--FILE--un cliente cinese negozi per un seggiolino di sicurezza per bambini in un negozio a Shanghai in Cina, 5 settembre 2013. La Cina ha perso quasi tre volte come molti bambini
--FILE--A Chinese customer shops for a child safety seat at a shop in Shanghai, China, 5 September 2013. China lost almost three times as many children in car accidents as the U.S. in 2012, even though it has fewer than half the number of vehicles. The government increased penalties this year for failing to fasten seat belts or using a mobile phone while driving. The next step: getting parents to install child-safety seats in a country where only about one in 100 cars have them. The World Health Organization says the seats, which reduce stress to the neck and spinal cord in a crash, can cut deaths by 70 percent. Chinas health ministry agrees. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention, an agency under the ministry overseeing public health awareness, will start the countrys first national campaign to encourage the use of child seats at the end of this year, starting in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen.