Photo: Getty

Parents may want to think twice before letting their child sleep in their car seat while not in the car.
Anew study published this monthin the American Academy of Pediatrics journalPediatricshas found that, in data looked at from 2004 to 2014, 62.9 percent of sleep-related deaths in infants occurred when children were in car safety seats (CSSs). Of these cases, less than 10 percent of the seats were “used as directed.”
“Using CSSs for sleep in nontraveling contexts may pose a risk to the infant,” the study warned.
Child in car seat.Getty

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Pediatrician Dr. Jeffrey Colvin — who was the study’s lead author — spokewithTodayabout the findings, sharing, “It really appeared that the deaths in these car seats occurred in the context where the car seat wasn’t being used for itspurpose in transporting a child, but instead it was being used as a substitute for a crib or bassinet.”
“But they aren’t as safe as a crib or bassinet when the child is out of the car and sleeping … There’s a lack of awareness (about this),” he continued. “I think every parent, including myself, has been guilty of doing this at one time or another.”
“A lot of times we just saw this context where the infanthad been left in the car seatfor hours and hours, and the supervisor was asleep or intoxicated during the time,” Dr. Colvin added.

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“The car seat is where infants should be always when they’re traveling and it’s the absolute safest place for that infant to be, whether they are awake or asleep,” Colvin said.
He added, “But you just have to remember that car seats are for carsand when you get out of the car, the safest thing to do if your infant is still sleeping would be to put them in a bassinet or a crib.”
source: people.com