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  Vol. 154 No. 6, June 2000 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Anticipatory Guidance About Child Safety Seat Misuse

Lessons From Safety Seat "Checkups"

Melvin Kohn, MD, MPH; Kerry Chausmer, ACSW, MPH; M. Holly Flood, MPH

Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2000;154:606-609.

Objectives  To quantify the frequency of improper child safety seat use and to identify the most common mistakes in safety seat use, so that priorities for anticipatory guidance about misuse can be identified.

Design  Descriptive survey of types and frequency of safety seat misuse.

Setting  Eleven safety seat "checkups" sponsored by the Louisiana SAFE KIDS Coalition in southeastern Louisiana in 1998.

Participants  Convenience sample of parents recruited for checkups through local media and sponsoring businesses. Three hundred seventeen child safety seats were checked.

Results  Of the 266 forward- and rear-facing seats checked, 250 (94%) were installed incorrectly. Sixty-one (23%) of the seats had minor misuse or were correctly used, 107 (40%) were partially misused, and 98 (37%) were extensively misused. The 3 most frequently found problems were seat not belted into vehicle tightly (142 [88%] of forward-facing seats and 84 [81%] of rear-facing seats), safety seat harness straps not snug (70 [43%] of forward-facing seats and 49 [47%] of rear-facing seats), and harness retainer clip not at armpit level (55 [34%] of forward-facing seats and 38 [37%] of rear-facing seats).

Conclusions  As part of the routine anticipatory guidance offered during well-child visits, health care providers (ie, physician, nurse, or nurse practitioner) should counsel parents specifically about these 3 frequent errors in child safety seat use.


From the Injury Research and Prevention Section, Louisiana Office of Public Health (Dr Kohn and Mss Chausmer and Flood), the Department of Pediatrics, Tulane University School of Medicine (Dr Kohn), and the Louisiana SAFE KIDS Coalition (Ms Chausmer), New Orleans. Dr Kohn is now with the Oregon Health Division, Portland.



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