4 children dead this week alone from vehicular heatstroke

4 children dead this week alone from vehicular heatstroke

This brings the total number of heat related vehicular deaths to 14 in 2021

New radar technology could reduce hot car deaths

The in-car systems are sensitive enough to detect a baby breathing, and could send alerts if a child is left behind in a car.

The following written content by Keith Barry

To prevent the deaths of children left behind in hot cars, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has cleared the way for auto manufacturers to install highly sensitive in-car radar systems that can detect the presence of a child in a vehicle and alert caregivers before it’s too late.

“Automakers should be utilizing every technology available to prevent kids dying in hot cars and this provides yet another avenue for them,” says Emily Thomas, automotive safety engineer at Consumer Reports. She says that the new radar-based systems have the potential to save many lives.

On average, more than 38 children die each year in hot cars, according to noheatstroke.org, an organization that closely monitors these incidents. Twenty automakers agreed in 2019 that they would install rear-seat reminder systems as standard equipment in their vehicles by the 2025 model year. Read more from Consumer Reports.

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