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Questions
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What
is the Injury Prevention Program?
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What
is meant by injury prevention? Accidents are
accidents aren’t they?
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What
effect would prevention of injury have?
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How
many people are injured each year?
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How
does Arizona compare with other states in
injury rates?
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Where
can I get more information?
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What
can I do to help?
What
is the Injury Prevention Program?
The Injury Prevention Program in Arizona is a systematic effort to reduce deaths and injuries from intentional and unintentional causes such as: motor vehicle crashes, poisoning, falls, drowning, shootings, burns, assault, and self harm. The program provides focus, works to reduce duplication of effort and seeks to improve the use of existing resources. The Injury Prevention Program is responsible for (1) identifying injury problems and the specific needs for injury prevention programs, policies and services within the state; (2) keeping abreast of developments within the field of injury prevention and sharing with others; (3) understanding where injury prevention fits into what other agencies are doing and serving as a coordinating force that brings different players to the table; (4) and building a solid constituency for injury prevention activities within the state. Arizona’s Injury Prevention Program is funded by a grant from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC).
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What
is meant by injury prevention? Accidents are
accidents aren’t they?
Many seemingly accidental injuries could have been prevented by taking precautions, for example: driving more carefully, wearing seatbelts or helmets, making sure ladders are stable before climbing, keeping cords away from cribs, and installing fencing around swimming pools. Injury prevention teaches people to take precautions and avoid unnecessary risks, as well as to provides for safer vehicles and playgrounds, or enacts and enforces laws such as laws against drunk driving and laws requiring wearing a seatbelt.
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What
effect would prevention of injury have?
Since injuries are a major cause of death among Arizonans between the ages of 1 and 44, reducing injuries would reduce a significant loss of life and loss of productivity. If a child dies at age 5, that is a loss of at least 60 years of productivity. Such costs run to billions of dollars nationwide. And among children under age 5, injuries are the leading cause of death. Motor vehicle crashes are a major problem in Arizona as in the rest of the US, but drowning, homicide or assault/abuse also account for a large number. Such injuries are felt disproportionately among younger males and minority ethnic groups.
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How
many people are injured each year?
In Arizona, in 2004, there were 2,641 deaths, 29,259 inpatient hospitalizations and 346,814 emergency room visits due to unintentional injuries, mostly from motor vehicle crashes. Injuries occur more commonly in younger ages and more males are injured than females (except for suicide in the 20-44 age group). Injuries account for nearly as many deaths as strokes and lung disease, which strike at older ages.
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How
does Arizona compare with other states in injury
rates?
According
to the latest comparison available, Arizona has
the seventh highest age adjusted death rate due to
injuries in the nation. Over the past decade, and
particularly the past three years, there has been
some reduction in drowning, fire, suicide among
adolescents, and fall rates. However, homicide,
suicide among older adults, and motor vehicle
death rates seem to be increasing.
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Where
can I get more information?
The Arizona Department of Health Services website
www.azdhs.gov has Arizona injury data. Look under “vital statistics, injury” within the website.
On the ADHS website Arizona
Injury Surveillance and Prevention Plan, 2006-2010
The CDC website www.cdc.gov/ncipc can point you to several sources of national and state injury data.
The CDC website also houses the MMWR (www.cdc.gov/mmwr/) which published Surveillance for Fatal and Nonfatal Injuries – United States, 2001. There are a number of references included.
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What
can I do to help?
You can help by
- Following
safety rules
- Teaching
your children and reminding others in your
family and your friends to follow safety rules
- Wearing
your seatbelt and obeying posted speed limits
- Don’t
drive while impaired (many prescription drugs
can cause impairment as well as illegal
substances and alcohol)
- Doing
a safety check on your house: smoke alarm
(check monthly & replace batteries
yearly), electrical, furnace, stair treads and
other elements
- Teaching
your children to look three ways when crossing
a street, to wear their seat belts or use
child safety seats, to stay away from unknown
animals and insects, to avoid matches and
smoking materials
- Restricting
access to firearms
- Fencing
your pool and supervising children at all
times around water
- Turning
buckets upside down to prevent toddler
drowning
- Keeping
poisons securely away from children and
animals
- Watching
for fall hazards for older adults
- Getting
involved with community based safety groups
such as SAFEKIDS®, the Maricopa Drowning
Prevention Coalition or others in your
community. You may be able to find them
through your city hall, city or county website
or local fire department or hospital.
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