Infants in Car Seats

Find out how long a child should be kept in a rear-facing car seat.
Q
My son is 4 months old and weighs 20 pounds. We have him in a rear-facing convertible car seat. The instruction manual says that I should reposition the car seat (make it front-facing) after he weighs 22 pounds. Can I keep the seat in its current position after he reaches that weight limit?
A
Keep your son in a rear-facing car seat until he is 12 months old. The issue is not so much your son's body weight as it is the stability of his neck. Even though your child is bigger than other infants his age, he's moving at the same developmental pace. He doesn't have the gross motor-skills to protect his neck as well as a one-year-old baby.

Infants are placed in cars facing the rear because most car collisions occur with the impact to the front of the car. The occupants of the car are thus thrown forward as the car is forced to a sudden stop. In a young infant who does not have good head control and doesn't have much strength in his neck, that forward motion could cause severe and even fatal spinal cord injury, as the head is snapped forward. Infants have very large heads compared with the rest of their bodies and, combined with their less-developed motor skills, they are less able to resist that forward snapping motion of the head and neck. When an infant is facing the rear, his head will already be against the back of the car seat, so in a front collision it just presses further against the back of the car seat.

You mention that you have a convertible car seat, which means he should still fit in it well, even though he is so big for his age. Infants who are that big who are in an infant car seat, rather than a convertible one, would need to move to a larger car seat.

With all the new car seats available, as well as all the new studies showing what the risks are to children in car accidents, there has been some confusion regarding recommendations for appropriate use of car seats. A wonderful site that is maintained by the American Academy of Pediatrics, reviews all the specific recommendations and answers most of the questions that parents have about individual car seat use. You can access that site to get more detailed information.

Shari Nethersole is a physician at Children's Hospital, Boston, and an instructor in Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School. She graduated from Yale University and Harvard Medical School, and did her internship and residency at Children's Hospital, Boston. As a pediatrician, she tries to work with parents to identify and address their concerns.

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