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Volume 30, Issue 3: June, 2003
Abstract
*The Effectiveness of Injury Prevention Strategies:
What Does the Public Believe?
Deborah C. Girasek, PhD, MPH, and Andrea C. Gielen, ScD
This article is based on a random digit dialed telephone
survey in which adults were asked to name effective strategies
for preventing deaths due to motor vehicle crashes, falls,
drowning, fires/burns, and poisoning. A majority of the 943
respondents could name prevention techniques, although they
were least likely to do so for fatal falls. Participants at
highest risk for not naming a countermeasure were those with
fewer years of education. The strategy cited most often for
preventing deaths due to falls, poisoning, and drowning was
safety education. These findings suggest that more advantaged
members of the public feel they know how to prevent America’s
leading causes of injury death. They may not fully appreciate,
however, the options of creating health-promoting environments
and safer products. This work makes it very clear that people
with less education also need to be exposed to the breadth
of effective injury countermeasures.
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