Care providers will be able to use the car seat strollers they purchased to care for the elderly.
This comes as a result of an executive order issued by President Donald Trump.
The order directs the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services to set up a pilot program to evaluate the benefits and cost savings from using car seats as care devices for the chronically ill.
It will require that all caregivers purchase car seats with a safety harness and seatbelt.
Care providers also will have to meet a safety requirement that is the same as the requirements for all care devices on the market today.
The order will require providers to meet other standards such as a maximum age of 60 and the use of a car seat that is “designed, manufactured, and fit for purpose.”
The safety harness must be placed in a manner that prevents accidental or inappropriate use.
As a result, the regulations will require manufacturers of care devices to offer more than one type of car seat for each type of care and to provide a simple safety harness with a latch that can be used to secure the carseat.
This is the latest in a series of orders that have been issued by Trump since taking office.
According to the executive order, the goal of the program is to improve the quality of care for Americans.
“This is an important first step toward bringing the quality and safety of care to the chronically sick,” said Julie Cohen, the director of health policy for the American Family Association, the conservative advocacy group that is part of the American Careers Foundation, a conservative think tank.
There are about 1.2 million Americans with chronic illness.
The American Career Institute, a think tank, estimates that nearly a million Americans in their 50s or older are unable to work because of chronic illness, and that many are disabled or have chronic health conditions.