Click here to return to the NurseWeek.com Homepage   Nurse.com Version 2.0
 
 
Search Site
Select Year:
Search Term:
 
Job Search

Nursing Careers

Career Fairs

Facility & Agency Profiles

Resume Builder

Career Advice

Resources

Salary Wizard

Spotlight On

Career Assessment
Tool


 


Education/CE Marketplace

Unlimited CE

Event Guide

CE Direct

Nursing Schools

Resources

NCLEX Information

 


Weekly Features

Archives

In the News Today

Dear Donna

Nursing Shortage

Up Front

5 Minutes With

NurseWeek/AONE Survey

 
 
Video Health Library

Flu Report

Pollen Report

Nursing Calculators
 





   

 

Playing It Safe
Nurses take an active role in injury prevention by creating
programs that keep accidents from happening

 
 
  More NurseWeek Features  
Smoke-Free Zone  
Nurses and patients tackle nicotine addiction
 
Bloodless Survival  
  Surgical techniques to use when transfusion drops out of the equation  

The Injury Free Coalition for Kids includes 40 sites in 37 cities, each housed in the trauma centers of their participating institutions.

Nurses who work in trauma centers commonly see children after motor vehicle accidents, horrific falls, or accidents around the home. What makes the job a little easier for some nurses is the opportunity to play a role in preventing accidents.

While nurses who take an active role in injury prevention may never know just how much impact they have, “if you plant the seed and save the life of one kid …,” it’s reward enough, says nurse Sally Jacko, RN, MPH, the trauma program manager at Harlem Hospital Center in New York.

When it comes to helping prevent injuries, Jacko wears more than one hat. She is also deputy director of the Injury Free Coalition for Kids, a position she’s held for a year and a half.

The Injury Free Coalition for Kids is a national organization that’s been existence since 1984. Founder Barbara Barlow, MD, who works in Harlem, felt that she saw too many children come in with preventable injuries. In fact, Harlem had twice the national injury rate. “I figured something could be done,” Barlow says.

At the beginning, “it was hard to get money from anyone. No one believed we could reduce injuries,” she says.

But Barlow persevered, and to prove her point, started keeping track of injury rates. This persuaded The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to start funding the coalition, which it continues to do. The latest major contribution, given in 2001, was for $15 million to be spread over five years.

Funding from the coalition to support individual projects that now exist at the 40 Injury Free Coalition for Kids sites across the country is usually given for five years as well, at $50,000 annually. Hospitals that mentor other hospitals receive more. This donation is always double-matched — that is, the trauma center that receives the money must come up with twice that amount for injury prevention. Usually about half comes from the institution itself, in labor, materials, or money, and the rest comes from a variety of donors in the community.

The coalition doesn’t tell sites what to fund or how. That way “the folks are very inventive,” Barlow says.

Take, for example, the Injury Free Coalition for Kids site at Children’s Hospital and Health Center in San Diego, where Sue Cox, RN, MS, CEN, is coprincipal investigator. One of its projects has been to organize a baby safety shower, where the entire party centers on ways to keep children safe, including safety-issue bingo and a safety-related slide show.

The main goal, however, has been to cut down on the number of pedestrian-related accidents among children, something that is a problem in many communities, and an issue that was identified as a priority in Cox’s area. “We did a needs assessment,” says Cox, noting that too many children were coming in who had been hit by cars.

Cox, who has been involved with the Injury Free Coalition for Kids for about three years, says that the program kicked off with an educational campaign. Then environmental engineers were brought in to look at ways to manage traffic and modify the environment. For example, some traffic lights were changed so they’re more visible, and the timing of the lights was altered at some intersections to make it safer for pedestrians to cross.

In the neighborhood

The coalition also worked on creating a playground in a needy area. The premise is that if children have a safe area to play, they are less likely to play in the street. Community groups were rallied to help and came through with flying colors, Cox says. “We built the park in one day.”

To help increase safety in other areas where needs were noted, the group is working on creating a traveling safety trailer, which will be equipped with child safety items, such as car seats.

A knowledgeable staff member will go from neighborhood to neighborhood, educating the public and selling items on a sliding-scale basis to those with lower incomes, Cox says. Money from the Injury Free Coalition for Kids has helped make these changes possible, she notes. While other agencies often donate money, the Injury Free Coalition for Kids “plugs in the holes we can’t get from other organizations.”

But the Injury Free Coalition for Kids has provided more than that, Cox is quick to add. “Injury Free provides ideas,” she says. “It’s a think-tank type of group. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel.”

Those involved in the coalition share their ideas, which others can use in their own community, she says.