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RIDE ON CARRY ON CHILD SEAT LUGGAGE ATTACHMENTGreat for Traveling with Children
RIDE ON CARRY ON CHILD SEAT LUGGAGE ATTACHMENTGreat for Traveling with Children
$39.99
Time Remaining: 27d 22h 35m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

EAGLE CREEK TRAVEL MEDIUM SHOULDER BAG W ZIP OFF SLING PACK Carry On Under Seat
EAGLE CREEK TRAVEL MEDIUM SHOULDER BAG W ZIP OFF SLING PACK Carry On Under Seat
$9.99 (1 Bid)
Time Remaining: 4d 21h 21m

Black Under Seat Rolling Carry On Luggage Travel Bag Ballistic nylon case
Black Under Seat Rolling Carry On Luggage Travel Bag Ballistic nylon case
$32.95
Time Remaining: 3d 19h 16m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

RIDE ON CARRY CHAIR SEAT LUGGAGE AIRPLANE FOLDS FLAT TRAY
RIDE ON CARRY CHAIR SEAT LUGGAGE AIRPLANE FOLDS FLAT TRAY
$31.88
Time Remaining: 20d 17h 7m
Buy It Now for only: $31.88

Black Under Seat Rolling Carry On Luggage Travel Bag Ballistic nylon case
Black Under Seat Rolling Carry On Luggage Travel Bag Ballistic nylon case
$29.95
Time Remaining: 4d 21h 1m
Buy It Now for only: $39.99

Black Under Seat Rolling Carry On Luggage Travel Bag Ballistic nylon case
Black Under Seat Rolling Carry On Luggage Travel Bag Ballistic nylon case
$24.99
Time Remaining: 6d 20h 16m

Seat Carry
Seat Carry

Rear Facing Car Seats - The Way Forward

It is Child Safety Week 2009 this week, so a perfect opportunity to draw attention to one of the simplest road safety precaution: if you have young children keep them in a safely-fitted rear facing car seat for as long as possible.

The statistics are shocking. Rear facing seats were found to be 75 per cent more effective by scientists in the US who looked at information on 870 car crashes involving children between 1998 and 2003.  Another study undertaken in Sweden suggested that over a seven year period half of the children who died in accidents where front facing “booster” seats were used could have been saved had they been using rear-facing seats. 

Whilst this advice is borne out by statistics, the problem in the UK is that many of the rear facing seats are not usable by children over 9Kg (20lbs).  Therefore children over about eight months have to be carried in normal front facing child seats. So, is this an issue that car seat manufacturers, and vehicle manufacturers, are looking into? Should parents be calling upon manufacturers to make rear-facing seats for older children more available? 

In addition, there is concern that car-seat manufacturers are not making the safety implications as clear as they should. Recent research on this issue was carried out by Dr. Elizabeth Watson, a Surrey GP, and Dr. Michael Monteiro, a specialist registrar at the Royal Surrey County Hospital in Guildford, and was published in the British Medical Journal.  It criticised the current weight-range labelling of European seats, as it might imply that forward-facing seats are as safe as rear-facing seats for children over 9kg.

The law on child car seats can also be confusing. Jonathan Wright, a partner at the motoring solicitors Keepmedriving, said “not all parents realise that they may be committing an offence if they do not carry their child in an appropriate seat.  It is a simple fact that many parents are quite unaware of how dangerous using the wrong type of seat can be, and the lives of children are being unnecessarily placed at risk as a result.”

The law is not prescriptive as to the nature of the seat which must be used, although it does contain guidance on when a reward facing seat must not be used.  It states that the driver is responsible for ensuring that all children travelling in cars use the correct child form of child restraint until they have either reached a height of 135 cm or the age of 12 - whichever comes first. Children over that age or height must use an adult seat belt. It is the driver's responsibility to ensure that children under the age of 14 years are restrained correctly in accordance with the law.

The law does state that it is illegal to carry a child in a rear-facing child seat in the front of a car where there is an active frontal airbag. In other words, unless there is no passenger airbag or it can be switched off, then a rear-facing child seat may not be used in the front.

What is less clear is what constitutes the correct form of child restraint.  Appropriate child restraints include baby carriers, child seats, harnesses and booster seats.  Clearly, however, not all forms of restraint are equally suitable for all children. All approved child restraints must carry the BS "Kitemark" or United Nations "E" mark and should be labelled by manufacturers to indicate the weight for which the seat or device has been designed.  This in itself may deter some parents from continuing to use rear-facing seats. 

For more information about the correct use of child restraints visit http://www.childcarseats.org.uk/, or if you have any concerns about the legal issues surrounding child car restraints contact the motoring solicitors Keepmedriving on 084 4804 4804 or visit http://www.keepmedriving.com/

About the Author

X fACTOR Whats all this carry on with the seat swapping?

Last week Danni was sitting in Louis seat, n Louis in hers. Now this week they were back in their own seats again??
I heard rumors that Simon said the women were too boring when seated next to each other. So why have they changed again for?

It was in the papers, something to do with Simon livening up the show, seeing as there was no chemistry between Dannii and Cheryl, they wanted to increase the banter with Simon and Louis.

But now they have moved it back, because apparently Dannii was annoyed by being pushed off to the end.

People like Bollox really p*ss me off.

Concord Ion Car Seat - Kiddcare