Driver and Passenger Safety -> Protecting Children General Guidelines for Your Honda CR-V SUV Third Generation (2006-2010)

09/07/16 17:49:43 31SWA630_040  
Protecting Children General Guidelines  
All Children Must Be Restrained  
Each year, many children are injured  
or killed in vehicle crashes because  
they are either unrestrained or not  
properly restrained. In fact, vehicle  
accidents are the number one cause  
of the death of children aged 12 and  
under.  
Children who are unrestrained  
or improperly restrained can be  
seriously injured or killed in a  
crash.  
Any child too small for a seat  
belt should be properly  
To reduce the number of child  
deaths and injuries, every state,  
Canadian province and territory  
requires that infants and children be  
properly restrained when they ride in  
a vehicle.  
restrained in a child seat. A  
larger child should be properly  
restrained with a seat belt and  
use a booster seat if necessary.  
Children depend on adults to protect  
them. However, despite their best  
intentions, many adults do not know  
how to properly protect child  
passengers.  
Larger children must be restrained  
with a lap/shoulder belt and ride on  
a booster seat until the seat belt fits  
them properly (see pages 51 54 ).  
Infants and small children must be  
restrained in an approved child seat  
that is properly secured to the  
vehicle (see pages 40 50 ).  
If you have children, or ever need to  
drive with a child in your vehicle, be  
sure to read this section. It begins  
with important general guidelines,  
then presents special information for  
infants, small children, and larger  
children.  
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09/07/16 17:49:55 31SWA630_041  
Protecting Children General Guidelines  
All Children Should Sit in a Back  
Seat  
The Passenger’s Front Airbag  
Small Children  
Can Pose Serious Risks  
Placing a forward-facing child seat in  
the front seat of a vehicle equipped  
with a passenger’s front airbag can  
be hazardous. If the vehicle seat is  
too far forward, or the child’s head is  
thrown forward during a collision, an  
inflating front airbag can strike the  
child with enough force to kill or  
very seriously injure a small child.  
According to statistics, children of all  
ages and sizes are safer when they  
are restrained in a back seat.  
The National Highway Traffic Safety  
Administration and Transport  
Canada recommend that all children  
aged 12 and under be properly  
restrained in a back seat. Some  
states have laws restricting where  
children may ride.  
Front airbags have been designed to  
help protect adults in a moderate to  
severe frontal collision. To do this,  
the passenger’s front airbag is quite  
large, and it can inflate with enough  
force to cause very serious injuries.  
Even though your vehicle has an  
advanced front airbag system that  
automatically turns the passenger’s  
front airbag off under certain  
circumstances (see page 33 ), please  
follow these guidelines:  
Larger Children  
Children who have outgrown child  
seats are also at risk of being injured  
or killed by an inflating passenger’s  
front airbag. Whenever possible,  
larger children should sit in the back  
seat, on a booster seat if needed, and  
be properly restrained with a seat  
belt (see page 51 for important  
information about protecting larger  
children).  
Children who ride in back are less  
likely to be injured by striking  
interior vehicle parts during a  
collision or hard braking. Also,  
children cannot be injured by an  
inflating front airbag when they ride  
in the back.  
Infants  
Never put a rear-facing child seat in  
the front seat of a vehicle equipped  
with a passenger’s front airbag. If  
the airbag inflates, it can hit the back  
of the child seat with enough force  
to kill or very seriously injure an  
infant.  
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09/07/16 17:50:12 31SWA630_042  
Protecting Children General Guidelines  
To remind you of the passenger’s  
front airbag hazards, and that  
children must be properly restrained  
in a back seat, your vehicle has  
warning labels on the dashboard  
(U.S. models) and on the front visors.  
Please read and follow the  
U.S. Models  
SUN VISORS  
DASHBOARD  
instructions on these labels.  
Canadian Models  
SUN VISORS  
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09/07/16 17:50:26 31SWA630_043  
Protecting Children General Guidelines  
If You Must Drive with Several  
Children  
Your vehicle has a back seat where  
children can be properly restrained.  
If you ever have to carry a group of  
children, and a child must ride in  
front:  
If a Child Requires Close  
Additional Safety Precautions  
Never hold an infant or child on  
your lap. If you are not wearing a  
seat belt in a crash, you could be  
thrown forward and crush the  
child against the dashboard or a  
seat-back. If you are wearing a  
seat belt, the child can be torn  
from your arms and be seriously  
hurt or killed.  
Attention  
Many parents say they prefer to put  
an infant or a small child in the front  
passenger seat so they can watch the  
child, or because the child requires  
attention.  
Place the largest child in the front  
seat, provided the child is large  
enough to wear the lap/shoulder  
belt properly (see page 51 ).  
Placing a child in the front seat  
exposes the child to hazards in a  
frontal collision, and paying close  
attention to a child distracts the  
driver from the important tasks of  
driving, placing both of you at risk.  
Never put a seat belt over yourself  
and a child. During a crash, the  
belt could press deep into the child  
and cause serious or fatal injuries.  
Move the vehicle seat as far to the  
rear as possible (see pages  
97 and 98 ).  
If a child requires close physical  
attention or frequent visual contact,  
we strongly recommend that another  
adult ride with the child in a back  
seat. The back seat is far safer for a  
child than the front.  
Never let two children use the  
same seat belt. If they do, they  
could be very seriously injured in a  
crash.  
Have the child sit upright and well  
back in the seat (see page 16 ).  
Make sure the seat belt is properly  
positioned and secured (see page  
15 ).  
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09/07/16 17:50:35 31SWA630_044  
Protecting Children General Guidelines  
Make sure any unused seat belt  
that a child can reach is buckled,  
the lockable retractor is activated,  
and the belt is fully retracted and  
locked. If a child wraps a loose  
seat belt around their neck, they  
can be seriously or fatally injured.  
(See pages 47 and 48 for how to  
activate and deactivate the  
Do not leave children alone in a  
Lock all doors and the tailgate  
when your vehicle is not in use.  
Children who play in vehicles can  
accidentally get trapped inside.  
Teach your children not to play in  
or around vehicles.  
vehicle. Leaving children without  
adult supervision is illegal in most  
states, Canadian provinces and  
territories, and can be very  
hazardous.  
For example, infants and small  
children left in a vehicle on a hot  
day can die from heatstroke. A  
child left alone with the key in the  
ignition switch can accidentally set  
the vehicle in motion, possibly  
injuring themselves or others.  
Keep vehicle keys/remote  
transmitters out of the reach of  
children. Even very young  
children learn how to unlock  
vehicle doors, turn on the ignition  
switch, and open the tailgate,  
which can lead to accidental injury  
or death.  
lockable retractor.)  
Use the childproof door locks to  
prevent children from opening the  
rear doors. This can prevent  
children from accidentally falling  
out (see page 91 ).  
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