Download - Rear-face Rear-facing Car Seats - St. John Ambulance · Infant Car Seat Five-point harness Comes with carrier and a base that stays in the car Seat should be 45° angle for newborn,

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Page 1: Rear-face Rear-facing Car Seats - St. John Ambulance · Infant Car Seat Five-point harness Comes with carrier and a base that stays in the car Seat should be 45° angle for newborn,

Rear-facing Car Seats

Booster Seats

Rear-face your child for as long as possible!

Infant Car SeatFive-point harnessComes with carrier and a base that stays in the carSeat should be 45° angle for newborn, unless otherwise stated.

High Back BoosterSturdy backrest to cushion spineRepositions car seatbelt to properly secure a small child

Backless BoosterNo backrestRepositions car seatbelt to properly secure a small child

Rear-facing car seats keep kids

75% safer than forward-facing car seats*

as long as they satisfy the specific seat’s

requirements

*Source: Understanding the different car seat stages. Parachute Canada 2018. http://www.parachutecanada.org/injury-topics/item/a-simple-way-to-understand-the-different-car-seat-stages

Convertible Car Seat – 1st StageFive-point harnessTurns into a front-facing car seat

Front-facing Car SeatsConvertible Car Seat – 2nd StageFive-point harnessUsed when your child outgrows the seat’s rear-facing configuration

Combination Car Seat – 1st stageFive-point harnessTurns into a high back booster seat

Combination Car Seat – 2nd StageSturdy backrest to cushion spineRepositions car seatbelt to properly secure a small childUsed when your child outgrows the seat’s five-point harness configuration

For more information about first aid, visit sja.ca