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Community Injury Prevention Projects
Injuries, whether unintentional (or accidental), self-inflicted
or violence- related, continue to be leading causes of death and
morbidity among Virginians across the life-span. Transportation
injuries, poisonings, falls, fires and burns, drowning, firearm
injuries, self-inflicted injuries and assault are largely responsible
for this toll. These injuries are preventable through environmental
modification, behavior change, and widespread use of safety devices.
Communities are encouraged to identify community needs and engage
in diverse but proven injury prevention practices including: providing
age appropriate injury, suicide and violencerelated anticipatory
guidance; coordinating education, dissemination and/or installation
of safety devices in homes or cars; convening or participating in
community coalitions or work groups to identify and rectify hazardous
environments; and implementing community or school based education
and training about injury prevention, risk and protective behaviors.
Following are examples of the types of injury prevention activities
communities have participated in:
1) integration of age appropriate injury and violence prevention
guidance into prenatal,
infant and well child clinic and home visits
2) community pedestrian, bike, or skating safety environmental improvement
projects
3) pedestrian safety education programs for young and elderly and
to raise driver
awareness of children, older adults or impaired pedestrians
4) community bike and skate safety education programs
5) programs that promote use of child safety seats through education
and information
campaigns, loaner programs, training programs for parents
6) participation in community playground audits and collaboration
to improve
supervision, replace hazardous equipment and replace concrete, asphalt
or other hard
surfacing under swings and other play equipment with absorbent surfacing.
7) identification of high risk residences(e.g. young children, elderly,
immigrant) and
partnership with local fire, EMS to educate and install home safety
devices such as
smoke alarms, railing, window guards.
8) education, policy, environmental initiatives to address underage
alcohol fatalities and
injuries (e.g. underage drinking, post prom programs)
9) coordination/involvement in local collaborative teams to implement
unintentional
injury prevention (e.g. RISK WATCH) , or violence prevention (e.g.
Second Step,
Als Pals, Get Real About Violence) curricula in schools, childcare
or other youth
settings
10) community shaken baby prevention or safe sleeping awareness
projects
11) safe gun storage education and gun lock distribution projects
12) suicide awareness and intervention training for gatekeepers
13) domestic violence screening and community education projects
14) hosting a Water Safety Day Event in the community
www.watersafety.org/water_safety_awareness_day_plann.htm
Staff at the Center for Injury and Violence Prevention are available
to assist you with data,
checklists, guidelines, program & resource recommendations.
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