Protect our future. Use child safety seatson every ride.

The Facts • Among children aged 0– 2, American Indian and Alaska Native children have the highest traffic death rate of all racial/ethnic groups in the United States. • More than half of car seats and booster seats are not used correctly. If the seat isn’t installed the right way, or you’r...

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Other Authors: National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (U.S.), United States. Indian Health Service. Injury Prevention Program.
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/34099/
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spelling ftcdc:oai:example.org:cdc:34099 2023-05-15T16:55:30+02:00 Protect our future. Use child safety seatson every ride. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (U.S.) United States. Indian Health Service. Injury Prevention Program. United States 2 unnumbered pages http://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/34099/ eng eng http://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/34099/ Automobile Driving Indians North American Inuits Program Development Safety Seat Belts ftcdc 2017-04-11T13:31:26Z The Facts • Among children aged 0– 2, American Indian and Alaska Native children have the highest traffic death rate of all racial/ethnic groups in the United States. • More than half of car seats and booster seats are not used correctly. If the seat isn’t installed the right way, or you’re using the wrong type of seat for your child’s age, height, or weight, your child is not as safe as he or she could be. • Using age- and size-appropriate car seats, booster seats, and seat belts significantly reduce the risk of injury and death among children in a crash. Help Keep Yourself and Your Loved Ones Safe You can help keep yourself and your loved ones safe by: • Using a car seat, booster seat, or seat belt on every trip, no matter how short. • Finding the right car seat or booster seat for your child’s age, height, and weight. See the chart below for tips. • Getting help installing a car or booster seat from a certified child passenger safety technician. • Properly buckling children aged 12 and under in the back seat. The back seat is safest for children. • Never placing a rear-facing car seat in front of an airbag. Airbags can injure or kill small children riding in the front seat. • Not using traditional baby carriers (such as cradleboards) in place of a car seat. Traditional carriers do not keep children safe in cars or trucks. • Always wearing a seat belt when pregnant. Be sure to wear the lap belt below your belly. Place the shoulder belt across your chest—never behind the back, under the arm, or across the stomach. Other/Unknown Material inuits Alaska CDC Stacks (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Indian
institution Open Polar
collection CDC Stacks (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)
op_collection_id ftcdc
language English
topic Automobile Driving
Indians
North American
Inuits
Program Development
Safety
Seat Belts
spellingShingle Automobile Driving
Indians
North American
Inuits
Program Development
Safety
Seat Belts
Protect our future. Use child safety seatson every ride.
topic_facet Automobile Driving
Indians
North American
Inuits
Program Development
Safety
Seat Belts
description The Facts • Among children aged 0– 2, American Indian and Alaska Native children have the highest traffic death rate of all racial/ethnic groups in the United States. • More than half of car seats and booster seats are not used correctly. If the seat isn’t installed the right way, or you’re using the wrong type of seat for your child’s age, height, or weight, your child is not as safe as he or she could be. • Using age- and size-appropriate car seats, booster seats, and seat belts significantly reduce the risk of injury and death among children in a crash. Help Keep Yourself and Your Loved Ones Safe You can help keep yourself and your loved ones safe by: • Using a car seat, booster seat, or seat belt on every trip, no matter how short. • Finding the right car seat or booster seat for your child’s age, height, and weight. See the chart below for tips. • Getting help installing a car or booster seat from a certified child passenger safety technician. • Properly buckling children aged 12 and under in the back seat. The back seat is safest for children. • Never placing a rear-facing car seat in front of an airbag. Airbags can injure or kill small children riding in the front seat. • Not using traditional baby carriers (such as cradleboards) in place of a car seat. Traditional carriers do not keep children safe in cars or trucks. • Always wearing a seat belt when pregnant. Be sure to wear the lap belt below your belly. Place the shoulder belt across your chest—never behind the back, under the arm, or across the stomach.
author2 National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (U.S.)
United States. Indian Health Service. Injury Prevention Program.
title Protect our future. Use child safety seatson every ride.
title_short Protect our future. Use child safety seatson every ride.
title_full Protect our future. Use child safety seatson every ride.
title_fullStr Protect our future. Use child safety seatson every ride.
title_full_unstemmed Protect our future. Use child safety seatson every ride.
title_sort protect our future. use child safety seatson every ride.
url http://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/34099/
op_coverage United States
geographic Indian
geographic_facet Indian
genre inuits
Alaska
genre_facet inuits
Alaska
op_relation http://stacks.cdc.gov/view/cdc/34099/
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