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Booster seats are necessary for optimal protection
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
The article by Halman et al (p 1123) in this issue
indicates that children of school age involved in motor vehicle crashes were less severely injured if they were wearing a seat belt,
irrespective of the type of restraint or seating position in the motor
vehicle.1 The authors report that school age children
(4-14 years old) restrained with a seat belt were 2-10 times as safe as
unbelted children and were at least as well protected as adults wearing
seat belts. The findings, however, do not answer the question about
whether the degree of protection afforded children by standard seat
belts is sufficient, according to the authors' discussion of the
limitations of the data. The national safe kids campaign in the United
States and the child passenger safety community recommend that children be protected in an appropriate child restraint or booster seat rather
than in a safety belt at least up
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What can you learn from this BMJ paper? Read Leanne Tite's Paper+