Pregnant? Protecting yourself and
your unborn baby
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Always use a lap and shoulder
belt. The biggest risk to your baby is if you ride unbuckled.
-
Push the lap part of the belt down as far as
possible below your
baby. Check often to make sure it stays low, especially
late in pregnancy.
-
If you are wearing a heavy coat, open it or
take it off. This will help keep the lap belt low and snug.
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Sit as far as possible from the steering wheel.
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Let others drive as much as possible during
the last few months of pregnancy. Riding in the back seat using
a lap/shoulder
belt usually is even safer than riding belted in the front passenger
seat.
-
Get yourself checked out at the emergency
room after even a minor crash. Your unborn baby, uterus,
or placenta
could be seriously injured even if you do not seem to be hurt.
Use a Car Seat
for Your New Baby
-
Carry your baby in a rear-facing car
seat for the first year. If you buy a convertible car seat,
choose one that can be used facing the rear
up to at least 30 pounds.
-
Follow the car seat instructions.
-
If you have
a vehicle with a passenger air bag, always put your baby
in the back seat. The air bag could kill or seriously
injure an infant riding in front. Read
your vehicle owner's manual about air bags, safety
belts, and car seats (child restraints).
-
Make sure the safety belt holds the
car seat tightly in place. Fasten the straps
snugly over your baby's shoulders.
To learn more about car safety for babies:
Call the National Auto Safety Hotline at 1-888-DASH-2-DOT
or the Safety BeltSafe U.S.A. Helpline at 1-800-745-SAFE.
Look
at these
web sites:
www.nhtsa.dot.gov
www.childsafety.org
www.aap.org
www.saferidenews.com
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