National
Desk
| June 4, 2003, Wednesday
Study Finds
Booster Seats Safer Than Seat Belts
By MATTHEW L. WALD (NYT) 577 words
Late Edition - Final , Section A ,
Page 29 , Column 1
ABSTRACT
- Study of over 3,600 auto crashes finds
child in booster seat has less than half
risk of injury of child wearing only adult
seat belt; children in study's age group, 4
to 7, are not covered by child safety laws
of most states and study finds few of them
use booster seats; lead author, Dr Dennis R
Durbin, says wearing adult seat belt cut
child's risk of injury by 38 percent, but
using booster seat with belt cut it by 78
percent (M) In a car crash, a child in a
booster seat has less than half the risk of
injury of a child wearing only an adult seat
belt, a study of more than 3,600 crashes has
found.
But children in the study's age group, 4
to 7, are not covered by the child safety
laws of most states. The seats are called
belt-positioning boosters because they raise
the child's torso to a level that makes the
adult lap and shoulder belts safer, but the
study found few children were using them.
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