Assessing tether anchor labeling and usability in pickup trucks

Traffic Injury Prevention
Kathleen D KlinichJessica S Jermakian

Abstract

The objective of this study was to investigate vehicle factors associated with child restraint tether use and misuse in pickup trucks and evaluate 4 labeling interventions designed to educate consumers on proper tether use. Volunteer testing was performed with 24 subjects and 4 different pickup trucks. Each subject performed 8 child restraint installations among the 4 pickups using 2 forward-facing restraints: a Britax Marathon G4.1 and an Evenflo Triumph. Vehicles were selected to represent 4 different implementations of tether anchors among pickups: plastic loop routers (Chevrolet Silverado), webbing routers (Ram), back wall anchors (Nissan Frontier), and webbing routers plus metal anchors (Toyota Tundra). Interventions included a diagram label, Quick Response (QR) Code linked to video instruction, coordinating text label, and contrasting text tag. Subjects used the child restraint tether in 93% of trials. However, tether use was completely correct in only 9% of trials. An installation was considered functional if the subject attached the tether to a tether anchor and had a tight installation (ignoring routing and head restraint position); 28% of subjects achieved a functional installation. The most common installation error ...Continue Reading

References

Mar 23, 2011·Injury Prevention : Journal of the International Society for Child and Adolescent Injury Prevention·Jessica S Jermakian, JoAnn K Wells
May 21, 2013·Traffic Injury Prevention·Kathleen D KlinichJoann K Wells
Jun 5, 2013·Applied Ergonomics·Kathleen D KlinichMatthew P Reed
Feb 18, 2014·Journal of Safety Research·Angela H EichelbergerAnne T McCartt
Dec 3, 2014·Journal of Safety Research·Jessica S JermakianPrabha Narayanaswamy
May 3, 2015·Journal of Safety Research·Jessica B Cicchino, Jessica S Jermakian

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