July 9, 2005

NO ONE CAN FIGURE OUT HOW TO USE THE THINGS PROPERLY ANYWAY:

The Seat-Belt Solution (STEPHEN J. DUBNER and STEVEN D. LEVITT, 7/10/05, NY Times Magazine)

[O]ne question about car seats is rarely even asked: How well do they actually work?

They certainly have the hallmarks of an effective piece of safety equipment: big and bulky, federally regulated, hard to install and expensive. (You can easily spend $200 on a car seat.) And NHTSA data seem to show that car seats are indeed a remarkable lifesaver. Although motor-vehicle crashes are still the top killer among children from 2 to 14, fatality rates have fallen steadily in recent decades -- a drop that coincides with the rise of car-seat use. Perhaps the single most compelling statistic about car seats in the NHTSA manual was this one: ''They are 54 percent effective in reducing deaths for children ages 1 to 4 in passenger cars.''

But 54 percent effective compared with what? The answer, it turns out, is this: Compared with a child's riding completely unrestrained. There is another mode of restraint, meanwhile, that doesn't cost $200 or require a four-day course to master: seat belts.

For children younger than roughly 24 months, seat belts plainly won't do. For them, a car seat represents the best practical way to ride securely, and it is certainly an improvement over the days of riding shotgun on mom's lap. But what about older children? Is it possible that seat belts might afford them the same protection as car seats?

The answer can be found in a trove of government data called the Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS), which compiles police reports on all fatal crashes in the U.S. since 1975. These data include every imaginable variable in a crash, including whether the occupants were restrained and how.

Even a quick look at the FARS data reveals a striking result: among children 2 and older, the death rate is no lower for those traveling in any kind of car seat than for those wearing seat belts. There are many reasons, of course, that this raw data might be misleading. Perhaps kids in car seats are, on average, in worse wrecks. Or maybe their parents drive smaller cars, which might provide less protection.

But no matter what you control for in the FARS data, the results don't change. In recent crashes and old ones, in big vehicles and small, in one-car crashes and multiple-vehicle crashes, there is no evidence that car seats do a better job than seat belts in saving the lives of children older than 2.


Across the fruited plain tomorrow millions of fathers will grumble, "Told you so," while their wives snap back: "Don't think we're taking the car seats out!"

Posted by Orrin Judd at July 9, 2005 8:54 PM
Comments

I've just buckled up my 3 year old in the back seat when I've been caught without a car seat (we have two cars but only one car seat). In MN, that's breaking The Law. So we won't be getting rid of the car seat for another few months anyway.

The study didn't seem to specify whether the car-seatless kids were buckled up in front on the passenger side (the most dangerous seat in the car, especially for a small kid, especially if the car has airbags).

Posted by: ted welter at July 9, 2005 9:45 PM

You tell me this after the baby has turned 18, and is now 3 inches taller than the old man. Thanks.

Posted by: Robert Schwartz at July 9, 2005 10:12 PM

I don't have kids, but I'm pretty sure the law in CA is child must be over age 6 (!) or over 60 pounds before he can stop using a car seat. Our legislature is berserk - the ultimate nanny state.

Posted by: Kay in CA at July 9, 2005 10:16 PM

Reminds me of a favorite Simpsons gag:

Homer: "Seatbelts? Phooey! They kill more people than they save."
Lisa: "No, Dad! You're thinking of airbags!"

Posted by: PapayaSF at July 9, 2005 11:50 PM

There are several problems with regular seat belts for small or light users, including petite adults, which is why many states specify a given weight for seat belt use by minors.

First is the potential for lap belts to cause separation of the lumbar vertebrae, and the sometimes associated paralysis, or "seat belt syndrome", which has led to a revision of safety regulations in nearly all of the developed world requiring that all seats in a vehicle be equipped with three-point belts.

Young children, however, often can't effectively use the shoulder belt without at least a booster seat.

Also, most seat belts are equipped with locking mechanisms that tighten the belt when pulled hard (such as by the force of a body during a crash), which lowers the risk of "submarining", which is when a passenger slides forward under a loosely worn seat belt.

Young and/or light children are more prone to sliding out of the belt, and don't need as much slack to do so.

Whether or not the seats themselves provide greater protection, the five-point belts most of them have certainly do.

Posted by: Michael Herdegen at July 10, 2005 3:09 AM

Had this exact conversation with my darling daughter (now 15) today. Told her that almost all accidents derive from driving too fast and/or tailgating. Slow down, and leave a cushion between you and the car ahead of you . . . you will not only survive, but be able to avoid arrest, says I.

Posted by: Fred Jacobsen (San Fran) at July 10, 2005 5:14 AM

Car seats were invented. Ergo, mothers will insist on them. Divine purpose.

Posted by: Peter B at July 10, 2005 5:56 AM
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