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It is easier to ensure the safety of an infant when you are driving the vehicle. The infant may cry and howl but can easily be restrained when you fit it inside the harness. However, convincing a five or six year old child to remain seated on the back seat and not to come on to the front seat may prove to be a very difficult task.
For starters, the child may disregard your instructions and may simply jump on to the front seat when the vehicle is in motion. If this coincides with a sudden reduction in speed, the child may very well end up being pushed out of the vehicle through the windshield.
It is important to keep the child away from the front seat because the speed at which the air bags deploy in an accident may injure the child. The air bags are designed in such a manner that they are inflated in a span of a few milliseconds. Before you know it, the air bag would be in front of you and you would have a soft cushion to protect you from the forward jerk.
However, there always is a possibility of the individual getting injured due to the impact to the air bag. Of course, this impact will be far less forceful than the impact with the windshield. However, the child may not withstand this and may face severe injury.
This risk is nonexistent in the backseat. The child will be fitted to the seat through the seat belt and there is very little scope for damage when the car stops suddenly.






