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Children's Car Seat Safety Guide

Tip #13: Handrails & Drawstrings: Clothing Causes School Bus Hazard

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For more information, see our Car Seat guide.

Safety Tip Thirteen
Safety Tip Thirteen
Safety Tip Thirteen


Drawstrings can be dangerous

Current styles and fads of children's clothing, especially drawstrings, have brought new injury risks. Some clothing can cause deaths and injuries by catching on bus doors or handrails, playground equipment, and cribs. Items that can catch in these areas:Jackets, sweatshirts, and clothing with drawstrings at the neck or waist;Backpack straps, dangling key chains, scarves, belt buckles, and other loose clothing.

How can a drawstring hurt a child?

A drawstring at the waist, hood, or neck on clothing can catch in a small gap in playground equipment, a bus handrail, or on a bolt. A drawstring with a large toggle or knot at the end is most likely to get caught (B). As a child gets off the school bus, a dangling drawstring or loose object may catch in the handrail. If the bus doors close and the child isn't seen, she could be dragged and run over by the wheels (A).

School bus improvements help reduce danger

While clothing changes are very important, school bus manufacturers and school districts are working to change handrails. New handrails are made so they won't catch drawstrings. Older buses are being repaired (C). Bus drivers are trained to watch children as they get off the bus. Your child's bus driver should make sure each child has completely cleared the bus when leaving. He also should look for clothing that could get caught.

Simple steps make clothing safer

Choose clothes without drawstrings — snaps, Velcro, buttons, or elastic are better choices (D).Remove hood and neck strings.Remove drawstrings from the waist and bottom of coats.Warn children about dangling key rings, large buckles, and other objects hanging from their backpacks.

For a flyer on how to test for handrail snagging
or for other school bus safety information
(including vehicle recalls), call the
NHTSA Auto Safety Hotline: 1-888-DASH-2-DOT
or visit the NHTSA website, www.nhtsa.dot.gov.

Next page > Tip #14 > Page 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15

Car Seat Safety Internet Resources:

  • Car Seats Accidents are the leading cause of death for children. Most of these deaths could easily be prevented and it is therefore important to keep your child's safety in mind at all times. These articles and web sites offer tips to keep your children safe in the car, including a car seat quiz and car seat safety inspector.
  • Safety: more safety tips from your Pediatrics Guide
  • Safety First: safety tips and resources from your Guide to Parenting: Babies and Toddlers
  • Family Shopping Guide to Car Seats: AAP guide to buying a car seat, with a price comparison chart of features and prices of car seats from different manufacturers
  • Transporting Children With Special Health Care Needs: an AAP policy statement on transporting children with special needs, such as a tracheostomy, a spica cast, challenging behaviors, or muscle tone abnormalities as well as those transported in wheelchairs.

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