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| This
child is in great danger! He is
using only the lap part of the lap/shoulder
belt and is perched on the edge
of the seat, very close to the air
bag. |

This
car has a passenger air bag, so
baby always rides in back.
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| How
do you know if your vehicle has
a passenger air bag? |
Here are
some signs:
- Compartment cover in dashboard
panel with embossed letters:
SRS, SIR, or SRS/Air Bag.
Beware: NOT all vehicles have
these marks. NOT all vehicles
have a cover that shows in the
dashboard.
- Warning label on sun visor
(often on the back of the visor)
and/or on the front of the right
door frame.
- Description in the owner's
manual.
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An infant or child
riding in the front seat can be seriously injured
or killed by the inflating air bag.
An air bag is not a soft pillow. To do its important
job, an air bag comes out of the dashboard very
fast, faster than the blink of an eye. Many
people's lives have been saved by air bags.
The force of an
air bag can hurt people who are too close to
it. Drivers can prevent injuries to adults and
children from air bags by following these safety
steps.
Air Bag Safety
Steps
- Infants in rear-facing
child safety seats must never ride in the
front seat of a vehicle with a passenger air
bag.
- Children 12
and under should ride buckled up in the rear
seat. They should use child safety seats,
booster seats, or safety belts appropriate
for their age and size.
- Everyone should
buckle up with both lap AND shoulder belts
on every trip. Driver and front passenger
seats should be moved as far back from the
dashboard as practical.
- Infants under
age one must ride facing the rear of the car
in the rear seat. Parents should feel just
as comfortable in this situation as they do
when they put their babies down for a nap
and leave the room.
- If a baby has
special health needs and requires full-time
supervision, ask another adult to ride with
the baby in the back seat and travel alone
as little as possible until the health problem
is resolved.
- Check your vehicle
owner's manual and the instructions provided
with your child safety seat for information
on air bags and safety seat use.
Why have children
died in vehicles with air bags?
In almost all cases in which an infant died,
the baby was riding in a rear-facing safety
seat in the front passenger seat. The back
of the safety seat was so close to the dashboard
that the air bag hit the safety seat with
tremendous force. The force broke the back
of the safety seat and caused a fatal brain
injury. Child safety seats are not designed
to protect against this extreme impact.
In almost all
cases in which a child over age 1 has died
from impact by the air bag, he or she was
"out of position" – either unbuckled, or
not wearing the shoulder portion of the
safety belt. The child slid or flexed forward
during pre-crash braking, so the head and
neck were close to the dashboard at the
time the air bag was triggered. Severe head
or neck injuries occurred.
If a child
is sitting against the seat back, fully
restrained by a forward-facing child safety
seat or a lap/shoulder belt and the seat
is pushed all the way back, the danger from
the air bag is reduced.
What about
sports cars and pickup trucks?
If there is
no rear seat and no air bag shut-off switch,
a child is at high risk from a passenger
air bag.
Some pickup
trucks made since model year 1996 have switches
to shut off the passenger air bag. Other
vehicles may have them in future years.
Turning off the switch is the best way to
protect an infant riding in a rear-facing
safety seat or an older child using a safety
seat, booster, or safety belt.
What if you
have no alternative except putting a child
in front?
If there is no room in back, a child over
age one may have to ride in the front seat.
Here's how to reduce the risk:
- Make sure the
child is correctly buckled up with the vehicle
seat moved as far back as possible. A toddler/preschooler
should use a forward-facing child safety seat;
an older child should use a belt-positioning
booster or lap/shoulder belt.
- Fasten the harness
or lap/shoulder belt securely.
- Make sure an
older child does not slip out of the shoulder
belt or lean toward the dashboard.
Vehicle owners
and lessees can obtain an on-off switch
for one or both of their air bags only if
they can certify that they are, or a user
of their vehicle is, in one of the four
risk groups: infants in rear-facing infant
seats, drivers or passengers with unusual
medical or physical conditions, children
ages 1 to 12, or drivers who cannot get
back 10 inches from the air bag cover. To
be considered eligible for an on-off switch,
a NHTSA request form must be filled out
and returned to NHTSA. Forms are available
from state motor vehicle offices and may
be available from automobile dealerships
and repair facilities. Forms can also be
requested by contacting NHTSA's Auto Safety
Hotline at 1-888-DASH-2-DOT or visiting
the NHTSA Web site at http://www.nhtsa.dot.gov/.
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