| Literature DB >> 30377536 |
Lisa Keay1, Kate Hunter1,2, Martyn Ralph1, Bobby Porykali1, Marilyn Lyford3, Kathleen Clapham4, Winston Lo5, Rebecca Ivers1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the barriers to use of child car seats in Australian Aboriginal communities, or the acceptability of programs to increase appropriate car seat use. This formative evaluation sought to consult and partner with Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Services (ACCHS) to develop and evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of a program intended to improve optimal use of child car seats.Entities:
Keywords: Aboriginal; Booster seat; Child car seats; Process evaluation; Research methods
Year: 2018 PMID: 30377536 PMCID: PMC6195719 DOI: 10.1186/s40814-018-0351-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pilot Feasibility Stud ISSN: 2055-5784
Fig. 1Program timeline
Issues surrounding use of child car seats grouped into barriers and facilitating factors for the stages of behaviour change
| Stages | Barriers | Facilitating factors |
|---|---|---|
| Awareness | Lack of awareness of the law and confusion about the age and seat types required | Having an understanding of exactly what happens in a crash Having visible pictures/posters to inform |
| Engaged | Adults do not think about safety on day to day journeys ‘Some just don’t even care - not worried. Just get in the car’ | Involving children in safety: doing workshops with children to educate children about why car seats are important. Kids can see better—sitting up high ‘I say it is his ‘special seat’ |
| Getting the right restraint | Confusion: large children concern that large children do not fit in the seat they need by law. ‘Eyes over or head over. What do I do?’ | Individual advice |
| Lack of resources/cost: do not own car seats, cost was a major barrier, especially with more children and currently having no seats, cost of restraint fitters also acknowledged. ‘paying a ridiculous amount for just a foam chair’ | Supportive of hire scheme or subsidised purchase | |
| Large families: problems fitting seats across back seat and doing seat belt up with tight fitting seats | Appeal of seats that will last across greater age range | |
| Simple tick system favoured as a way to get better seat. ‘As long as you have the tick, cheapest one with that tick on it. Means I am safe and abiding by the rules.’ | ||
| Using correctly | Multiple vehicles: taxis not having seats, and having to have car seats to put in other people’s cars, difficult to move between cars. ‘Taking in and out, in and out. It’s such a headache’ | Ease of use: group felt that once familiar, seats are easy enough to get in and out of a car |
| Children resistant to using child restraints: children do not like to sit in ‘baby’ car seats, seats not comfortable | Being consistent with children—if you are not in the seat, we do not drive anywhere. Making sure other adults who may take the kids in their car have the same rules. | |
| Fitting challenges: cars without the right anchor points—vans, problems with two door cars | Restraint checks are useful: understood importance of restraint check, knew about fitting checks | |
| Demonstration favoured getting a practical demonstration and thought it should be at point of sale/supply. ‘Demonstration would be best, better than reading a book. You pay attention to someone actually standing there’ |
Program content and corresponding components of the simplified precaution adoption process model
| Stages | Program content |
|---|---|
| Awareness | • Personal approach to clients |
| Engaged | • Presentation at community days and information sessions |
| Getting the right restraint | • Demonstration of seats to families |
| Using correctly | • Staff trained to be able to install the child restraints correctly |