MYTH: Belts are uncomfortable or inconvenient.
FACT:
Initially people may find safety belts uncomfortable, confining or inconvenient
simply because they're not used to wearing them. Those people who have made
wearing safety belts a habit can testify that once their use does become a
habit, there is no discomfort or inconvenience. It can't be overemphasized
that the serious discomfort and inconvenience of motor vehicle crash injury
in no way compares to the imaginary discomfort or the inconvenience you may
think you feel wearing a belt the first few times.
MYTH: The belts in my car don't work.
FACT:
It's important that everyone realizes that newer shoulder belts are made so
that you can move comfortably but they will still lock up in sudden stops
or crashes. Many people mistake this freedom of movement as a broken mechanism.
Newer shoulder belts are designed to lock up only when the car changes speed
or direction suddenly, not when the occupant changes position.
MYTH: Drivers in air bag-equipped vehicles don't need to wear safety
belts.
FACT:
Air bags provide supplemental protection in frontal crashes, but motorists
can slide under them if they are not wearing a seat belt. In addition, air
bags will not help in a side or rear impact or rollover crash. Motorists should
wear a seat belt for protection in all types of crashes.
MYTH: I don't want to be trapped in a fire or underwater.
FACT:
Crashes involving fire or water happen in only 1/2 of one percent of all crashes.
So it doesn't happen often. However, when they do occur the best chance of
survival rests in remaining conscious, uninjured, and in full possession of
your faculties. The greatest danger is with the impact that precedes the fire
or submersion in water. If you're not using a safety belt, it's very likely
that you will be knocked unconscious or severely injured. If you're belted,
it's very likely you will be able to unbuckle yourself and get out of a potential
fire or submerged car situation.
MYTH: I'd rather be thrown clear in a crash.
FACT:
Being thrown safely clear in a crash is almost impossible. When you're thrown,
you may be thrown through the windshield, scraped along the pavement, or even
crushed by your own vehicle or another one. The idea of being thrown from
a car and gently landing in a grassy area beside the road is pure fantasy.
Your best bet in a crash is to stay inside the vehicle, securely held by your
safety belt.
MYTH: Belts can hurt you in a crash.
FACT:
Properly worn safety belts seldom cause injuries. If they do, the injuries
are usually surface bruises and are generally less severe than would have
been the case without any belt. Without the belts, you could probably have
been thrown out of the vehicle and been injured severely. It is true that
sometimes the force of a crash is so great that nothing could have prevented
injuries. Studies have consistently shown that injuries in most serious crashes
would have been much more severe had safety belts not been worn.
MYTH: I'm not going far and I won't be going fast.
FACT:
This is the comment that so many people living in rural areas use when asked
why they do not wear a safety belt. It's important to remember that most crash
deaths occur within 25 miles of home and at speeds of less than 40 miles per
hour. This emphasizes that everyday driving from just one neighbor's home
to another, to school, to the store or just one farm to another poses the
greatest danger.
MYTH: The chance that I'll have an accident is so small, those things
only happen to other people.
FACT:
This is an attitude that is universal to everything we do. It's comfortable
to think that accidents only happen to other people. However, one out of three
people will be seriously injured in a car crash sometime during their lives.
This is really a significant risk. We never know when it will occur or how
it will occur. The answer -- buckle up every time on every trip.
MYTH: I'm a good driver, it won't happen to me.
FACT:
You may be a good driver but you cannot always control the other drivers on
the road. The statistics related to motor vehicle crashes and drunk drivers
are devastating. Even if you are driving defensively, a drunk driver coming
around the next curve may not be. Again, you never know what might happen.
Play it safe. Buckle up every time -- every trip.