Home safety education and provision of safety equipment for injury prevention

Sep 14, 2012The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Home safety education and safety equipment to help prevent injuries

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Abstract

Ninety-eight studies involving 2,605,044 participants were analyzed regarding home safety interventions for children.

  • Home safety interventions may reduce injury rates, particularly when delivered in the home.
  • Interventions not providing safety equipment could be associated with greater reductions in injury rates.
  • Families participating in home safety interventions were more likely to adopt safety practices, such as having safe hot tap water temperatures and functional smoke alarms.
  • Providing free, low cost, or discounted safety equipment may improve certain safety practices more effectively than interventions without such provisions.
  • There is no consistent evidence that the effectiveness of these interventions varies based on the risk level of the families involved.

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Full Text

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