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Seat Belt

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Acronyms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
Seat Belt
Molecular medicine A popular term for the configuration of FSH’s beta-subunit which wraps around and stabilises the beta-FSH dimer, critical for binding of FSH to its receptor. See FSH
Public health A nylon strap with a quick-release buckle—a waist belt, shoulder belt, or harness—in a motor vehicle, intended to minimise jostling in an MVA; nonuse of seat belts is a major factor in RTA/MVA-related morbidity and mortality


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Weiser, along with officials from the state Executive Office of Public Safety and Security, state police, local police and the Brain Injury Association of Massachusetts, held a news conference yesterday to use statistics, a real-life story and a dramatization to drive home the role of seat belts in saving lives.
A dog seat belt will kept them where they belong instead of trying to crawl all over your car and distracting you.
If the seat belt use rate rose to 90 percent in every state, about 1,650 more lives could be saved and 22,370 serious injuries avoided on America's roads each year.
 
 
 
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