BUCKLE UP MOMMIES! Must-Know Car Safety Tips for Moms-to-Be

BUCKLE UP MOMMIES! Must-Know Car Safety Tips for Moms-to-Be

 If you think it’s alright for not putting on your seatbelt because you are carrying a melon-sized bump with you — you ought to think twice!

 

Many pregnant mothers have a misperception that it’s okay to skip the buckle-up part when they are pregnant because it makes them feel uncomfortable. If you are one of them, you ought to think twice. You might feel uncomfortable wearing a seatbelt when you are carrying a melon-sized bump with you. But it’s absolutely necessary for your safety as well as your unborn child. Wearing your seat belt protects you and your baby from injury or death in a car crash. You should wear a seat belt regardless where you sit in the car.

 

Buckle up properly

The seat belt should be a three-point restraint. That means it should have a lap strap and a shoulder strap. Lap and shoulder belts keep you from being thrown from the car during an accident. The shoulder strap also keeps the pressure of your body off of the baby after a crash.

 

 

 

Be sure to wear your seat belt correctly. The lap strap should go under your belly, across your hips and as high as possible on your thighs. The shoulder strap should go between your breasts and off to the side of your belly. Seat belt straps should never go directly across your stomach. The seat belt should fit snugly. If possible, adjust the height of the shoulder strap so that it fits you correctly.

 

To be safe, you should move the seat back as far as possible and tilt the seat to get some distance between your belly and the steering wheel or dashboard.

 

Air bags help too!

Most experts agree that air bags are safe and could protect pregnant mothers from head injury. The air bags in your car should not be turned off when you are pregnant. To be safe, you should move the seat back as far as possible and tilt the seat to get some distance between your belly and the steering wheel or dashboard. However, air bags are not a substitute for a seat belt, so always wear your seat belt even if your car has air bags.

 

Back Seat versus Front Seat

Although the sitting position of a pregnant mother has not been shown to affect the safety of an unborn baby in a crash, you should still sit in the back seat if you are not driving. Injuries from car crashes tend to be less serious in people who are sitting in the back seat. It is still important to wear a seat belt.

 

If you are in a car crash…

You should get treatment right away, even if you think you are not hurt. Most injuries to the baby happen within a few hours after a crash. Your doctor needs to check you and your baby as soon as possible after a crash, especially if you are more than six months pregnant. 

 

Look out for after-crash danger signs such as pain in your belly, blood or fluid leaking from your vagina, or contractions. If you experience any of these danger signs after a car accident, do not stall any longer and call your doctor right away.