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Stephen I Halman a Division of Orthopaedic Surgery, Hospital for
Sick Children, 555 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, M5G 1X8,
Canada, b University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, c Division
of Pediatric Medicine, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto
Correspondence to: J G Wright jim.wright{at}sickkids.ca
Objective:
To study effectiveness of seat belts for
protecting school age children in road vehicle crashes.
What is already known on this topic
School age children are often unbelted in cars What this study adds
Adults were more likely than children to be belted, and 22% of
children travelling with belted drivers were unbelted
Design:
Crash examinations by trained investigators.
Setting:
Ten Canadian university based crash
investigation centres.
Subjects:
470 children aged 4-14 years, with 168 selected for detailed analysis, and 1301 adults.
Main outcomes measures:
Use of seat belts by vehicle
occupants; severity of injury adjusted for age and crash severity.
Results:
Overall, 40% (189/470) of children were
unbelted. Of the 335 children in cars driven by belted adults, 73 (22%) were unbelted. The odds of sustaining fatal or moderately severe injury (injury severity score
4) for children in the front passenger seat was more than nine times higher for unbelted children than for
belted ones (odds ratio 9.8 (95% confidence interval 2.4 to 39.4)) and
for those in the rear left seat was more than two times higher for
unbelted than for belted children (2.6 (1.1 to 5.9)). The protection
afforded by seat belts compared favourably with the results for adults
in the same seat positions (odds ratios for unbelted v
belted adults of 2.4 and 2.7 for front and rear seat passengers respectively).
Conclusions:
Seat belts helped to protect school age
children from injury in road vehicle crashes. However, 40% of children were unbelted. Despite standard seat belts being designed for adults,
school age children were at least as well protected as adults.
Although child restraints protect young children in road vehicle
crashes, it is not known whether standard seat belts used by school age
children work as well
Data from detailed crash assessments indicate that seat belts
protected children at least as well as adults