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Steer Clear of Trouble

October 6, 2011 · No Comments

While you can’t avoid every accident, there are steps you can take to minimize the risks of everyday tasks. According to the Centers for Disease Control, most events resulting in injury, death or disability are predictable and therefore preventable. Often taking personal responsibility for your actions and learning to be safe in your chosen sport or activity will make you more aware of the dangers you face.

Say No to Distracted Driving

Distracted driving is driving while doing another activity that takes your attention away from driving. There are three main types of distraction: visual—taking your eyes off the road; manual—taking your hands off the wheel, and cognitive—taking your mind off what you’re doing.

Texting while driving combines all three of the above distractions, making it an especially dangerous activity. Distracted driving also includes using a cell phone, eating, drinking and talking with passengers. Adjusting your vehicle’s sound system or navigation system is also a distraction. If you understand that these activities can lead to injury, you are more likely to avoid them.

Watch Where You Walk

In the time it takes you to read this article, one pedestrian will be injured in a traffic accident. Walking may be good for your health, but walking near traffic makes you 1.5 times more likely to be killed in a car crash than the occupants of the vehicle.

There are several steps you can take to protect yourself while walking near traffic:

Know Dangers of Water

Every day, about 10 people die from unintentional drowning, according to the Centers for Disease Control. Drowning is the sixth leading cause of unintentional injury death for people of all ages and 80 percent of those deaths are male.

Nonfatal drownings can cause severe injuries, including brain damage, learning disabilities, and permanent loss of basic functions. However, everyone can learn to be safe around water. Here is what the Red Cross recommends:

Focus on Cycle Safety

Each year, more than half a million people are treated in emergency departments for bicycle-related injuries. About 60 percent of those injuries are children under the age of 15.

Head injuries are among the most serious bike injuries and the most common. Bikers should always wear a bike helmet to reduce that risk. Even with a helmet, a rider who falls and hits his or her head should see a doctor, even if the injury seems minor. In addition to wearing a helmet, these tips can help you avoid injury:

A Bike Rodeo is planned for the Oct. 8 Vacaville Kid Fest. Co-sponsored by the NorthBay Bike to Work Committee, the Solano Transportation Authority and the Monticello Cycling Club, the event will feature bike safety instruction, helmet safety fitting and bike safety inspections. Kids should bring their bike and helmet.

Leading Causes of Injury or Death

1 to 4 years: Motor Vehicle Crashes, Drowning

16 to 24 years: Motor Vehicle Crashes, Homicide

35 to 54 years: Unintentional Poisoning, Suicide

65+ years: Falls, Motor Vehicle Crashes

Older adults and children are more vulnerable to sustaining injury requiring medical attention, but for Americans ages 1 to 44, injuries are the leading cause of death.

Tags: Lifestyle & Wellness

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