PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 2 August 2001, pp. 438-442
Predictors of Hazardous Child Seating Behavior in Fatal Motor Vehicle Crashes: 1990 to 1998
Received Oct 9, 2000; accepted Mar 29, 2001.
From the Harvard Center for Risk Analysis, Harvard School of
Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
Objective. Motor vehicle crashes are
the leading cause of death in children ages 5 to 14. Children seated in
the front seats of vehicles are at increased risk of death and injury
in crashes, particularly in vehicles with passenger-side air bags. This
study identifies factors associated with the seating of children in the
front seats of vehicles involved in fatal crashes between 1990 and
1998.
Methods. Using 1990 to 1998 data from the Fatal Analysis
Reporting System, a US census of motor vehicle crashes involving a
fatality, multivariable logistic regression was used to model the
association between child seating behavior and vehicle, driver, and
occupant characteristics.
Results. The proportion of vehicles carrying children in
the front declined from 42% to 31% over the 9-year period.
Controlling for driver and vehicle characteristics, the risk of
front-seating declined between 1990 and 1998, and this risk was smaller
in vehicles carrying only younger children ( Conclusions. The 1990s saw a decline in
front-seating of children in vehicles involved in fatal crashes among
all types of vehicles and drivers. Although this trend is encouraging,
children ages 6 to 12 and children traveling alone with the driver
remain at higher risk of being seated in the front. These traveling
situations should be targeted for behavioral safety interventions to
improve child motor vehicle safety.
6 years) than in those
carrying older children. In the 3 years after the introduction of dual air bags into a significant proportion of the passenger fleet in late
1995, dual air bags were associated with fewer children being seated in
the front seat. By the end of 1998, traveling in a vehicle with dual
air bags and only children age 6 or younger was associated with a 95%
lower chance of a child being seated in the front (odds ratio = 0.05;
95% confidence interval: 0.04-0.08). An important factor in safer
seating position was the presence of multiple passengers, especially an
older one, and children were at higher risk of front-seating when they
traveled alone with the driver.




