Project Burn Prevention: outcome and implications.
- 1 March 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 72 (3) , 241-247
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.72.3.241
Abstract
Project Burn Prevention was designed and implemented to determine the ability of a public education program to increase awareness about burn hazards and reduce the incidence and severity of burn injuries. Media messages were transmitted to residents of a large metropolitan area; separate school and community interventions were implemented in two demographically similar communities within the Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area (SMSA). A second metropolitan area and two of its communities served as control sites. Messages for specific, high-risk age groups emphasized flame burns because of their severity and scalds because of their frequency. Knowledge gains were demonstrable only as a result of the school program. Neither the school program nor the media campaign reduced burn incidence or severity; the community intervention may have brought about a moderate, temporary reduction in injuries. Multiplicity of messages, brevity of the campaign, and separation of the interventions are among possible reasons for the program's failure to significantly reduce burn injuries. Education for personal responsibility is not sufficient. Product modification and environmental redesign must be instituted through education and legislation for successful control of burn injuries.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The incidence and severity of burn injuries following Project Burn Prevention.American Journal of Public Health, 1982
- Prevention of Childhood Accidents: Recent ProgressPediatrics in Review, 1980
- A comparison of age-specific burn injury rates in five Massachusetts communities.American Journal of Public Health, 1979
- What does safety propaganda do for safety? A reviewApplied Ergonomics, 1977
- Prevention of childhood household injuries: a controlled clinical trial.American Journal of Public Health, 1977
- Flame-Retardant Additives as Possible Cancer HazardsScience, 1977
- PREVENTION OF BURNS AND SCALDS IN A DEVELOPED COUNTRYPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1976
- A controlled study of the effect of television messages on safety belt use.American Journal of Public Health, 1974
- STRATEGY IN PREVENTIVE MEDICINEPublished by Wolters Kluwer Health ,1974
- Effectiveness of Drug Education Programs for Secondary School StudentsAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1973