Use the timer below to time yourself as you read this section and quiz yourself at the end! When completed please pause the timer and move to the next lesson.
[simplestopwatch]90.7%
Rate of National Seat Belt Use in 2019
Source
1. If you buckle up in the front seat of a passenger car, you can reduce your risk of:
2. If you buckle up in a light truck, you can reduce your risk of:
Source: NHTSA
1. Buckling up is the single most effective thing you can do to protect yourself in a crash
Seat belts are the best defense against impaired, aggressive, and distracted drivers. Being buckled up during a crash helps keep you safe and secure inside your vehicle, being completely ejected from a vehicle is almost always deadly.
2. Air bags are designed to work with seat belts, not replace them
If you don’t wear your seat belt, you could be thrown into a rapidly opening frontal air bag. Such force could injure or even kill you. Learn about air bag safety.
3. Guidelines to buckle up safely
4. Fit matters
5. Seat belt safety for children and pregnant women
Find out when your child is ready to use an adult seat belt and learn about seat belt safety when you’re pregnant.
If you’re pregnant, make sure you know how to position your seat and wear a seat belt to maximize your safety and the safety of your unborn child.
Source: NHTSA
Transitioning Your Child to an Adult Seat Belt
When is your child ready to use an adult seat belt, and how should it be used when that time comes? NHTSA reports:
Remember, always check your child’s belt fit in every vehicle. A booster seat may be needed in some vehicles and not in others. If the seat belt does not fit properly yet, your child should continue to use a booster seat.
As a parent, you are your kids’ strongest influence when it comes to modeling safe driving practices, including buckling up every time you get in the car. Teach your family that safety is the responsibility of all passengers as well as the driver.”
Source: NHTSA
As your child grows, you may face challenges enforcing seat belt safety. Life as a parent is full of compromises, but seat belt safety is never up for negotiation. Follow these pointers and set the example of buckling up every time you get into the car. And remember: Never give up until they buckle up!
NOTE: All children under 13 ride in the back seat for maximum safety.
You’re the #1 Influence: Make Sure Your Tween is Properly Buckled Up the Whole Ride, Every Time
Learning the importance of wearing a seat belt starts with a good role model—and that’s you. As a parent or caregiver, you are the number one influence on your child’s seat belt safety. Research shows that children whose parents buckle up are much more likely to buckle up themselves.
Consistently remind your children to buckle up properly the whole ride, and never assume they’re buckled up! Learn tips to motivate your tweens to buckle up, and make it a rule in your family that everyone follows the same practices as you: Always buckle up before moving the car, no matter how short or routine the drive, and make sure all children are buckled up properly.
The risk of injury among child passengers is significantly higher when their seat belts are loose and/or improperly positioned. Learn about the proper seat belt fit for your child and why your children may not be wearing their seat belts correctly.
All children under age 13 should ride in the back seat for maximum safety. The back seat is the safest place for your children because most crashes occur in the front of the car and the back seat is farthest from this impact.
We know life as a parent is full of distractions and often hectic, making it easy to forget or forego buckling up altogether. See if any of these excuses for not buckling up sound familiar, then do whatever it takes to buckle up and make sure your kids do the same:
Getting your kids to properly buckle up and stay buckled can be a battle of wills. There are several reasons why children 8 to 14 may forget or not want to wear their seat belts. For as many reasons as your kids can protest against wearing a seat belt, we’ve got tips to help you motivate them to buckle up.
Tweens are going through several developmental stages—social, cognitive and emotional—which offer helpful insights into what makes sense to them and what motivates them. Learn about the developmental stages and motivational messages get your kids to buckle up properly, the whole ride, every time.
We know you make every effort to keep your kids safe. However, parenting can be a hectic job. The daily routine of getting your kids to and from school and other activities can be hurried and chaotic, creating an environment where insisting on wearing a seat belt is not top of mind. See if you face these five challenges to getting tweens to wear — and stay in — their seat belts.
As a parent, sometimes you let your kids have their way. But their safety should never be up for negotiation, no matter how much they push back on the seat belts being uncomfortable or unnecessary for just a “short drive.” Here are some tips to help you win the seat belt battle:
Source: NHTSA
54% OF UNRESTRAINED 13 TO 15-YEAR-OLD PASSENGER VEHICLE OCCUPANTS WERE KILLED IN CRASHES IN 2017
It’s been a long time since your little ones transitioned from a booster seat into an adult seat belt, and now they’re teenagers. Think it’s time to relax? Think again. The majority of teens involved in fatal crashes aren’t wearing their seat belts.
Buckling up is not a one-time conversation—it’s ongoing. Set the example by always wearing your seat belt, and remind your teens buckling up is the law.
Source: NHTSA
Most drivers’ side mirrors overlap with what can be seen in the rearview mirror. In that case, each mirror provides basically the same information.
By adjusting your side view mirrors out a little more than you would usually put them, vehicles that are no longer visible in your rearview mirror will become visible in your side view mirror much sooner. Doing so will help to virtually eliminate your blind spot. To adjust the left side mirror, rest your head against the closed window and set the mirror to barely show the edge of your vehicle. To adjust the right mirror, lean to the right so your head is directly in line with the rearview mirror above the center console. Adjust this mirror the same way so you can barely see the edge of the right side of your vehicle.
Positioning your mirrors this way will enable you to look into what would be your largest blind spot. It also minimizes the amount of time that other vehicles disappear from your sight.
Vehicles that are no longer visible in your rearview mirror will become visible in your side view mirrors much sooner than your side vision allows.
Even if the lane looks open in your side mirrors, it’s still recommended to look over your shoulder before changing lanes. That’s the only way to be certain the space you want to move into is open.
When you complete this section, you should adjust your side mirrors with this information fresh in your mind. The next time you drive, you can test your new settings. When a car starts to pass you on the left, you should be able to see the back of their car in your rearview mirror and simultaneously see the front of their car in your left side mirror. As the vehicle continues to pass, you should see the back of the vehicle in your side mirror and its front in your peripheral vision. The same maneuvers will also work for the right mirror. It may take a short time to get used to the new settings, but knowing your safety has been enhanced will make it worthwhile.
Delivery trucks have convex (outward curved) mirrors mounted on the edge of the roof at the left rear corner which allow drivers to see the back of the truck. In fact, many trucks have convex mirrors attached to the side mirrors to reduce/eliminate blind spots.
There has been new technology involving mirrors. NHTSA announced in August of 2019 plans to research driving behavior and how drivers execute lane changes with both traditional mirrors and the new camera systems. Backup camera are now federally mandated in all new vehicles.
Some newer cars have blind spot cameras or lights that activate as a car approaches their blind spot. In addition, peel and stick circular convex mirrors can be purchased at a minimal price at almost all auto parts stores. Some drivers report this improves their blind spot detection capabilities.
Now that we are at the end of this section, please adjust those side mirrors before you forget!
Use the quiz below to test yourself on the material you have learned!
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