Monday, January 22, 2007

What To Do About Consumer Reports’ Car Infant Seat Report

If you are a new parent, an infant car seat should be high on your list of things to buy. If you already have your baby’s car seat, you are concern that it is completely safe for your baby. You will have to have one to bring your baby home from the hospital. Normally hospitals and birthing centers won't let you leave by car with your new baby unless have one. You will need one for every car trip with your baby thereafter. All states require kids up to 4 years of age ride in a car seat; some require booster seats for older children. Therefore, any report on car seat safety will attract your attention.

I want to discuss the recent baby car seat report by Consumer Reports. If you are at all sensitive to child safety and you have not been visiting outer space recently, you’ve heard of this recent car seat study performed by Consumer Reports. Listening to the news and reading the newspapers, it appeared no car seat was safe for your baby at the tested speeds. It left many wondering if there are any safe car seats out there and how to travel safely with your baby? Do you know what to think or do about a safe care seat for your baby? I hope this article will help.

The Consumer Reports study was aimed at discovering how infant seats performed in tests at speeds that match those used in the government’s New Car Assessment Program (NCAP). This program tests most new vehicles in crashes at speeds of 35 mph for frontal impact and 38 mph for side impact.

Consumer Reports withdrew the report upon discovering a substantive issue that may have affected the original test results. The issue came to light based on new information they received from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) concerning the speed at which our side-impact tests were conducted. A new report will be published with any necessary revisions as soon as possible after the new tests are complete.

It is obvious that the study did not make car seats any less safe than they were prior to the study. So, I suggest you continue doing what you were doing before. When new standards are available you will want to them applied to your baby car seat. Until then, follow the advice of Consumer Reports, “… we urge you to remember that use of any child seat is safer than no child seat, but to suspend judgment on the merits of individual products until the new testing has been completed and the report re-published.”

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