Your child must be in a child seat of some type until they are large enough to use
the seat belts properly.
I showed her how I had threaded
the seat belt properly and offered her the instruction manual to verify and re-assured her that the seat was approved for flight by transportation authorities.
Keep your child in a booster seat until he or she is big enough to fit in
a seat belt properly.
Whenever you are travelling with your child, make sure that he is wearing
his seat belt properly.
I bought two of these, And have to say they easily click right onto the LATCH bars, are super easy to use, look beautiful, feel incredibly solid, and perfectly guide
the seat belt properly and safely across my children's chests.
These seats are used when your child can properly sit with their legs in front of them, with their back against the backrest, to elevate them so
the seat belt properly crosses their chest, and are only to be used when your child has fully outgrown the other forward facing car seats.
- Remember that all children need a car seat or a booster seat until they are big enough to fit and adult
seat belt properly (generally kids can use an adult seat belt by the time they are eight years old, but if your child is small for his age, this may not be the case).
Just as society stigmatizes a parent who fails to fasten a child's
seat belt properly, for example, Hooke said, it could stigmatize «letting your kids go to sleep in a flood plain» without prudent protections.
Our Highland car accident lawyers understand that many women have concerns about how to wear
a seat belt properly while pregnant — and with good reason!
Not exact matches
I invited her to check the
seat belt herself (not wanting to argue and get tossed for «air - rage» or whatever) and she was stumped and had to ask a colleague if it was done
properly (of course it was).
If there aren't enough
seat belts in the taxi for each person to use one as well as have the car
seat properly restrained, it is not safe!
Rosemary Mason: So once children out - grow their forward - facing
seats, usually around 4 years or 40 pounds, they should ride in the booster
seats in the back
seats until the vehicle
seat belts fit
properly.
All children whose weight or height exceeds the forward - facing limit for their car
seat should use a
belt - positioning booster
seat until the vehicle
seat belt fits
properly, typically when they have reached 4 feet 9 inches in height and are 8 through 12 years of age.
Kids should use a booster
seat until the car's lap - and - shoulder
belt fits
properly, which is typically when they've reached 4 feet 9 inches in height and are between 8 and 12 years old.
Booster
seats boost your child up, providing a higher sitting height, which allows the adult lap and shoulder
belt to fit
properly.
Or you can take the back off once they hit 40 pounds and have them only elevated so that the vehicle
seat belt fits
properly across their shoulder and waist.
A child should only move to this last phase when a
seat belt fits him or her
properly.
A
properly fitted booster
seat will lift your child up so that the shoulder and lap
belts fit
properly.
However, their purpose is to lift the child so that the
seat belt fits a smaller body
properly.
California Highway Patrol Officer Patrick Roth shows us how to
properly install an infant car
seat using both a
seat belt and the LATCH system.
However, when a child is ready for booster mode, Britax recommends parents use the following guidelines to ensure the booster
seat and vehicle
seat belt are
properly positioned:
Easy - to - use Britax exclusive feature that ensures the vehicle
seat belt is
properly positioned on your child's hips, minimizing the risk of abdominal injury during a crash.
Thus, to avoid chances of injuries, keep the child in a booster
seat until he / she becomes 8 years old and can fit
properly into the car's safety
belts.
Once your child exceeds the height or weight limitations of a harnessed car
seat, you'll want to transition them into a booster
seat, which are designed to
properly align regular
seat belts over a child's lap.
When your child does become too big for the car
seat, then you must buy a booster
seat for him / her because even though he / she has outgrown the car
seat, he / she is still too small to
properly fit into the safety
belts of the car.
This
seat belt will help to fit the kids
properly -LSB-...]
The move to regular
seat belts should not occur until kids are «old enough and large enough» for the
seat belts to protect them
properly, which usually isn't until they are 4 feet 9 inches tall (57 inches) and are between 8 and 12 years old.
Again, the move to regular
seat belts should not occur until kids are «old enough and large enough» for the
seat belts to protect them
properly, which usually isn't until they are 4 feet 9 inches tall (57 inches) and are between 8 and 12 years old.
This
seat belt will help to fit the kids
properly with the
seat.
To make it even easier, remember that
seat belts don't fit
properly until the lap
belt lays across your child's upper thighs (not his stomach) and the shoulder
belt fits across his chest (not his neck).
The Graco Highback booster car
seat comes with open - loops
belt guides that will allow you to
properly position your car's seatbelt.
New Mexico law requires that all children under age 18 be
properly restrained in a car
seat, booster
seat or
seat belt.
If a lap / shoulder
belt is not available for a child who weighs more than 40 pounds, a
properly fitted lap
belt may be used, since booster
seats should not be used with lap - only
seat belts.
Properly restrained means that the lap
belt sits low across the hips and not on the abdomen, and that the shoulder portion of the
seat belt crosses the chest, not the head or neck.
Children under age four should be
properly secured in a child restraint that is secured to the vehicle with a
seat belt or LATCH system.
It comes with
belt guides that enable you to position the
seat properly and keep your child safe even while it is asleep.
Children ages 8 through 15 must be
properly buckled in a
seat belt.
seat belt should fit child
properly in booster: shoulder
belt squarely over shoulder or slightly closer to neck, lap
belt low and touching top of thighs
Still, for convenience, you may want to check your child's booster
seat as baggage since the FAA says that children big enough for a booster can be
properly restrained with the aircraft's
seat belt.
Their main function is to boost the child's height so the
seat belt fits
properly.
These
seats lift your child so that the vehicle lap and shoulder
belts fit
properly.
The safety
belt is aligned
properly where it should on your child's body, so you don't have to worry about your child ejecting out of the car
seat in the event of a car crash.
Eventually, kids move on to a booster
seat, which lifts them so that the vehicle's
seat belt fits
properly.
If you think you're ready for a backless booster
seat, consider starting with one that includes a LATCH system and a clip that helps position the shoulder
belt properly.
While a
belt clip on a backless
seat may
properly hold the shoulder
belt in place, if your child is wiggly, the clip could come loose and be useless.
When used with
seat belts, airbags work well to protect teenagers and adults; however, airbags can be very dangerous to children, particularly those riding in rear - facing
seats, and to preschool - and young school — aged children who are not
properly restrained.
For a
seat belt to fit
properly the lap
belt must lie snugly across the upper thighs, not the stomach.
In order to be positioned
properly, the bottom portion of the
seat belt has to be positioned between the legs.
A child who has outgrown her car safety
seat with a harness (she has reached the top weight or height allowed for her
seat, her shoulders are above the top harness slots, or her ears have reached the top of the
seat) should ride in a
belt - positioning booster
seat until the vehicle's
seat belt fits
properly (usually when the child reaches about 4» 9» in height and is between 8 to 12 years of age).
You, as the parent, need to show your child how to
properly wear a
seat belt.