
@article{ref1,
title="Net, sack, harness or no infant restraint?",
journal="Proceedings: American Association for Automotive Medicine Annual Conference",
year="1981",
author="Herbert, D. C. and Arthurson, RM and Netterfield, SA",
volume="25",
number="",
pages="291-305",
abstract="In spite of world-wide attempts to develop for the newly born infant, crash protective gear that does not require a supplementary restraining device, every commercially available infant restraint seen by the authors uses one.  This paper reports crash studies (in field or laboratory) on protective gear that incorporates one of the three devices -- net, sack or harness -- and on prototype equipment that uses no supplement to the basic infant carrier.  The authors also discuss the behavioral problems involved in obtaining the co-operation of parents in the use of nets, sacks and harnesses, emphasizing the need either to modify this behavior or to produce protective gear that does not depend for its crash- effectiveness so much on parental co-operation.<p />",
language="",
issn="0892-6484",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}