Friday, July 26, 2013

KidsAndCars.org to mark Heat Stroke Prevention Day on July 31

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-->News Release

KidsAndCars.org
7532 Wyoming St., Kansas City, Mo. 64114
www.KidsAndCars.org

Contacts:
Janette Fennell, 484-278-4641, cell 415-336-9279 or Janette@KidsAndCars.org
Susan Pepperdine, 913-262-7414, cell 913-205-5304 or susan@pepperdinepr.com
Sally Davisson, 913-871-4763, cell 859-361-5004 or sally@sistersofinvention.com

KidsAndCars.org to mark Heat Stroke Prevention Day on July 31

23 children have already died in hot vehicles this year

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – July ­­29, 2013 – KidsAndCars.org, along with other child-safety advocacy groups and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), will mark Heat Stroke Prevention Day on July 31 with increased efforts to raise awareness and educate parents and caregivers about ways to prevent children from being unknowingly left alone in a hot vehicle. Heat stroke is the leading cause of non-crash vehicle fatalities for children 14 and younger.

On Heat Stroke Prevention Day KidsAndCars.org volunteers will visit birthing centers in cities nationally to distribute Look Before You Lock™ safety education cards for new and expectant parents.

KidsAndCars.org, the only and leading national nonprofit group dedicated solely to preventing injuries and deaths of children in and around motor vehicles, to date has distributed over 320,000 of the safety information cards to birthing centers and hospitals nationally.

Participating agencies will also post social media messages throughout the day, asking people to share the posts and retweet using #heatstroke.

“A change in routine, fatigue, distraction, anxiety – each can lead to a tragic momentary memory lapse,” notes Janette Fennell, founder and president of KidsAndCars.org. “It can happen to anybody, even the most loving and attentive parents.” It has happened to teachers, a pediatrician, dentist, postal clerk, social worker, police officer, nurse, clergyman, electrician, accountant, soldier, assistant principal and even a rocket scientist.

The number of child heat stroke deaths in vehicles continues to average approximately 37 per year; or about one every 10 days. Since the group began tracking data, at least 670 children have died in these preventable tragedies.

A parked car can reach 125 degrees in minutes, even when the windows are open. Children are especially vulnerable to heat stroke, as their body temperatures rise three to five times faster than an adult’s.

All parents need to carefully follow the guidelines for placing car seats in the back seat – the safest place for children to ride. Additionally, babies should ride rear-facing in their car seats till age 2, according to the guidelines prescribed by the American Academy of Pediatrics. 

At the same time, parents must understand that while children riding in the back seat has saved many lives, it also requires drivers to take extra precautions to avoid unknowingly leaving children alone in a vehicle. “Following KidsAndCars.org’s Look Before You Lock safety tips doesn’t cost a penny, and provides several layers of protection so your child will not be unknowingly left in a vehicle,” Fennell added. “We never know when there might be a day that our memory fails us, so we urge parents to implement these easy-to-follow instructions so that they become a habit for them and all who care for their child.”

KidsAndCars.org’s Look Before You Lock safety tips include:
  • Get in the habit of always opening the back door of your vehicle every time you reach your destination to check to make sure no child – or pet – has been left behind.
  • Keep a large stuffed animal in the child's car seat. Right before the child is placed in the seat, move the stuffed animal to the front passenger seat as a visual reminder that your child is in the back seat.
  • Put something you'll need on the floorboard in the back seat in front of your child’s car seat (cellphone, handbag, employee ID, briefcase, etc.). This ensures you open the back door of your vehicle to retrieve your belongings.
  • Make arrangements with your daycare provider or babysitter to call you within 10 minutes if your child does not arrive as expected.
  • Never leave children alone in or around cars, not even for a minute. Instead, use drive-thru services when available.
  • Since the group began tracking data, at least 675 children have died in these preventable tragedies.
  • When a child is missing, check vehicles and car trunks immediately.


About KidsAndCars.org: Founded in 1996, KidsAndCars.org is the only national nonprofit child safety organization that is solely dedicated to preventing injuries and deaths of children in and around vehicles. KidAndCars.org promotes awareness among parents, caregivers and the general public about the dangers to children, including backover and frontover incidents, and heat stroke from being inadvertently left in a vehicle. The organization works to prevent tragedies through data collection, education and public awareness, policy change, product redesign and survivor advocacy.

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Donated stuffed animals to warn parents about dangers of leaving children alone in vehicles


News Release


KidsAndCars.org
7532 Wyoming St., Kansas City, Mo. 64114
Office: 816-216-7085, www.KidsAndCars.org

Contacts:
Janette Fennell, 484-278-4641, cell 415-336-9279 or Janette@KidsAndCars.org
Amber Rollins, 816-216-7085 or Amber@KidsAndCars.org
Susan Pepperdine, 913-262-7414, cell 913-205-5304 or susan@pepperdinepr.com

Donated stuffed animals to warn parents
about dangers of leaving children alone in vehicles

22 children have already died in hot vehicles in U.S. this year

Anchorage, Alaska – Kansas City, MO - July 20, 2013 – Nearly 3,000 stuffed animals and their transport have been donated by Anchorage, Alaska, businesses to KidsAndCars.org, a Kansas City-based national nonprofit child safety organization solely dedicated to preventing injuries and deaths of children in and around motor vehicles. 

PetSmart, in south Anchorage, donated the stuffed cat and dog toys. On Friday afternoon another Anchorage firm, Lynden Transport, loaded the toys onto a truck and is providing free shipment by steamship to their warehouse in Fife, Wash., near Tacoma.

KidsAndCars.org will coordinate distribution to hospital birthing centers in the lower 48. Volunteers will attach KidsAndCars.org’s “Look before you lock”™ safety information cards with tips to avoid
unknowingly leaving a child behind in a vehicle, including:
  • Get in the habit of always opening the back door of your vehicle every time you reach your destination to make sure no child – or pet – has been left behind. 
  •  Keep a large stuffed animal in the child's car seat. When the child is placed in the seat, move the stuffed animal to the front passenger seat as a visual reminder that your child is in the back seat.
  • Put something you'll need on the floorboard in the back seat (cellphone, handbag, employee ID, briefcase, etc.)
  • Make arrangements with your daycare or babysitter to call you within 10 minutes if your child does not arrive as expected.
  • Never leave children alone in or around cars, not even for a minute. Instead, use drive-thru services when available.
  • When a child is missing, check vehicles and car trunks immediately. 

"The worst thing any parent or caregiver can do is think that this could never happen to them, that they are not capable of inadvertently leaving their child behind," says Janette Fennell, founder and president of KidsAndCars.org.

"This can and does happen to the most loving, responsible and attentive parents,” she added. ““All it takes is a lapse in memory when there’s a distraction or a change in routine or change in drivers.” Since the group began tracking data, at least 675 children have died in these preventable tragedies.

About KidsAndCars.org: Founded in 1996, KidsAndCars.org is a national nonprofit child safety organization dedicated to preventing injuries and deaths of children in and around vehicles. KidAndCars.org promotes awareness among parents, caregivers and the general public about the dangers to children, including backover and frontover incidents, and heat stroke from being inadvertently left in a vehicle. The organization works to prevent tragedies through data collection, education and public awareness, policy change, product redesign and survivor advocacy.

Friday, July 19, 2013

TOMY Revolutionizes Car Seat Safety With First Smartphone-Synched Convertible Car Seat

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TOMY
2015 Spring Road
Suite 400
Oak Brook, IL 60523
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Matt Miller
Salmon Borre Group
847.582.1610
Twitter: @TOMYNewsUS

TOMY Revolutionizes Car Seat Safety With 
The First Smartphone-Synched Convertible Car Seat

The First Years® True Fit IAlert Car Seat Monitors Key Safety Areas:
Child Out of Seat, Unattended Child, Installation Angle and Temperature Check

Now Available Exclusively on Amazon.com

OAK BROOK, IL (July 18, 2013) – A new car seat from TOMY International that will revolutionize the way parents and caregivers think about automobile safety for babies and toddlers is now available for consumers to purchase. TOMY’s The First Years brand is producing the first mobile-synched car seat, featuring an integrated innovative monitoring system designed to alert parents of unsafe and potentially life-threatening situations. The First Years True Fit IAlert Convertible Car Seat (for use from 5 to 65 lbs.) monitors a child in the car seat and notifies parents or caregivers with an alert via their Smartphones if: 

·       A child moves out of the car seat while the vehicle is in motion
·       A child is left in the car seat when the vehicle is not in motion

Additionally, the IAlert Smartphone App:
·       Assists in achieving the recommended angle orientation for rear-facing installation
·       Reminds caregivers to buckle up their child
·       Displays the temperature in the back seat of the car

Each year, thousands of infants and children are killed or injured in motor vehicles, many of those fatalities as a result of an improperly installed car seat or a child who is improperly restrained while the vehicle is in motion. In addition, heatstroke is the leading cause of non-crash, vehicle related deaths for children, with 33 fatalities in 2012 and many other illnesses occurring after children were unintentionally left in cars, according to KidsAndCars.org. Unfortunately, until now, parents and caregivers have only been aware of these life-threatening situations after a close call or tragedy has occurred.

“At TOMY, our mission is to help parents and caregivers keep kids safe by making innovative high quality products that are easy to use and install. To that end, the new The First Years True Fit IAlert Convertible Car Seat has built-in features and functions that take some of the guesswork out of using infant gear properly,” says Greg Kilrea, President and Chief Executive Officer of TOMY International. “The advanced Smartphone-synched technology integrated into The First Years True Fit IAlert Convertible Car Seat helps provide parents with additional peace of mind, which is central to our Company mission. It is critically important to TOMY that we take a leadership position in advancing the overall safety of children in motor vehicles.”

“All new parents need to learn how to keep their child safe in and around vehicles. KidsAndCars.org believes the solution to preventing tragedies is education along with technology in case the driver’s memory fails,” says Janette Fennell, President and Founder of KidsAndCars.org. “When parents follow our simple ‘Look Before You Lock’ program safety tips such as never leaving their child alone in the car and always opening the back door once they arrive at their destination, they are taking life-saving steps to protect their children.”

The IAlert Convertible Car Seat application, produced in partnership with St. Louis, Mo.-based CARS-N-KIDS LLC, is compatible with iPhone and Android devices, and is currently available to consumers. Once the app has been installed and synched, the app provides an audio and a visual alert on the user’s Smartphone when a monitored issue occurs, so that parents or caregivers can pull over to a safe location and check the situation. The system can also be configured to send a text message to other family members or caregivers in the event of an unsafe situation. The First Years True Fit IAlert Convertible Car Seat, which retails for $349.99, is now available exclusively on Amazon.com.

The First Years True Fit IAlert Convertible Car Seat – Description & Specifications
The First Years True Fit IAlert Convertible Car Seat is a revolutionary new car seat with an integrated monitoring system designed to alert parents of potentially life-threatening situations. Working in partnership with CARS-N-KIDS LLC out of St. Louis Mo., this patented technology, when integrated into the True Fit Convertible Car Seat, assists parents or caregivers via their Smartphones with the recommended angle orientation when installing in the rear facing position. In addition, it alerts them if their child moves out of their seat while the vehicle is in motion, if their child is left unattended in the car when the car is not in motion and constantly displays the ambient temperature in the back seat of the car, The First Years True Fit IAlert Convertible Car Seat is side-impact tested to international standards and offers all the standard features of the True Fit line, including the Rebound Energy Management system for rear-facing installation. Managing rebound energy helps reduce the chance for broken bones in the legs, hips and waist that can be significant in a violent crash. The True Fit IAlert Convertible Car Seat also features a new head rest designed to help manage head control, a no-rethread, easy-adjust harness, built in lock offs, color coded belt paths, LATCH, center angle indicator, cup holder and easy-off pads for convenient cleaning. For use rear-facing 5 to 35 lbs.; forward-facing 23-65 lbs. MSRP: $349.99, available now exclusively on Amazon.com

About TOMY International
TOMY International (www.tomy.com) is a leading global designer, producer and marketer of a broad range of innovative, high-quality toys sold to preschoolers, youths and adults under the TOMY®, Ertl®, Johnny Lightning® and Tomica® brands as well as products for mothers, infants and toddlers marketed under its The First Years®, Lamaze, JJ Cole® Collections and Boon® brands. TOMY International also markets its products under popular and classic licensed properties such as Chuggington, Pokémon, Dinosaur Train, John Deere, Disney’s Winnie the Pooh, Princesses, Cars, Fairies and Toy Story, and other well-known properties. TOMY International’s mission is to inspire and fulfill the dreams of children and parents worldwide. TOMY International reaches its target consumers through multiple channels of distribution supporting more than 25,000 retail outlets throughout North and South America, Europe and Australia. TOMY International is a wholly owned subsidiary of Japan-based TOMY Company, Ltd. (Tokyo Stock Exchange Code No. 7867). © TOMY

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