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Tag: Automobile

Automobile Safety for Children

Kindersitz BxHxT 47x61x52cm / Child Car Seat
Image via Wikipedia

Over the years we have treated thousand of people who have been injured in automobile accidents, and some of those people have been children.  As adults, we all know to wear our seat belt and to not deactivate our airbags, but the rules to keeping kids safe in the a little more complicated.

In order to help you keep your kids safe in the car – and we all know how bad people drive around here – we are sharing some advice from the CDC:

Reduce Their Risk

In 2008, about 4 children ages 14 or younger were killed in motor vehicle crashes every day, and many more were injured. But parents and caregivers can make a lifesaving difference.

Whenever you’re on the road, make sure your child passengers are buckled into appropriate safety seats. The safest place for children of any age to ride is properly restrained in the back seat. Data show that:

•In 2008, restraint use saved the lives of 244 children ages 4 and younger. Child safety seats reduce the risk of death in car crashes by 71% for infants and 54% for toddlers ages one to four.

•For children ages 4 to 7, booster seats reduce injury risk by 59% compared to safety belts alone.
Children ages 12 and younger should always be buckled up and seated in the rear seat of vehicles. Infants in rear-facing car seats should never ride in the front seat of vehicles with airbags.

Know the Stages

Follow these guidelines for child passenger safety:
•UNTIL AGE 1/20 LBS – For the best possible protection keep infants in the back seat, in rear-facing child safety seats, as long as possible up to the height or weight limit of their particular seat. At a minimum, keep infants rear-facing until at least age 1 year and at least 20 pounds.

•UNTIL AGE 4/40 LBS – When children outgrow their rear-facing seats (at least age 1 year and at least 20 pounds) they should ride in forward-facing child safety seats, in the back seat, until they reach the upper weight or height limit of the particular seat (usually around age 4 and 40 pounds).

•UNTIL AGE 8 OR 4’9″ TALL – Once children outgrow their forward-facing seats (usually around age 4 and 40 pounds), they should ride in booster seats, in the back seat, until the vehicle seat belts fit properly. Seat belts fit properly when the lap belt lays across the upper thighs and the shoulder belt fits across the chest (usually at age 8 or when the children are 4’9″ tall).

•AFTER AGE 8 OR 4’9″ TALL – When children outgrow their booster seats (usually at age 8 or when they are 4’9″ tall), they can use the adult seat belts in the back seat, if they fit properly (lap belt lays across the upper thighs and the shoulder belt fits across the chest).

Remember: All children younger than 13 years should ride in the back seat. Never place a child in the front seat facing an airbag

Hopefully this information will help to keep you and your children safe.  If, however, you do get in an automobile accident, please seek the care of a caring and competent doctor.  If you don’t live or work near Remmel Wellness Center, we will be more than happy to refer you to a great doctor in your area.  Don’t call a referral hotline – they are in it for the money, not for the patient care.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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The Cost of Car Accidents

Drivers around here really suck.  Maybe you don’t like my language, but you still probably agree with me.  And I’m going to give you my two cents worth as to why I think that is.  #1 – distractions; #2 – lack of personal responsibility; #3 – lack of capability. 

#1 Distractions:  Distractions are the obvious culprit for why there are so many bad drivers on the road today.  People are more focused on their phoone or text conversations or email communications on their cell phones/smart phones.  More and more business people have computers in their cars, which provide an oh-so-tempting distraction while driving.  And don’t forget the DVD players installed in cars, SUVs and minivans of all the moms and dads out there.  Sure, it keeps the kids from being a distraction, but can’t you see how the movie could be a distraction?

#2 Lack of Personal Responsibility:  Let’s face it – people don’t accept responsibility for their actions anymore.  It is always someone else’s fault.  Spill a cup of hot coffee in your lap?  Surely you didn’t fumble the cup and place it on precariously on your lap – so it must be McDonald’s fault.  Same thing on the road.  That is why you see drivers rolling through stop signs and running red lights, weaving in and out of traffic, speeding through town and school zones.  Because if something bad happens, of course it won’t be your fault.  Blame it on the person who was driving too slow in front of you.  Blame it on the person with the right-of-way who didn’t see you coming or didn’t get out of your way fast enough.  Blame it on the kid who was talking to friends while getting of the bus – he should have been paying attention! 

#3 – Lack of Capability: This really covers a lot of different situtations.  The drivers who are impared from alcholol, illegal drug use, or legal prescription use.  It also incorporates young drivers who haven’t developed the reflexes and skills that come with experience behind the wheel.  And finally, it includes our aging population who maybe shouldn’t be driving anymore, but are reluctant to give up the freedom that it represents.

So what are the costs associated with lousy drivers (regardless of the reason)?  In a one-year period, the cost of medical care and productivity losses associated with injuries from motor vehicle crashes exceeded $99 billion – with the cost of direct medical care accounting for $17 billion, according to a study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The total annual cost amounts to nearly $500 for each licensed driver in the United States, said the study in the journal Traffic Injury Prevention. See the CDC press release.

The one-year costs of fatal and non-fatal crash-related injuries totaled $70 billion (71 percent of total costs) for people riding in motor vehicles, such as cars and light trucks, $12 billion for motorcyclists, $10 billion for pedestrians, and $5 billion for bicyclists, the study said.

So the message here is that getting in an accident ain’t cheap.  Slow down, take your time, put away the cell phone, turn off all electronic devices when you are driving and be present and aware.  If you are taking medications that can impair your ability to drive a car, stay home or get a ride.   Don’t even think about driving if you are drinking or doing drugs – you might get what you deserve, but the innocent victim of your irresponsibility doesn’t.  If you are young use common sense, practice in less trafficed areas when possible, and follow all of the advice above.  And if you are elderly, talk to your family about whether you should consider retiring your driver’s license.  These steps won’t just keep you safe, it will keep your passengers and the other travelers on the road safe as well.

And, if you do get in a car accident, be sure to seek quality, competent medical care from a reputable doctor.  Dr. Remmel has been treating patients who have been injuried in automobile accidents for over 30 years.  If you can’t see him, see someone that is recommended by someone you know and trust.  Don’t call a “doctor and attorney referral service.”  They aren’t about getting you better, they are about making money off of you.

Posted by Laurie Puckett at Remmel Wellness Center, a full service wellness and chiropractic facility located in beautiful St. Petersburg, Florida.

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Staying Safe on the Road – Buckle Up for Safety!

A three point seat belt in a Lincoln Town Car.
Image via Wikipedia

Seat belts can—and do—save lives. Just by buckling up on every trip, drivers and passengers can reduce their risk of being injured or killed in a crash by more than half.

Reduce Your Risk
By buckling up, you’re not only reducing your chances of being stopped and ticketed, you’re also increasing your chances of staying alive in a crash. Consider that:

•In 2007, more than 41,000 people lost their lives in motor vehicle crashes. This is an average of 112 deaths a day, or a death every 13 minutes.
•Just by buckling their seat belts, drivers and passengers can reduce their risk of dying in a crash by more than half.
•In 2007, seat belts saved an estimated 15,000 lives.

Learn About the Laws
In the United States, seat belt laws allow for either primary or secondary enforcement:

•Primary enforcement laws allow for a person to be stopped and cited, or given a ticket, for not wearing a seatbelt.
•Secondary enforcement laws stipulate that a person can only be cited, or given a ticket, for not wearing a seatbelt if he or she has been stopped for another type of violation (such as speeding). As of Jan 1, 2010, 28 states and territories had primary laws, and 25 had secondary laws.  Florida started out being a secondary law state, but we are now a primary law state, which you should be aware of through the Click It, Or Ticket Campaign that law enforcement has been engaging in.

At the Remmel Wellness Center, we hope you never get in a car accident, but if you do, we want you to survive it.  Really, what are we going to do with a whole bunch of dead patients?!!?  But seriously, if you are injured in an automobile accident, come on to get a consultation and evaluation.  If you need treatment, in most cases we are able to treat you with no out-of-pocket expenses to you.  You need the care, and you need to get well.  Money shouldn’t get in the way.

Posted by Laurie Puckett, Remmel Wellness Center, a full service chiropractic and wellness center in St. Petersburg, Florida.

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