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Seat Belt Use by Pregnant Women Could Save 200 Fetuses a Year
April 4, 2008 by Dr Arun Pal Singh
Filed under News, Trauma
Pregnant women should wear seat belts, not only to save themselves in the event of a car accident but also to save their fetus.
According to a new study published in the April issue of the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, almost 200 fetuses each year or half of all fetal losses in motor-vehicle crashes could be saved if pregnant women buckled up properly.
Dr. Richard Jones, assistant professor of obstetrics/gynecology at Texas A&M Health Science Center College of Medicine, said, “Pregnant women need to be properly wearing seat belts,” with the best type of seat belt the three-point restraint.
An estimated 170,000 motor vehicle crashes each year in the United States involve pregnant women, and some 90 to 369 fetuses are lost as a result. That’s more than the number of children under 1 year of age who die in such crashes and more than the number of children who die from bicycle accidents, the study authors stated.
Even if a fetus survives, premature delivery as a result of the crash can lead to low birth weight, respiratory problems and long-term physical or neurological problems, the authors said.
The survival of the fetus is most strongly associated with the severity of the crash and how badly the mother is injured.
Fetuses were 4.5 times more likely to survive if the mother was wearing the proper seat belt restraint (with or without air bag deployment).
Among the study’s other findings:
* Regular use of seat belts by pregnant women will prevent 84 percent of fetal injuries and deaths as a result of car accidents.
* Women in car crashes where the fetus is injured or dies are unbelted 62 percent of the time.
* 79 percent of pregnant women who properly wore a three-point belt, with or without air bag deployment, had “acceptable” fetal outcomes in less severe crashes.
* Air bags do not seem to adversely affect fetal outcomes.
For pregnant women, the lap-belt portion needs to be worn low over the pelvis as stated in the article.” Jones explained. “The shoulder belt should simply come up from the side, go between the woman’s breasts, and over the shoulder.”
Author’s Note
The study is based on US data. I expect the death rates to be higher in countries like ours where people are not so cautious and enforcement is not that strong.
Do spread this information so that you could save somebody who is yet to come to the world.
Tags: accidents, crash, death, fetal injury, fetus, injury, pregnant women, Trauma


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