• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

@BasilPuglisi

Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI, Since 2009

  • Headlines
  • My Story
    • Engagements & Moderating
  • AI – Artificial Intelligence
    • Content Disclaimer
    • đź§­ AI for Professionals
  • Basil’s Brand Blog
  • Building Blocks by AI
  • Barstool Biz Blog

Baby Car Seats Safety Tips

May 17, 2017 by Basil Puglisi 2 Comments

Baby car seats can prevent serious injury to your child in the event of an accident. It is the law that all children under the age of twelve should be seated in the back seat. This is especially true if you have airbags in the front.

From the time you bring your baby home from the hospital, s/he should be placed in an appropriate car safety seat. Infants must be in a rear facing infant only seat or an appropriate convertible seat until s/he weighs twenty pounds or reach the age of one. After twenty pounds and after the first birthday, toddlers can use a forward facing seat until they reach approximately forty pounds or their ears reach the top of the car seat.
Over forty pounds, a child must be in a seatbelt positioned booster seat.

Your car seat belts should not be used by a child under the age of eight unless they are four feet nine inches tall. A booster seat should be used until then. There are many different types of booster seats are available.

Your child should be appropriately restrained at all times. Your child will not be ready to use regular seatbelts until the shoulder trap fits across the shoulder not the neck. The lap belt must fit across the hips and not his stomach.

When installing car seats the manufacturer’s directions must be followed exactly. if you don’t have them call the company for a replacement. The car seat will have a label which will have the manufacturer, the address, and the phone number. It will also show the name of the car seat. You must have this information to get a replacement. If there is no label on the seat do not purchase it. It could be a seat that was damaged in a car accident.

If you are purchasing the car seat second hand, inspect it thoroughly. Check all the belts for fraying, all fasteners for cracks, and the padding of the seat to be sure it is not ripped or torn. Always check to see if there is a label on the seat, it will have the information you need if there is no manual available. Ask questions such as has this seat been in a crash? If so, do not purchase it. It may look fine but its safety may have been compromised. There could be a misalignment of the frame resulting in your child’s safety being compromised.

No matter what type of seat you purchase, and there are many, consider how much you can spend. If expense is a concern a convertible travel system maybe in order. A rear-facing car seat can be used as a front facing car seat until the appropriate age. There is a base that remains in the car. The infant/toddler car seat then can be attached to a stroller frame and later it can reattach to the base that’s in the car. Check out your options and consider what will be best as far as expenses are concerned. Do your research and determine what will be best for you and your child. Always, the first concern should be the safety of your baby from day one.

It is important to know what type of seat your vehicle will accommodate.
Your car owner’s manual or a dealer will be able to tell you what is compatible with the vehicle you own. It is an overwhelming choice to make but begin looking for a car seat when you find out you are expecting. A well informed choice will keep your baby safe.

Filed Under: Baby Database PLR Sourced Tagged With: Baby Car Seats

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. peter says

    July 21, 2017 at 9:37 pm

    Some parents say that their babies feel pain because of the shoulder strap of the car seat and they suggest to loose the shoulder strap a bit.

    Log in to Reply
  2. Joseph Garrison says

    August 10, 2017 at 2:29 am

    The top three most common mistakes Baer sees are car seats that are too loose in the car, kids that are too loose in the car seats, and children who are graduated from rear-facing to forward facing. With some effort and care, we can all avoid those mistakes and more. It’s a lot of info to absorb, but we’re talking about our kids’ lives.

    Log in to Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Primary Sidebar

For Small Business

Facebook Groups: Build a Local Community Following Without Advertising Spend

Turn Google Reviews Smarter to Win New Customers

Save Time with AI: Let It Write Your FAQ Page Draft

Let AI Handle Your Google Profile Updates

How to Send One Customer Email That Doesn’t Get Ignored

Keep Your Google Listing Safe from Sneaky Changes

#AIgenerated

Spam Updates, SERP Volatility, and AI-Driven Search Shifts

Mapping the July Shake-Up: Core Update Fallout, AI Overviews, and Privacy Pull

Navigating SEO After Google’s June 2025 Core Update

Navigating SEO in a Localized, Zero-Click World

Communities Fragment, Platforms Adapt, and Trust Recalibrates #AIg

Yahoo Deliverability Shake-Up & Multi-Engine SEO in a Privacy-First World

Social Media: Monetization Races Ahead, Earnings Expand, and Burnout Surfaces #AIg

SEO Map: Core Updates, AI Overviews, and Bing’s New Copilot

YouTube Shorts, TikTok, Meta Reels, and X Accelerate Creation, Engagement, and Monetization #AIg

Surviving February’s Volatility: AI Overviews, Local Bugs, and Technical Benchmarks

Social Media: AI Tools Mature, Testing Expands, and Engagement Rules #AIg

Navigating Zero-Click SERPs and Local Volatility Now

More Posts from this Category

#SMAC #SocialMediaWeek

Basil Social Media Week

Digital Ethos Holiday Networking

Basil Speaking for Digital Ethos
RSS Search

@BasilPuglisi Copyright 2008, Factics™ BasilPuglisi.com, Content & Strategy, Powered by Factics & AI,