Injury Prevention Podcast

Injury Prevention is a peer-reviewed online journal that offers the best in science, policy, and public health practice to reduce the burden of injury in all age groups around the world. It offers a free monthly audio podcast on topics relating to the prevention of unintentional, occupational and intentional (violence-related) injuries. The Injury Prevention podcast is released monthly. Subscribe via all podcast platforms, including Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Stitcher and Spotify. https://injuryprevention.bmj.com/ If you enjoy our podcast, please consider leaving us a review or a comment on the Injury Prevention Podcast iTunes page (https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/injury-prevention-podcast/id942473946). Thank you for listening.

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Episodes

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Brian Johnston, Injury Prevention’s editor, talks to Jennifer Taylor from the Drexel University School of Public Health, Philadelphia, about this month’s editor’s choice.Read the article online:Triangulating case-finding tools for patient safety surveillance: a cross-sectional case study of puncture/laceration http://bit.ly/17NCd7w

Preventing bath water scalds

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Thermostatic mixer valves - which keep water delivered to the bath below a maximum temperature - can prevent scalds. But would adding them to new build houses and those undergoing a change in use be cost-effective?Ceri Phillips (Swansea University, UK) talks to IP editor Brian Johnston about what his study in Scotland revealed.See also:Preventing bath water scalds: a cost-effectiveness analysis of introducing bath thermostatic mixer valves in social housing http://bit.ly/13VzgoT

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Brian Johnston, Injury Prevention’s editor, talks to Jagnoor Jagnoor from the George Institute in Australia about this month’s editor’s choice.India’s million deaths study used cross sectional verbal autopsies to take a snapshot of the main causes of deaths in India - data which are otherwise poorly reported. Jagnoor and colleagues used these data to examine cause of death due to injury in children under five, the results of which are published in Injury Prevention this month.See also:Unintentional injury deaths among children younger than 5 years of age in India: a nationally representative study http://bit.ly/17NBxPm

Cycle tracks versus the street

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Although most people prefer to bicycle on facilities separated from motor traffic, as with cycle tracks, guidance in the USA has suggested that these separated facilities are more dangerous than bicycling on the road. Brian Johnston (IP editor-in-chief) asks Anne Lusk (Harvard School of Public Health) what research on this reveals.Read the brief report online: http://tinyurl.com/ot45bo7

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

This month’s editor’s choice reports success in using the World Health Organisation safe communities model approach to increase child restraint in motor vehicles. Brian Johnston asks lead author Greg Istre, from the Injury Prevention Center of Greater Dallas, USA, about what they achieved and the value and difficulties of the approach.See also:A controlled evaluation of the WHO Safe Communities model approach to injury prevention: increasing child restraint use in motor vehicles http://bit.ly/XTLgmb

Agricultural injuries

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

In this month’s podcast, IP editor Brian Johnston talks to one of the authors on this month’s editor’s choice, Will Pickett, from the Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada. They discuss his work using a novel method of investigating agricultural injury in Canadian farmers.See also:Determinants of agricultural injury: a novel application of population health theory http://bit.ly/17NAxLj

Cultural translation

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

In this month’s podcast, IP editor Brian Johnston talks to Flaura Winston, University of Pennsylvania and Joan Ozanne-Smith, Monash University. They discuss their research into the efficacy and acceptability of an injury prevention intervention, designed for the USA, but implemented in China.See also:Cultural translation: acceptability and efficacy of a US-based injury prevention intervention in China http://bit.ly/11hp3NM

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Brian Johnston, IP’s editor, talks to Mathieu Gagne, The Institut national de santé publique du Québec, about the effect firearms regulation introduced in 1991 has had on the rate of method-specific male suicide in the Canadian province.See also:Firearms regulation and declining rates of male suicide in Quebec http://bit.ly/11hp3NM

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Brian Johnston, IP’s editor, talks to Isaac Kofi Yankson from the CSIR-Building and Road Research Institute, Ghana, and Beth E Ebel from the Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center, University of Washington, about their look how road traffic injury and injury prevention were reported in Ghanaian newspapers.see alsoReporting on road traffic injury: content analysis of injuries and prevention opportunities in Ghanaian newspapers http://bit.ly/9WZEXo

Tuesday Apr 23, 2013

Brian Johnston, IP’s editor, talks to Flaura Winston, an associate editor with IP, about applying best practice in behavioural science to injury prevention. See also: A practical approach for applying best practices in behavioural interventions to injury prevention http://bit.ly/15F4f8H

* The purpose of this podcast is to educate and to inform. The content of this podcast does not constitute medical advice and it is not intended to function as a substitute for a healthcare practitioner’s judgement, patient care or treatment. The views expressed by contributors are those of the speakers. BMJ does not endorse any views or recommendations discussed or expressed on this podcast. Listeners should also be aware that professionals in the field may have different opinions. By listening to this podcast, listeners agree not to use its content as the basis for their own medical treatment or for the medical treatment of others.

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