USA Today
(5/23, Lloyd) reports, "Millions of injuries could be prevented every
year if states adopted and enforced a set of laws and health policies
with proven track records for saving lives, says a report out Tuesday,
but many states are reluctant to do so when personal freedoms are at
stake and as revenue continues to decline." Linda Degutis, director of
the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Injury Center, which
was not involved with the new report, stated, "We know injuries are
preventable and we'd certainly rather prevent them than deal with the
aftermath, which often results in death or long-term disability."
According to Degutis, "Having certain laws in place helps people follow a
safe strategy."
Bloomberg News
(5/23, Klopott) reports, "Poisoning, primarily by drugs, kills more
people than car accidents, making it the biggest injury-related cause of
death in the US, said" the "report by the Trust for America's Health
and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation." Across the US, "13.3 people
per 100,000 died from poisoning between 2007 and 2009, compared with
12.4 from motor-vehicle accidents during the same period, the report
found." Over "90 percent of unintentional poisoning deaths in 2007 were
caused by drugs and medicine, the report said."
The National Journal
(5/23, Sanger-Katz, Subscription Publication) reports, "The
researchers compared per-capita injury death rates with the number of
injury-prevention laws in all 50 states and found that, by and large,
the states with the most laws had the fewest injury deaths." That
"trend didn't hold uniformly, however. New Hampshire also ranked as
relatively safe, with 50 deaths per 100,000 residents, even though it
only
has four of the 10 public-policy laws tracked by the report."
CQ
(5/23, Norman, Subscription Publication) reports, "The report found
that 29 states don't require bike helmets for all children, 31 don't
require motorcycle helmets for all riders and 14 lack strong laws to
protect young people involved in sports against concussions." Some "new
trends in injuries include those connected to bullying, texting while
driving, prescription drug abuse and falls among aging members of the
baby boom
generation."
The Time
(5/23, Sifferlin) "Healthland" blog reports, "State funding for injury
prevention from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
dropped 24% from 2006 to 2011."
Also covering the story are the Boston Globe (5/23, Kotz) "Daily Dose" blog, the Orlando Sentinel (5/23, Jameson), the Columbus (OH) Dispatch (5/23, Ballentine), the Tennessean (5/23, Wilemon), the Topeka Capital-Journal (5/23), the Charleston (WV) State Journal (5/23, Ali), WebMD (5/23, Nierenberg), HealthDay (5/23), and MedPage Today (5/23, Walker).
Report: US made no overall progress in reducing motorcyclist deaths in 2011.
The Los Angeles Times
(5/23, Simon) "Nation Now" blog reports, "No progress was made last
year in reducing motorcyclist deaths, even though overall motor vehicle
fatalities dropped to their lowest level since 1949, according to the
Governors Highway Safety Assn."
HealthDay
(5/23, Preidt) reports that, according to "an analysis of preliminary
data from 50 states and the District of Columbia...there were about
4,500 motorcyclist deaths last year, the same number as in 2010."
However, "some individual states did see decreases in these fatalities
in 2011, while rates rose in other states, according to the report."
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