Abstract

The incorrect use of child car seats is common, with significant negative effects on crash protection for child passengers. There is currently little evidence for effective, practical countermeasures for incorrect use. The provision of clear and comprehensible materials on correct use supplied with restraints at the point of sale could be highly cost-effective and achieve similar benefits to restraint-fitting services or hands-on training; however, routinely supplied instructions in their current form are frequently difficult to understand. We are conducting a randomised controlled trial of the consumer-driven redesign of instructional materials, consisting of an instruction sheet, swing tags and online training videos. This paper presents the protocol that will be used in an innovate process evaluation that will use the primary outcome of overall serious misuse assessed at six months, together with a survey and semi-structured interviews to determine fidelity, dose and outcomes for all intervention participants. The study will assess intervention delivery and external factors that may impact the effectiveness of the intervention, including experience, health literacy, confidence and attitudes. When it has been conducted, this process evaluation will provide enhanced understanding of the mechanisms through which the intervention works or not, aspects of the implementation process key to success of the intervention and insight into how external factors influence the success of the intervention.

Highlights

  • The incorrect use of child car seats is a long-standing and widespread problem

  • 1754) allows for ISOFIX-compatible restraints, it requires that all child restraint systems are able to be anchored to the vehicle by the seat belt and top tether anchorage system

  • As we aim to examine the impact of implementation and mechanisms underpinning the effect of the intervention, this process evaluation will only include data collected from participants within the intervention group of our pragmatic field trial

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Summary

Introduction

The incorrect use of child car seats is a long-standing and widespread problem. In Australia, the latest available estimates are that one in two children have errors in the way they are restrained when travelling in cars [1]. Similar rates of incorrect restraint use are reported in Europe and North. America [2,3,4,5]. There is a need to find effective interventions to reduce the rate of incorrect use given the significant negative effect that the incorrect use of child car seats has on crash protection for child. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 4508; doi:10.3390/ijerph17124508 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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