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Smith’s to demonstrate shopping cart designed to keep infants safe

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Smith’s to demonstrate shopping cart designed to keep infants safe

From Thursday through Saturday, all 34 Smith’s stores in Southern Nevada will be participating in National Safety Month by introducing the Safe-Dock system, a specially designed shopping cart that keeps infants secure.

According to Linda Waters, division safety manager for Kroger, the grocery retailer that owns Smith’s, the company began exploring options to keep infants and toddlers safer at the supermarket more than a year ago.

“We had moms putting their babies in their car seats in the basket portion of the shopping cart, leaving them with little room to shop so they would have to come back another time or they would push two carts, one with their baby and one for their items,” Waters said. “With the Safe-Dock, it’s the first universal system so they don’t have to worry about what kind of car seat they have. Moms can take their car seat and secure their child in using the huge seat belt that comes across to strap them in.”

Employees will be on hand Thursday through Saturday in order to demonstrate the Safe-Dock system and let parents know the new feature is available.

“We want to make sure our stores interact with our customers because they may not realize the safety features we have developed for them,” Waters said. “We’re taking action for the benefit of our customers.”

Article from Las Vegas Review-Journal

Safe-Dock featured on ABC this morning

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Smith’s launching campaign to educate parents on using shopping carts

The next time you and the kids head to the grocery you may want to be more careful shopping carts.

Believe or it not every year 24,000 children get sent to emergency room with shopping cart injuries.

That’s more than high chairs, strollers and changing tables.

That’s why Smith’s is launching a campaign to educate parents on how to use shopping carts safely.

Marsha Gilford demonstrates the proper use of a shopping cart with a child seat.

Article from ABC 4

Safer Shopping Carts on ABC

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Thousands of children sent to ER for shopping cart injuries

SALT LAKE CITY (ABC 4 Utah) – As part of National Safety Month, Smiths Food and Drug is stepping up their safety measures when it comes to shopping carts their customers put their kids in.

According to a recent study, each day 66 kids are sent to the emergency room for shopping cart related injuries. “That’s a scary number for sure,” said Carlee Johnson who was out shopping with her 11 month old at Smiths in Salt Lake.

Johnson says she is shocked to learn so many children are injured from shopping carts and says it’s too bad her 11 month old is too old to use the new “Safe-Dock’s” Smith’s Food and Drug is offering its customers. However, she’s happy to see the grocery store is helping parents keep kids secure. “When my baby was really little I would just put him in a stroller because I didn’t think the cart was a safe option,” said Johnson.

Smith’s recognized that concern and started making changes. “We invested a quarter of a million dollars to buy these and put them in all of our stores throughout our area, because we think it’s going to be a great security and convenience for our families,” said Marsha Gilford, Smith’s Food and Drug spokesperson.

According to the recent study conducted by the Center for Injury Research and Policy of the Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital, 530,494 children were treated to shopping cart related injuries in the emergency room between 1990 and 2011. Those numbers translate to 24,000 per year and 66 per day.

Now, with the new “Safe-Dock” Smiths Food and Drug hopes to reduce those numbers, but they need parents to make sure they are using them correctly. “It’s strictly for car seat usage. If the child is able to sit up they should be in a normal cart with the seat,” said Gilford.

So, although the safe dock isn’t for Johnson’s baby boy she thinks it’s a great solution for other parents trying to get their shopping in. “I think it’s great they have different options for parents so they can bring their kids to the grocery store,” said Johnson.

All Smith Food and Drug locations in Utah should have directions in both English and Spanish posted near the shopping carts on how to safely use the Safe-dock. If a location does not have Safe-Docks available ask for the store director, who can assist you.

Article from ABC 4

Shopping Safe with Safe-Dock on CBS

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Safer Shopping Carts

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DAHO FALLS, Idaho – Smith’s Food and Drug is changing the way their shopping carts are designed to keep children safer.

“So the big launch is the focus on child safety in our shopping carts,” said Bruce Herbst, store director at Smith’s.

Shopping with children at any grocery store is not easy, but Monday afternoon, inside Smiths in Idaho Falls, parents with infants can now be sure their kids won’t fall out of shopping carts.

The new carts are designed with Safe Dock systems, which have car seat holders bolted into the shopping carts. Parents put the infant’s car seat inside them and children will safely stay put even if they squirm around.

“I mean you can see the baby and it’s not like you’re constantly peaking to see if he’s okay and it’s not slipping or wobbling,” said mother Kristina Loop.

The store has around eight of these special carts and even though Herbst said there have not been any major incidents at the Idaho Falls location, nationwide a recent study showed 66 kids a day end up in the emergency room for head related injuries. 70 percent of them were caused from falling out of shopping carts, and with the annual rate of concussions up by 200 percent, Smith’s decided to be proactive.

“I’d say they’re probably about 80 dollars a unit,” said Herbst.

A small price to pay, to protect the most important item in your shopping cart.

All Kroger stores- which include Fred Meyer and Albertsons will also have the new Safe Dock system on their shopping carts.

Article from Local News 8

Smiths and Safe-Dock featured on Fox News

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Local grocery store adds safe-dock shopping carts for child safety

SALT LAKE CITY — Across America an average of 66 children a day are rushed to the emergency room due to shopping cart related accidents, according to the Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s Hospital.

Smith’s Food and Drug is trying to change those numbers by adding new Safe-Dock shopping carts to their stores. These new shopping carts allow parents to buckle in their child’s baby carrier, just like they would in a car.

Maggie Bennett and her husband Ian say the new Safe-Dock carts have made shopping with an eight-week-old a lot less stressful. Falling out of shopping carts is the leading cause of head injuries among children, according to the study.

“I’d rather not have my daughter hurt by something as simple as going to the grocery store, that’s something a little bit scary,” Bennett said. “You can actually turn the cart without worrying about the baby tipping over and you don’t have to worry about it jostling or the baby falling out — they are a lot safer in there.”

Bennett said it certainly beats other alternatives she has used in the past.

“I used to actually put her into the basket but then you don’t have as much room to shop, you’re putting groceries in, on and around,” Bennett said.

Smith’s has invested a quarter of a million dollars to insure all 132 stores have an ample amount of these carts.

“I think only having one child injured in a grocery cart accident is too many,” said Marsha Gilford, Smith’s VP of Public Affairs. “The new technology is designed to hold any baby carrier at all.”

According to the study, between 1990 and 2011 more than a half a million children were treated for shopping cart related injuries.

Shopper Joey Diana knows these stats all too well. His oldest son had to be rushed to the ER after falling out of a cart when he was a baby.

“We had to do the full range CAT scan to make sure there was no head injury or anything,” Diana said.

Diana added if the Safe-Dock carts were around back then he’s certain his child would have not been injured.

Smith’s is one of only a few retailers in Utah to have these new shopping carts available for customers. A few others include Walmart and Sam’s Club.

The carts are designed by the Safe-Strap company.

Article from Fox News

The Daily Record talks Shopping Cart Safety with Paul Giampavolo

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Ruse on the Loose: Wharton company makes shopping safer for kids

Sometimes the best ideas happen by accident.

Watching a news report in 1982, Paul Giampavolo listened as the announcer told how many children were injured falling out of shopping carts every year.

“I had seen it firsthand,” said Giampavolo, who, while working at the Dumont ShopRite in the 1970s, stopped an unrestrained toddler from a shopping cart fall.

“I saw this child stand up in a shopping cart. The parent was nowhere around, the child was at the other end of the aisle. I ran and grabbed the child before he could fall out and sat him down. His mother came around the corner and I told her what happened. And that was sort of uneventful.”

But the recollection remained with Giampavolo while watching the news a decade later in his apartment.

“That memory came right back. I was working in new product development for my company and we were always looking to develop new products. So I had the idea for the shopping cart seat belt.”

Putting together a business plan, he submitted his work to the company’s management who rejected it as too risky liability-wise and unmarketable.

“I really felt passionate about it. So I resigned work to start Safe-Strap. I didn’t have any money. I had about $300. I think my parents thought I was out of my mind, leaving a good job. But I started the company.”

Giampavolo immediately began contacting supermarkets in the New York metropolitan area. It wasn’t until he made his pitch to an ad director at Weis Markets in Pennsylvania, that his idea took fruition.

“He thought it was a great idea and Weis Markets was my first customer. They outfitted the entire chain and ran full page advertisements to the consumer letting them know what they did. The response from the consumer was overwhelming.”

Based in Wharton, Safe-Strap Co. designed the first child safety belt for shopping carts. From that start, they now specialize in products including shopping cart infant seats and restroom baby changing stations, to make shopping for the consumer safer and more convenient.

The company received a letter of appreciation from Nancy Reagan in the 1980s. In 1996, the Consumer Product Safety Commission presented Safe-Strap Co. with a commendation for significant contributions to product safety.

“The company just got bigger and bigger and bigger. We began introducing other products that were shopping cart related like the infant seats. We expanded our product line all around items that could be used in a commercial setting that would help parents care for their children. That’s how the company’s grown.”

In 2014, Safe-Strap launched a new device call Fall-Stop, an alternative to the safety belt. The product is currently being tested locally in ShopRite supermarkets and Safeway stores in the Washington, D.C. area.

“Seatbelts are effective but they’re only as effective as a parent’s desire to use them. Children shouldn’t be put in the basket of a shopping cart and if they’re put in a seat of a shopping cart, they should be buckled up.”

There are 20,000 injuries involving children under five in shopping carts each year with approximately 80 percent of those from falls.

“Half of the falls come from the basket where the child doesn’t belong and the other half comes from falls from the seat where parents didn’t use the restraint. So the hazard awareness is very low. That child seat was a place for a handbag or for a watermelon or eggs and they don’t really realize that a child could fall out,” said Giampavolo, who resides in Sussex County with his wife and son.

“A belt itself might seem restrictive to a parent. So you put the belt around the child and you adjust it. But children can be cranky, maybe they don’t want it around them. So parents may unfasten it to keep the child quiet.”

While sitting in the cart, Fall-Stop allows small children full upper-body movement while restricting their legs enough to let them feel comfortable but not let them climb out of the seat.

“A child can’t fall unless they can get a leg up and they can boost themselves up. I said, there has to be a way we can hold the child’s legs and we can give them that upper body freedom. Children like to reach out for things and they like to turn around,” said Giampavolo, who graduated from Ramapo College with a BA in marketing.

“Kids are very antsy and they want to move around all the time. We designed the Fall-Stop to go down on the child’s legs. We had it tested to make sure that children couldn’t open it or couldn’t defeat it. It’s just a great product.”

The Fall-Stop is bright red with a yellow button, and is attached to the center of the seat. A prompt tells the parent to press the button down on the child’s legs. After installing them in carts at a Shop Rite on a Wednesday, Giampavolo returned on Saturday and was happy to see everyone with a child was using it.

“The best ideas are the simplest ones. But even having a good idea and making that into a viable product that operates and works properly and does what it’s intended to do is no guarantee of its success. You still have to be accepted by the market, it’s got to be priced correctly, it’s got to be distributed properly. There’s a lot to it, so it’s really been a life’s work,” Giampavolo said.

“We’re a New Jersey-based company. We’re all around the premise of making stores safer and more convenient for shoppers. You can see our products in just about every retail store there is. It’s been very, very rewarding and fulfilling to own and grow a business but also to be doing something really good for parents and small children.”

Article from the Daily Record

ABC KIVI TV and Albertsons Showcase Shopping Safe with Safe-Dock

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Car seat latch system makes shopping carts safer

Improper use of a shopping cart is to blame for nearly 24,000 kids visiting the ER across the country each year. This surpasses injuries from high chairs, strollers, changing tables and other equipment.

A handful of Boise area stores such as Walmart, Trader Joe’s, Albertsons and Paul’s Market have outfitted some of their shopping carts with the Safe-Dock system for infants. The specially-designed carts keep infant car carriers securely in place. This directly addresses a dangerous trend of parents balancing infant carriers and car seats on top of shopping carts – which too often, tip-over and lead to head injuries.

Dennis McCoy and Donna Porritt demonstrated how the Safe-Dock system works on Good Morning Idaho.

Article from Good Morning Idaho