to follow the recommendations used in Sweden which recommends to seat the child facing backwards until 4 years old.
So I think it is important that this page is changed to give the recommendations to place the children facing backwards until 25 kg and/or 4 years (or as logg as possible).
Regarding the comment on Steven Levitt's database study that suggest it is better to place the children in the car seat with a normal belt. that study does not regard the best option (rear facing) because Steven did not have access to that data in his study. I refere to personal email conversation with Steven Levitt, where he replies that he (as many other) thought it was not possible to put a child rear facing up to 4 years old, it is time to inform the world of the safest way for the childrens sake.
Niklar (talk) 13:12, 29 May 2012 (UTC)
- All this rear facing stuff assumes that you can safely drive with a screaming toddler in the back. For parents fortunate enough to have a child who doesn't do that, they're fortunate. For the rest of us, no one has studied the effects of screaming toddlers on the attention of driving parents. However, there are numerous studies that show that distracted drivers a major cause of accidents. Perhaps we should focus on reducing accidents rather than marginal improvements on what happens when an accident occurs. philosofool (talk) 23:17, 2 October 2013 (UTC)
- In the situation you are describing, or in general when you are alone in the car with a child, the recommendation from the authorities in Sweden is to put the babies rear facing in the front seat, but only if you can turn off the airbag. (in Swedish language: https://ntf.se/fragor-och-svar/barn-i-bil/placering-montering/ar-fram-eller-baksatet-sakrast-for-barnen/) 188.149.8.0 (talk) 11:42, 26 March 2024 (UTC)
references:
Cite error: There are <ref>
tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
1.Carlsson G, Norin H, Ysander L: Rearward-facing child seats – the safest car restraint for children? Accident Analysis and Prevention, 23(2-3):175-182, 1991
2. Kamrén B, von Koch M, Lie A, Tingvall C, Larsson S, Turbell T. The Protective Effect of Rearward Facing CRS. An Overview of possibilities and problems associated with child restrainf for children aged 0-3 years. Child Occupant Protection symposium, San Antonio, nov 1993. Society of Automotive engineers (SAE), Inc Warredale, PA. SAE technical paper 933093.
3. Isaksson-Hellman I, Jakobson L, Gustafsson C, Norin H: Trends and effects of child restraint systems based on Vovo´s Swedish accident database. SAE Technical paper 973299. Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE). Warrendale, PA, 1997.
4. Jacobsson L, Isaksson –Hellman I, Lundell B: Safety for the growing child – experiences from swedish accident data. ESV conference 2005. Paper no 05-0330.
5. Tingvall C. Children in cars. Doctor thesis. Some aspects of the safety of children as car passangers on raod traffic accidents. Acta Paediatrica Scandinavica. Supplement, 339:1-35,1987. (Doctoral thesis )
6. Turbell T. Child restraint systems: Frontal Imapct Performance. VTI rapport 36A. Swedish Raod and Traffic Resarch Institute (VTI) Stockholm Sweden. 1974
7. Fuchs S, Barthel MJ, Flannery, AM and Christoffel KK: Cervical spine fractures sustained by young children in forward facing car seats. Pediatrics 84(2), 348-354, 1989.
8. Stalnaker RL: Spinal cord injuires to children in real world accidents. SAE SP-986. Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE). Warrendale, PA. 1993. Pp 173-183.
9. Arbogast KB, Cornejo RA, Kallan MJ, Winston FK, Durbin DR: Injuries to children in forward facing child restraings. Association for the Advancement of Automotive Medicine 46th (AAAM). Annual Conference, Tempe, AX 2002. Pp 213-230.
10. Henary B, Sherwood, C P, Crandall J R, Kent R W, Vaca F E, Arbogast K B, Bull M J. Car safety seats for children: rear facing for best protection. Injury Prevention 2007; 13:398-402.
11. Sherwood C P, Crandall J R. Frontal sled tests comparing rear and forward facing child restraints with 1-3 year old dummies. Annual Proc Assoc Adv Automot Med. 2007;51:169-80
Article ratings
[edit]This has got to be the lowest rated article I have ever seen. Any suggestions for improvement? Marcus Qwertyus 23:55, 26 June 2012 (UTC)
How can you westerners invented this
[edit]These devices looks brute, stupid and restraining, much like something BD*M. And from the "Critism" section "Levitt suggests that the available data does not support the necessity of forward facing child safety seats for children over two years old, arguing that the cheaper and simpler alternative of seat belts offers similar protection as forward facing seats". Why did you westerners not invent some simple portable harness that can be joined to seat belts, but rather these big curbersome devices? Can these be comfortable and pleasant for children? Won't it hampers contact between child and a not-driving parent? From an Asian's manner of view, I dare to query. 183.195.21.160 (talk) 15:41, 17 August 2014 (UTC)
External links modified
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section: Type
[edit]it is perplexing that the description of the "convertible seat" is tagged by a "citation needed" mark while the neighbouring paragraphs are untagged. its hard to think of a scientific type reliable source for this kind of distinction, yet this is one prominent feature you perceive when you go shopping for a child seat. tagging simple descriptions doesnt seem to be right. if theres a need for sources then that need arises for the whole article rather than for a trivial description within it. other types of child safety seats arent tagged for citation even though those descriptions (see the same section of the article) are not differing from this one. one could question the notability of these types of seats but that seems quite a natural way of describing the topic even though probably no scientific journal has ever received submissions on this topic. just because it is trivial or irrelevant from a physics/mechanical engineering point of view(that is from scientific POV) it might be still important enough for the average buyer/wiki reader to include in the article. 89.134.199.32 (talk) 13:21, 30 April 2020 (UTC).
missing comparison of isofix and seat belt held child seat
[edit]i found no information in this article concerning the difference in effectiveness/safety of the isofix type that became common since 2002 and the earlier (still existing) safety belt held child seat. nor is this covered in the article about seat belts neither in the article about the isofix standard. there are cars still in use that were manufactured before the mandatory built in isofix fixture points - in these cars a child passanger is seated in the older type child safety seat, that is held in place by the built in safety belt intended for adult passengers. these older type child seats may vary in design, some of them have 5 point harness to hold the child in seat, but the seat itself is attached and fixed by the cars built in safety belt. i think it would be relevant to cover these and a comparison between them and the newer isofix type child seats, not just for a historical point of view but also because these are still used. 89.134.199.32 (talk) 20:19, 30 April 2020 (UTC).
Overcitation?
[edit]Is there a reason there are 10 (!) citations for this claim? Is there a history here that I'm not aware of?
Rear-facing car seats are significantly safer in frontal collisions, which are the most likely to cause severe injury and death
DeVosMax [ contribs • talk • created media ] 06:50, 26 August 2024 (UTC)
- Someone came up with a list of references earlier in the talk page and they were just shoved into the article in that spot. I did some kind of remedy. This article is pretty bad. Reconrabbit 18:55, 28 August 2024 (UTC)