Injuries and violence in
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Read it online: http://www.euro.who.int/document/E88037.pdf |
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By Dinesh Sethi, Francesca Racioppi, Inge Baumgarten & Patrizia Vida
2006, xii + 68 pages
ISBN 92 890 1379 6
CHF 30.00/US$ 27.00
In developing countries: CHF 21.00/US$ 18.90
Order no. 13400056
Injuries lead
to huge human, financial and other costs to society. In the WHO European
Region, road traffic injuries, drowning, poisoning, falls, fires,
self-inflicted injuries and interpersonal violence are estimated to kill over
2000 people, put 60 000 others in hospital and necessitate outpatient emergency
treatment for 600 000 more every day. But the evidence shows that they can be
predicted and prevented.
This book
provides detailed data on the harm to individuals and societies that is done by unintentional injuries and violence. Describing
injuries by cause and setting and violence by type, it specifies the damage
done using the variables of gender, age and country income. It shows that the
WHO European Region includes both high-income countries that are among the
safest in the world, and low-to-middle-income countries with very high rates of
death and disability from injuries and violence.
Having depicted
the problem, the book turns towards solutions that can save not only lives but
also social and economic costs, giving examples of programmes
that could be more widely applied. A separate summary
for policy-makers is also available. The authors argue that the most
effective approach is for all sectors of society to tackle injuries and violence
together, and propose a public health framework for action, highlighting some
of the key steps that need to be taken. This book identifies unique
opportunities for policy-makers, civil-society organizations and professionals
in the health sector to improve health by reducing the burden of injuries on
the WHO European Region.