William Haddon, Jr., MD HIS LEGACY - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

William Haddon, Jr., MD HIS LEGACY

Description:

William Haddon, Jr., MD HIS LEGACY Susan P. Baker, MPH Carol W. Runyan, PhD The Johns Hopkins University Center for Injury Research and Policy The University of North ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:83
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: iprcUncE
Category:
Tags: his | legacy | haddon | william

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: William Haddon, Jr., MD HIS LEGACY


1
William Haddon, Jr., MDHIS LEGACY
  • Susan P. Baker, MPH
  • Carol W. Runyan, PhD
  • The Johns Hopkins University
  • Center for Injury Research and Policy
  • The University of North Carolina
  • Injury Prevention Research Center

2
Bill Haddon 1926-1985
3
  • Haddons Ten Basic Strategies
  • The Haddon Matrix

4
HaddonsTen Basic Strategies
  • Do not create the hazard
  • Reduce the amount of hazard
  • Prevent release of the agent
  • Modify release of the agent
  • Separate in time or space
  • Separate with a physical barrier
  • Modify surfaces and basic structures
  • Increase resistance of the structure or person
  • First aid and emergency response
  • Acute care and rehabilitation

5
Reduce human damage from terrorist bombing of
buildings
  • The topic allows us to
  • Illustrate the power and broad applicability of
    the model
  • Discuss the issues involved in choosing
    approaches to be implemented
  • Call attention to a serious present-day threat

6
1. Do not create the hazard
  • Prevent the accumulation of bomb components

7
2. Reduce the amount of hazard
  • Limit the amount of explosives that can be sold
  • Reduce the number of people in the building
  • Build lower buildings

8
3. Prevent release of the agent
  • Reduce animosity and cause for retaliation
  • Ensure the world community would condemn such a
    bombing
  • Develop more detectable bomb components (e.g.
    detectable odor)
  • Trace acquisition of bomb components

9
3. Prevent release of the agent (cont.)
  • Improve bomb detection with canine or mechanical
    sniffers
  • Identify likely targets
  • Monitor known terrorists
  • Monitor truck rentals
  • Teach people to recognize and report suspicious
    persons or activity
  • Provide early warnings

10
4. Modify release of the agent
  • Develop slower-acting explosives

11
5. Separate in time or space
  • Define no-vehicle zone near likely target area

12
6. Separate with a physical barrier
  • Construct barriers to reduce access to building
  • Encourage wearing of protective clothing (e.g.
    helmets, fireproof materials)

13
7. Modify surfaces and basic structures
  • Install shatterproof glass in windows
  • Tape existing windows

14
8. Increase resistance of the structure or person
  • Design buildings to withstand bomb forces
  • Design elevators to be avenues of egress

15
9. First aid and emergency response
  • Train people in first aid and rescue skills
  • Strengthen norms to encourage volunteer rescuers
  • Ensure public health infrastructure adequate for
    emergency measures
  • Publicize evacuation routes
  • Install emergency call boxes to obtain help and
    locate survivors

16
10. Acute care and rehabilitation
  • Develop plans and adequate facilities for
    definitive care

17
Haddon Matrix (bombings)
18
Benefits of Haddon models
  • Recognize that injury is a process
  • Employ multi-disciplinary thinking
  • Help to develop creative solutions
  • Identify range of strategies

19
But
  • the models dont guide choices among multiple
    intervention options.

20
So
  • .there is a need for a third dimension to
    structure the decision-making process

21
Three-dimensional Haddon Matrix
Runyan, CW. Injury Prevention, 1998(4)302-307.
Phases
Other??
Pre-Event
Feasibility
Preferences
Event
Stigmatization
Equity
Post-event
Freedom
Person Vehicle/ Vector) Physical
Environ Social Environ
Cost
Effectiveness
Decision Criteria
Factors
22
First step
  • Identify decision criteria based on values that
    are
  • Suited to the problem setting
  • Culturally appropriate
  • Time sensitive

23
Then
  • Decide how important each criterion is
  • Obtain information about each criterion from
    various sources
  • Evaluate the strategy options according to
    criteria selected

24
Examples of criteria
  • Effectiveness
  • Is there good evidence that it DOES work?
  • SHOULD it work, based on
  • theory
  • judgment and/or
  • experience?

25
Examples of criteria (continued)
  • Cost
  • Of doing vs. not doing intervention?
  • To whom (e.g. at risk person, general society,
    product manufacturer)

26
Examples of criteria (continued)
  • Freedom
  • Whose freedom is infringed by the intervention?
  • Whose freedom is protected?
  • How much freedom is affected?
  • What freedoms?

27
Examples of criteria (continued)
  • Equity
  • Horizontal equity/universality
  • equal treatment of everyone (e.g. same protection
    for all children)
  • Vertical equity
  • treat people differently to make more equal (e.g.
    poor get extra help)

28
Examples of criteria (continued)
  • Stigmatization
  • Is stigmatization likely?
  • Stigmatization of whom (e.g. crime victims vs.
    perpetrators)?
  • How desirable/undesirable is it?

29
Examples of criteria (continued)
  • Preferences of persons affected
  • Do people want this intervention?
  • Will people accept this intervention?

30
Examples of criteria (continued)
  • Feasibility
  • Technologic?
  • Political?

31
Advantages of 3rd dimension
  • Forces clarity about whats important in decision
    process
  • Encourages use of data to inform decisions
  • Facilitates participation in decision making via
    a structured process
  • Makes it easier to talk about the reasons for
    choices, potentially resulting in more effective
    advocacy

32
Dr. Haddon
whose legacy continues to expand and enrich
our field Thank you.
33
Selected references
  • Haddon W. (1980). Advances in the Epidemiology of
    Injuries as a Basis for Public Policy. Public
    Health Reports. 95(5)411-421
  • Runyan, CW. (1998) Using the Haddon Matrix
    Introducing the Third Dimension. Injury
    Prevention, (4)302-307.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com