I was browsing online the other day and was amazed at how many shopping cart covers there are now. However, I don’t think any of them include a seatbelt. When my daughter was little, I purchased what was more of a padded seatbelt. Well, it has a small part to sit on and a part that could cover the cart’s handle, but what interested me the most was that it had a wide band with Velcro intended to serve as a seatbelt. That made me happy because she was not supported in the shopping cart. Also, the seatbelts provided were nasty and often were unable to be tightened.
Last month I was running to the grocery store to pick up a few last minute items when I saw a good friend of mine. She was there with her 3 kids, her 10 y/o, her 7 y/o and her 4 y/o. It was the end of a long day for them and everyone was at their wit’s end. She wanted to contain them and I suppose decrease the whining, so she put the 2 big ones in the cart and the youngest in the seat up front. I was quite surprised to see this, but didn’t know if I should say anything. I worried about the safety of this, but I also couldn’t imagine where she would put any food, or how she could push the cart with 3 kids in it.
I worry about child safety in general and have seen many people walk away from their carts with their kids still in it. However, I worry about falls from shopping carts. I don’t know if it is a common known fact that many children (about 23,000/ year) end up in the emergency room with head and neck injuries from shopping cart falls. These injuries occur both from the child falling out of the cart because they were standing or climbing, and also from the shopping cart tipping over. This is common when you have an older child climbing on or standing on the outside of the carts. According to the U.S. CPSC, “Falls from shopping carts are among the leading causes of head injuries to young children.” http://www.cpsc.gov/cpscpub/pubs/5075.html
Think about alternate ways you can get your shopping done with your child. Do not put an infant carrier in or on the shopping cart. If your supermarket offers carts with low down cars for kids, consider using those instead. The AAP makes other suggestions http://aappolicy.aappublications.org/cgi/reprint/pediatrics;118/2/e545.pdf.
Let’s keep all our kids safe!