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Winter car seat mistakes you might be making

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I know, the last thing your morning rush needs is one more step, but buckling infants and children into their car seats with coats on leaves them more vulnerable to injury in a crash. I had no idea! A quick search on Flickr for children bundled up in car seats showed me I wasn't alone. I spoke with Jennifer Hoekstra, who works at Helen DeVos Children's Hospital in Michigan as a safe kids coordinator, and asked her to better explain the reason behind this inconvenient cold weather rule. She summed it up in two words: loose straps.

"Although a child may seem secure all bundled up in the car seat, these thick layers make it very hard to get the harness tight enough to protect the child in a crash." In an impact, any space between your child's body and the harness straps allows for movement. This adds up to a greater risk for neck and spine injuries and possible ejection from the car seat. This means no heavy coats, no snow suits and absolutely no fluffy, puffy baby swaddling devices.

Think your child's coat is safe? Hoekstra suggests this experiment:

  1. Strap your child into her seat wearing her coat. Tighten the straps as much as possible.
  2. Undo the harness clips and have your child remove her coat.
  3. Strap her back in without tightening the straps. See how much slack remains? Yikes.

Car seat strap test

Image: Spectrum Health

"Strap 'em before you wrap 'em"

Hoekstra recommends dressing children for 50 degree F weather — in thin, tight layers — under their coats. If possible, run out to the car and let it warm up for a few minutes before you need to leave. Keep coats on, but unfastened, for the dash to the car, but remove them before getting buckled in. Once the harness is safely tightened, go ahead and put coats back on — backwards. That's right, you just invented the Snuggie.

Snuggie dance GIF

Image: Giphy.com

A few more tips

  • Leave on hats and keep blankets in the car for each child.
  • Most thin hoodies will be fine — see experiment above if you aren't sure — but check the hood isn't bunched behind your child's back. Not only will the straps be too loose, he will be complaining the entire trip.
  • Buntings that attach to the outside of bucket seats are a go, as long as the child is buckled in before you put them on.
  • Keep in mind, overheating can be a problem. As the car warms up, your children may need to take off the jackets, blankets and hats. Be sure to check on little ones periodically, and remove buntings from infant carriers — especially on longer car rides.
  • Always follow safe car seat practices, no matter the weather, and have your seat inspected. Visit safekids.org to find a certified child passenger safety technician in your area.

More on safety

Easy ways to make your children safer
Shopping carts are not for infant seats
This simple question could save your child's life


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