Preschooler Booster Car Seat
Britax Child Safety Seat Belt Positioning Booster features industry-leading side impact safeguard as well as SlideGuard anti-submarining technology to handle accident forces and minimize injuries. Supportive comfort foam and soft, padded materials promote proper seat use and enhance protection. Designed to fit 3 across in the majority cars, the infant car seat is appropriate for kids 40 lbs and up. A removable backrest, dual retractable cup holders, color coded belt guides as well as a simple to modify head restraint make the seat convenient and uncomplicated to install and remove from the cars.
Perfect for larger families, owners of smaller vehicles, or caregivers of multiple children, the Britax Convertible Car Seat features a compact design that makes it possible for you to fit three children car seats across the back seat. The Britax Slide Guard booster seat has cozy well padded armrests and cup holder provides a place for your child’s drink bottle. For the reason that this a forward facing car seat its uncomplicated for both parents and children to keep a good eye on each other, the fitting up and removing the seat is straightforward. The padding enhances protection as well as comfort and also to decrease shock collision forces, while the strap belt promotes appropriate protection method and provides an anchor to the protective seat.
The family way
If you tell your child to put his head back when he has a nosebleed, you're guilty of believing a first aid myth. As part of the Babysafe Campaign, the Red Cross outlines some of the major first aid myths and explains the correct ways parents should help their children in an emergency.
By Lisa Salmon.
Accidents will happen - and unfortunately, they happen more in the rough and tumble world of a child.
In fact, one in four UK parents will have to deal with a children's medical emergency, yet 81% of them don't know how to give basic first aid to a baby or a child.
New research by Tesco Baby & Toddler Club has found that 72% of parents wouldn't feel confident in administering first aid, and 60% would worry they'd do something wrong.
That fear of getting it wrong is hardly surprising when you consider how many myths there are about first aid.
The belief in myths, such as putting butter on a burn or tipping a child's head back during a nosebleed, and parents' lack of first aid knowledge, is something the British Red Cross is hoping to tackle with the help of the current Tesco Baby & Toddler Club BabySafe campaign.





