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5-point VS. Shield
Shield Booster Dangers
Lap Belt Dangers
Front-Facing Too Soon?
Locking in a Child Seat

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Information on Lap Belts


First, it should be understood that it is perfectly safe to use a lap belt to install harnessed child restraints.  In the US, all harnessed child restraints must pass the current standards using a lap only belt.  There is a stricter standard that allows the use of a tether. However, for any belted individual, they do not provide adequate protection. They generally prevent the individual from being ejected, but do not protect the head, neck, spine or internal organs adequately.
There are two types of injury associated with using a lap only belt:
  • Head and/or neck injury. This is caused when the individual is thrown forward and has no upper body restraint. They continue moving forward until they are stopped by something. Many times, it is the head that contacts the interior of the vehicle - dashboard, front seats, consoles, door frames, even the floor of the vehicle or the individual's knees. The injuries can be severe brain trauma from impacting something at a high rate of speed, cuts, abrasions, skull fractures, broken neck, jaw fractures, orbital fractures, etc. The neck can also be severely injured including the spinal cord being severed. The spinal cord is not able to be stretched beyond a certain point. In frontal crashes, a lap only belt will hold the lower body in place, but the heavy head will pull the upper body forward at a high rate. If the head does not contact anything to stop the rapid forward motion, the neck will eventually stop the head, but the force of this will stretch the neck bones, muscles and even the spinal cord - often beyond it's limit. Children and adults both have been paralyzed or killed in this manner - their spinal cord simply wasn't capable of stretching enough to withstand the crash force.
  • Seat Belt Syndrome. Seat Belt Syndrome, or SBS, is a phrase that was originally coined by the medical community in the late 1950s and early 1960s to describe injuries that physicians were seeing as a result of occupants wearing lap-belt-only restraints in frontal collisions. These injuries typically include: (1) severe abdominal injuries, (2) fractures of the lumbar spine, and (3) serious closed head and facial injuries. These injuries are primarily the result of the occupant's body jackknifing over the lap belt, at the waist, during the collision. Under such circumstances, the lap belt causes extreme force to be applied along the pelvis to the mid-section of the occupant. Securing the waist without securing the upper torso leads to increased head and neck velocities, which can cause serious head and neck injuries following either a head strike or inertial loading of the spine. A majority of these injuries can be prevented by the installation of an integrated three-point belt or other upper-torso restraint. (http://www.mobar.net/journal/1999/mayjun/langdon.htm)

Click on image to see the difference between a lap belt only and shoulder belt


When the lap belt does all the restraining, it, and the part of the body it is holding, take the entire force of the crash. On a child, the lap belt does not sit down on the hips, as it should, but most often rides up over the soft abdominal area. In a crash, the lap belt pulls toward the seat back and the body is pulled away from the seat back. These conflicting forces concentrate a lot of energy on two things that are very vulnerable - the abdominal organs, and the spine. The injuries that are associated with SBS include, but are not limited to:
  • liver
  • kidney
  • spleen
  • intestinal
  • stomach damage.
Some of these organs get damaged beyond repair, meaning life-long handicap or death. The other injury is paralysis - not from neck injury, but from the lap belt actually severing the lower part of the spinal cord.
Kathleen Weber's research paper "Crash Protection for Child Passengers" says:
    The question of fatality reduction effectiveness of rear-seat lap vs. lap/shoulder belts has recently been addressed in an extensive double-pair analysis by Morgan in which children of age 5 through 14 were included and evaluated separately. The conclusions for rear-outboard occupants in this age group are that lap-belted children were 38% less likely to die than unrestrained children, while lap/ shoulder-belted children were less likely by 52%. The lap/shoulder belt was found to reduce fatalities 26% over lap belts alone for children 5 through 14 in all crashes and 31% in frontal crashes, and children derived more relative benefit from the lap/shoulder belt than did the adult groups. Further analysis with supplemental cause of death data indicated that both types of belted children were somewhat more likely to receive abdominal injuries than unrestrained children, but the increase for the adult groups in lap belts was much greater. Finally, both belt systems markedly reduced fatal head injuries, but these were still twice as likely among lap-belted than lap/shoulder-belted children. This study makes it clear that shoulder belt use is very beneficial for older children.
With a lap belt, you only have two anchor points...two points of protection. On most children, those two points are going to be poorly positioned. A lap/shoulder belt provides three points of protection, include upper body protection, and a booster that must be utilized with a lap/shoulder belt properly positions those points for optimal effectiveness.

  • Many of the injuries associated with lap only belts are also associated with shield boosters.
  • A booster seat should NEVER be used with a lap-only belt.
  • Children up to 40 lbs are best protected in a harnessed seat - either a convertible seat, a forward-facing only seat, or a combination seat.

    Links




    Options for kids over 40 lbs with lap only belts


    Car Seat Specialty Airway



    Britax Husky


    Ride Ryte Booster with E-Z-On Kid-Y Harness


    Fisher Price Futura 20/60

    • Car Seat Specialty Airway retails at $99.99.  Harness can be used from 22-50 lbs.  Seat converts to a high back belt-positioning booster for use from 30-80 lbs.
       
    • Britax Marathon retails at $249.99.  Britax Wizard retails at $269.99.  Restraint uses internal five-point harness.  In the forward-facing position, it can be used with a lap only belt up to 65 lbs.  Tether included, but not required. 
       
    • Britax Husky retails at $239.99.  Restraint uses internal five-point harness.  Can be used with a lap only belt up to 50 lbs.  Must be tethered from 50 lbs up.  Rated for use from 20 to 80 lbs. 
       
    • E-Z-On Harnesses.  The 86-Y Harness can be used from 30-168 lbs.  The Kid-Y Harness can be used from 30-80 lbs in school buses and from 40-80 lbs in family vehicles.   The harness consists of a shoulder harness attached to single strap attaches to lap only belt; it must be  tethered at all times.  For young children, the Ride Ryte booster must be used with the Kid-Y and is recommended when using the 86-Y between 40-80 lbs.  Suggested minimum use is 40 lbs.  For more information and prices on the harnesses, contact E-Z-On at 1-800-323-6598.  For information on the Ride Ryte booster, contact Michele Palumbo at 1-866-396-6776

    •  
    • Fisher Price Futura, discontinued spring 2001, retailed at $95.  Was made in both a five-point harness model (shown) and tray-shield “four point” model.  Can be used with a lap only belt.  Rated for use from 20-60 lbs. Check online stores or for "new in box" on eBay.
       
    • Britax Laptop, discontinued September 2002, retailed at $49.99.  Restraint fits over the lap of the child.  Can be used with a lap only belt, as well as lap shoulder.  Rated for use from 30 to 65 lbs with lap only belt.  Check online stores or for "new in box" on eBay.

    Britax Marathon



    Britax Wizard


    E-Z-On 86-Y Harness



    Britax Laptop

     

    Retro-fitting shoulder belts:  This may be an expensive option, and some vehicle dealers will not accept the liability of retro-fitting.  Many models, including Jeep, GM, Chrysler, and Ford vehicles do have retrofit kits available for outboard belts.  There are no vehicles that can have a middle seating position retrofit with a shoulder belt.  The parent should check with the dealer as well as the corporate headquarters to discuss pricing and availability of retro-fit kits and installation.

    Ultimately, a vehicle with lap/shoulder belts and head restraints in all used seating positions needs to be considered.  Except for securing car seats, lap belts do not provide adequate protection.  If a lap belt MUST be used until other alternatives are found, it should be worn low and snug over the hips.  An adult is safer in a lap-only belt than a child.