A Texas mother was taken into custody Tuesday after police alleged her 22-month-old child died when she left the infant in a car outside a Corpus Christi school on one of the hottest days of the year.
The mother, 33-year-old Hilda Ann Adame, was jailed on charges of causing serious bodily injury to a child and child endangerment/abandonment with imminent bodily injury, according to a Corpus Christi Police Department incident report.
It was not clear how long the infant had been in the car before the baby was found unresponsive, according to the incident report.
I don't have kids and I don't plan to, but instead of all the smart crap in cars, why don't car manufacturers put some kind of car seat detection in? Like a little alarm that plays if you walk away from your car with a baby or child in it?
They can tell if someone's in a seat without their seatbelt, they should be able to work out a way to detect car seats too. This is 100% preventable.
Hell, not even car manufacturers. If someone made a Hackathon-type event where the goal was to make the best baby alert system, I'm sure there's at least one smart person out there who could crack this.
That's good to hear! Hopefully it becomes more common or someone makes a universal kit to adapt existing vehicles someday. It probably wouldn't be as elegant as a built-in fix, but definitely less waste and expense.
Most people using cars are adults, only a small number also have a young enough child that this would be a worry. You can buy specialized pads that you put on the seat which reminds you if something was left there, and yet this happens a lot.
The truth of the matter is, people are the problem and a technological solution would have to be mich more complex to work around peoples' carelessness and ignorance
That would suck to be arrested after accidentally (even if it was pure stupidity) killing your child. My car got to 122 recently. That's an unthinkably bad day.
Parents, teach your kids how to bang on the door as early as you can, so they can at least ask for help in the event they're strapped into a car seat and can't escape.
Shit happens, even with loving parents. Do you know what it feels like to have four hours of sleep non-contiguous each day for three years? That's some parents' experience.
Teaching your kids to survive regardless of your parenting doesn't mean you're a bad parent. It means you care about your kids enough to do everything possible to make sure they survive.
This mistake happens to mature, professional people, of no discernable background, race, income. First parents, second parents. Doctors, layers, teachers, janitors.
Habit distribution, sleep deprivation and distraction have no pattern of afflicting only some cluster of "irresponsible" people, in so much that anyone could determine who is in, or out of that "irresponsible" group. Including you.