Research Papers

Comparison of adult and child skeletal structures showing head-to-body ratios

The Physics of Protection: Why Children Aren’t Mini Adults

Comparison of adult and child skeletal structures showing head-to-body ratios

The Physics of Protection: Why Children Aren't Mini Adults.

By Peggie Mars
Founder, Wheel Well – Child Road Safety NGO

We often hear that “speed kills,” but as parents, it can be hard to visualize exactly why a few extra kilometres per hour matter so much. At Wheel Well, we believe that when you understand the “why” and the “how” of car seat safety, it becomes second nature..

Our guiding principle is simple: our children are not mini adults. Their bodies are far more vulnerable than ours, and for this reason, we have to take extra special care of them during the extreme conditions of a crash.

  1. The “Bowling Ball” Problem (Momentum)

Imagine holding a bowling ball. Now imagine that ball is actually your baby’s head. At birth, your baby carries about 30% of their total body weight in their head.

When a car stops suddenly in a crash, everything inside keeps moving forward at the original speed. If a child is forward-facing during a frontal crash, that “heavy” head is thrown forward with significantly more relative force than an adult’s. Because their immature spines and skulls are still developing, they simply cannot deal with these extreme forces.

  1. The “Cradle” vs. The “Stretch” (Deceleration)

In a crash, the goal is to stop the body as slowly as possible to reduce strain.

  • A Delicate Support: A young child’s spinal cord is incredibly vulnerable at birth. It consists of cartilage and bone and cannot yet support the body weight of your child.
  • The “Stretch”: Because their spine is so flexible, it can experience a violent stretch during a forward-facing impact. It is vital to know that the injuries resulting from a spinal “stretch” are devastating.
  • The Rear-Facing Solution: By keeping your child rear-facing for as long as possible, you protect the neck and pelvis. The seat acts as a cradle, catching the head and back together to distribute force and prevent dangerous spinal strain. For this reason, infant seats are designed with a flatter angle.
  1. Side Impact: Protecting the Developing Brain

Most crashes aren’t perfectly straight; they often involve lateral (side-to-side) movement. This is where side-impact protection becomes vital.

  • Fusing Plates: At birth, your baby’s skull has separate plates that must grow and fuse together.
  • The Age 2 Milestone: This fusing process isn’t complete until about age 2.
  • A Protective Shell: Until those bones fuse, the brain is extra vulnerable. You must take utmost care of this vulnerable brain by rear-facing your child and ensuring your car seat provides good side-impact protection.
  1. Why “Hip Bones” Matter (The Pelvis)

You might wonder why we use booster seats for older children. It comes down to how their bones grow. In an infant or young child, the pelvic area is made of separate bones that must still grow and fuse together. This is why they are so flexible in their hips. However, it also means they don’t yet have the solid “hip bones” needed to keep an adult seatbelt from sliding up into their soft stomach area during a sudden stop.

  1. The Golden Rule: Slowing Down for Every Condition

Because our children’s bodies are so vulnerable, we must reduce our speed whenever they are in the vehicle. Since impact energy multiplies quickly as speed increases, slowing down is the simplest way to give their safety seat a better chance to protect them.

To provide that extra special care they require, it is essential to lower your speed even further whenever you encounter adverse conditions, such as:

  • Night Driving: Reduced visibility means you have less time to react.
  • Rain or Wet Roads: Slick surfaces significantly increase your braking distance.
  • Bad Road Conditions: Potholes or gravel can impact your vehicle’s stability.
  • Fog or Low Visibility: If you can’t see clearly, you must slow down to ensure a safe stop.
  1. Handling the Pressure: Aggressive Drivers

It is natural to feel intimidated by aggressive drivers “tailgating” you. However, you are the guardian of someone whose body is far more vulnerable than yours. Their head still carries about 30% of their weight , and their immature spine cannot deal with the forces that higher speeds bring.

Don’t let a stranger’s impatience dictate your child’s safety. If pressured, stay calm, maintain your safe speed, and find a safe opportunity to let them pass. It is always better to let an angry driver go by than to put a young spine, which is still mostly cartilage, at risk.

Finally, remember that the most advanced safety seat in the world still relies on the vehicle surrounding it to perform its job. Ensuring your car is roadworthy isn’t just a legal requirement; it’s about making sure your vehicle reacts predictably when it is required most. Whether it’s having the tire tread to grip a wet road or the brake responsiveness to avoid a collision, maintenance is your first line of defence. We urge you to visit your local Supa Quick dealership for a professional safety assessment. By keeping your tires, brakes, and suspension in peak condition, you’re ensuring that the laws of physics work with you, not against you. Don’t leave your family’s safety to chance: give your vehicle the expert care it needs to keep your family safe.

Our children are vulnerable, but with the right seat and the right speed, they are protected.

Wheel Well is a proud winner of the Prince Michael International Road Safety Awards, recognizing achievement and innovation which improves road safety.

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Africa’s New Era of Road Safety

Africa’s New Era of Road Safety

Africa’s New Era of Road Safety

Africa’s New Era of Road Safety: Will South Africa Accept the Challenge?

By Peggie Mars
Founder, Wheel Well – Child Road Safety NGO

On 12 March 2026, a historic line was drawn in the sand for the African continent. The African Road Safety Charter officially entered into force, marking the first continental and legally binding road safety framework designed to end the carnage on our roads.

While 15 African Union Member States, including our neighbours Namibia, Mozambique, and Eswatini, have stepped up to lead this charge, South Africa is notably absent from the list.

At Wheel Well, we focus exclusively on the safety of children. For years, we have advocated for stricter enforcement and better education. Now, we are setting a challenge for the South African government: prove that the lives of our children are a priority by ratifying this Charter.

The High Cost of Inaction

The statistics are a grim reminder of why this Charter is necessary. The WHO African Region holds the world’s highest road fatality rate. Road deaths rose by 17% in the decade leading to 2021, reaching nearly 250,000 fatalities per year.

The Charter is not just a document. It is a strong political statement and a legal foundation to hold governments accountable. By remaining outside this framework, South Africa is effectively opting out of a collective continental vision to halve road deaths and injuries by 2030.

The Blueprint for Child Safety: Our Three Pillars

The Charter compels signatories to take actions that align with global best practices. For Wheel Well, ratification would provide the legal weight needed to enforce our core pillars:

  • Pillar 1: Mandatory Child Restraints The Charter specifically targets child restraints as one of the five key risk factors requiring strict legislation. We challenge the government to move beyond suggestions and enact binding laws that ensure every child is buckled up in a certified car seat.
  • Pillar 2: Child Pedestrian Safety The Charter explicitly aims to protect vulnerable road users, including pedestrians. By ratifying, South Africa commits to investing in safe road infrastructure. We need more than just paint on the road. We need engineered safety measures that protect children walking to school from speeding traffic.
  • Pillar 3: Safer School Transport Under the Charter’s mandate for vehicle safety standards and evidence-based policy, the current state of school transport in South Africa would no longer be acceptable. Ratification means a commitment to ensuring that the vehicles transporting our future leaders meet rigorous, life-saving safety criteria.

No More Excuses

The road map has been provided. The WHO and the African Union have laid out the tools, from improved emergency care to accurate accident analysis. Mozambique recently became the critical 15th country to ratify the Charter, triggering its implementation across the continent.

The question for South African leadership is simple: Why are we not leading this?

We do not need more awareness campaigns that shift the burden to the citizen. We need a government that is willing to be held legally accountable for the safety of its people. We challenge our leaders to join the 15 pioneer nations who have already deposited their instruments of ratification.

South Africa’s silence on the African Road Safety Charter is a choice. It is time to choose the lives of our children.

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Why "Safety Theatre" is Failing Our Children

Road Safety: Why “Safety Theatre” is Failing Our Children (and What Actually Works)

Why "Safety Theatre" is Failing Our Children

Why "Safety Theatre" is Failing Our Children (and What Actually Works)

By Peggie Mars
Founder, Wheel Well – Child Road Safety NGO

In the world of corporate social responsibility (CSR), there is a growing “effectiveness gap.”

On one side, we see campaigns designed for social media engagement: coloring competitions, catchy songs, and “awareness” posters. On the other side is the grim reality of road trauma, which remains a leading cause of death for children globally. As we approach high-risk travel periods like Easter, it’s time for a deep, evidence-based analysis of which interventions actually save lives and which ones are merely “Safety Theatre.”

  1. The “Safety Theatre” Trap: Why Coloring Competitions Fail

A recent industry shift perfectly illustrates the problem: a corporate pivot from providing life-saving car seats and safety harnesses to hosting a school colouring competition. While photogenic, this fails the most basic test of road safety science: Knowledge does not equal Behavior.

Research from the World Health Organization (WHO) and SWOV Institute for Road Safety Research consistently shows that passive awareness campaigns have negligible impact on casualty rates. These programs mistakenly task the child with their own safety, ignoring the biological reality of child development.

The Cognitive Profile of a Child

Children are not “small adults.” Their brains are physically incapable of navigating complex traffic safely due to:

  • Peripheral Vision Limitations: Children have roughly 1/3 less peripheral vision than adults.
  • Auditory Localization: Most children cannot accurately locate the direction of a vehicle’s sound until age 10.
  • Underdeveloped Impulse Control: The prefrontal cortex is still developing; a child who “knows” the rules may still dart into traffic to retrieve a ball or greet a friend.

The Verdict: When we ask a child to “colour themselves safe,” we shift the burden of responsibility from the adult to the victim.

  1. The Gold Standard: Physical Protection & Restraints

Evidence-based road safety points to one primary solution for child survival: Occupant Restraints.

Correctly installed car seats reduce the risk of death for infants by 71% and for toddlers by 54%. In low-income areas, low restraint usage is rarely due to a lack of “awareness” – it is a lack of access. A harness or car seat handout is not a marketing gesture; it is a life-saving intervention.

  1. High-Impact Education: The “Safety Literacy” Model

Education is vital only when it moves from “Awareness” to Hazard Literacy. In our collaborative school programs with partners like Bridgestone, we target senior secondary learners with a “Consequential Reality” model based on three pillars:

  1. Vehicle Integrity (The Physics of Prevention): We conduct hands-on tire safety checks and a pre-trip inspection. Teaching a learner to identify a “smooth” tire or check tread depth turns them into a “Safety Officer” and not just a passenger.
  2. Survival Basics (Secondary Crash Prevention): We demonstrate the essential kit every vehicle must carry: the wheel jack, spanner, fire extinguisher, reflective triangle, and high-visibility gear. This empowers youth to manage the aftermath of a breakdown and prevent lethal secondary collisions.
  3. Affective Education (The Messenger Effect): Adolescents often possess an “invincibility bias.” Hearing the lived experience of survivors like Zweli (TV personality) creates an emotional anchor that no textbook can replicate.
  4. The Vital Cog: Why Corporates Must Consult NGOs

Designing road safety projects in a vacuum lead to wasted budgets. To move from “optics” to “impact,” companies must partner with established NGOs for two reasons:

  • Expertise Over Aesthetics: NGOs understand the specific risks of the local landscape and the “Profile of a Child.”
  • Systemic Support: Supporting an NGO ensures CSR budgets fund validated, evidence-based interventions rather than “feel-good” activities.
  1. Ranking Road Safety Interventions for Efficacy

Efficacy Rank

Intervention Type

Real-World Impact

🥇 GOLD

Physical Restraints & Engineering

High. Directly prevents mortality in collisions.

🥈 SILVER

Hazard Literacy & Survivor Testimony

Moderate-High. Provides tangible skills and emotional resonance.

🥉 BRONZE

Adult-Focused Enforcement

Moderate. Targets the person in control of the vehicle.

❌ FAIL

Passive Child Awareness (Coloring/Songs)

Zero. Optimized for social media “likes,” not lives.

A Call to Action for CSR Leaders

If your road safety budget is spent on crayons instead of car seats, or posters instead of reflective gear, you aren’t investing in safety – you’re investing in optics.

Children learn from repeated, consistent, and adult-led messages. They are protected by the physical barriers we put between them and a ton of moving metal. Let’s stop asking children to draw their way to safety and start doing the heavy lifting ourselves.

Get Involved: We are proud to work with partners who choose impact over optics. To see the organizations making a real difference in child road safety, View Our Sponsors Page Here.

#RoadSafety #ChildSafety #CSR #VisionZero #SafeSystem #SustainableDevelopment

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