The American Academy of Pediatricians (AAP) last month changed its recommendation on the age at which children can safely stop riding in a rear-facing car seat, to two years old.Previously, AAP advised parents to keep their children in rear-facing seats until they were one year old or weighed 20 pounds. The group revised the number upward last month based primarily on a 2007 study that found infants up to 23 months old were significantly more likely to be injured in car crashes if they were riding in front-facing seats.Other recommendations from the AAP:
AAP says automobile collisions kill about 1,500 children younger than 16 each year. If your child has been harmed in an auto accident caused by a vehicle defect or negligent driver, contact our personal injury attorneys at Hodes Milman toll-free at (949) 640-8222 or submit the contact form via our website, www.hodesmilman.com. We've achieved million-dollar verdicts in product liability actions on behalf of our clients.
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