By: Bahar Gholipour
Published: 01/07/2015 04:18 PM EST on LiveScience
Almost three-quarters of parents fail to follow the safety advice to use rear-facing car seats for their toddlers until age 2, a new study finds. Instead, most parents turn their child's car seat around, to a front-facing position, at an earlier age than recommended, and a quarter of parents even turn the seats around before their child reaches 1 year old.
"There are lots of reasons why parents are eager to change from the rear-facing to forward-facing seat," study co-author Dr. Michelle Macy, a pediatric emergency medicine specialist at the University of Michigan's C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, said in a statement. For example, parents may think their children are too large for their rear-facing seats, or parents may prefer seeing their children when driving, Macy said.
"But delaying the switch can make a big difference. In Sweden, it is culturally accepted that children up to age 4 are in rear-facing seats, and child traffic fatalities [in that country] are among the lowest in the world," Macy said. [9 Weird Ways Kids Can Get Hurt]
Previously, U.S. guidelines recommended keeping children in a rear-facing seat until age 1, but in March 2011, the American Academy of Pediatrics changed the recommendation, saying that it is safer for children to remain in a rear-facing seat until age 2, or until children have outgrown the weight or height limits of their rear-facing seat.
In the new study, the researchers found that in 2013, 24 percent of parents said they had turned their babies to face forward before the child was 1 year old. Only 23 percent reported waiting until the child was 2 to turn the seat around to the front-facing position.
However, the new data did show a trend of improvement among parents, the researchers said. In 2011, 33 percent of parents said they had turned their toddlers to face forward before the kids were 1 year old, and just 16 percent reported waiting until the child reached 2.
Still, more children will be safer if more parents follow the guidelines. Car accidents remain a leading cause of death among children, and that is partly because many child passengers are not properly restrained, the researchers said.
The study was published Jan. 5 in the journal Academic Pediatrics.
Email Bahar Gholipour or follow her @alterwired. Follow Live Science @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Originally published on Live Science.
Copyright 2015 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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