Title: Home Safety Literacy Project
1Home Safety Literacy Project
- Angela D. Mickalide, Ph.D, CHES
- Director of Education and Outreach, Home Safety
Council - National Prevention Summit
- Washington, DC
- October 27, 2006
2Home Safety Council
- The Home Safety Council (HSC) is the only
national non-profit organization solely dedicated
to preventing home related injuries that result
in nearly 20,000 deaths and 21 million medical
visits on average each year. Through national
programs, partnerships and the support of
volunteers, HSC educates people of all ages to be
safer in and around their homes. -
3Research Foundations
4Home Safety Research
Conducted the largest and most comprehensive
study of injuries at home the State of Home
Safety in America
- Each year, preventable injuries in the home
- Result in nearly 20,000 deaths
- Cause nearly 21 million medical visits
- Are the fifth leading cause of death overall
- Are 2.5 times more likely to cause injury than
car crashes - Cost our nation up to 380 billion
- Cost employers up to 38 billion
- Commissioned by the Home Safety Council and
conducted by the - University of North Carolinas Injury and
Prevention Research - Center
5Home Safety Research
State of Home Safety in America
- Leading causes of home injury death
- Falls
- Poisoning
- Fires / Burns
- Choking
- Drowning
6Community Outreach
7The Great Safety Adventure
- The Great Safety Adventure (GSA) is in its
eighth year of teaching the importance of home
safety to children across the nation. The program
has reached nearly one million participants! -
GSA continues to be a favorite among elementary
schools and Lowes stores.
8GSA Highlights
- 2006
- 2006 YTD attendance 61,325
- 25 classes taught in Spanish
- 188 events in 16 markets
- 120 elementary school visits
- 42 Lowes store events
- 26 special event days
- 16.46 million media impressions
- 1,762 media placements
- 698 Spanish media placements
- 2005
- 2005 attendance 139,169
- 58 classes taught in Spanish
- 362 events in 32 markets
- 179 elementary school visits
- 77 Lowes store visits
- 104 special event days
- 41.5 million media impressions
- 1,327 media placements
- 367 Spanish media placements
9 Youth Safety Outreach
Great Safety Adventure Curriculum Kit Includes
the Code Red Rover video along with printed
safety materials for schools and communities
where the Great Safety Adventure was requested
but unable to visit. Reach 1,880 schools and/or
public health departments reaching 101,000
children
10Youth Safety Outreach
2005 Safety Ranger Program Safety Rangers Say No
to Dangers and Code Red Rover, Grownup Come
Over and video. Addresses the top five home
injury risks for children falls, fires/burns,
poisonings, choking/suffocation and drowning.
Reach 131,223 teachers (print) and 95,000
teachers and parents (video)
11Youth Safety Outreach
2006 Safety Ranger Program Disaster Preparedness
Outreach "Get Ready with Freddie" poster guide
focuses on creating an emergency preparedness
plan and Ready-to-Go and Ready-to-Stay kits.
Reach 65,000 3rd and 4th grade teachers and
3,700 Expert Network members (6.7 million
people) Impact 50 of teachers reported that
their students made changes in family readiness
12Youth Safety Outreach
2006 Safety Ranger Program Disaster Preparedness
Outreach NEW 8-page Get Ready with Freddie
activity book and video sent in August 2006 to
schools which did not receive the January 2006
poster guide. Reach 13,000 3rd 4th grade
teachers (1.4 million people) Operation Freddie
fund-raising underway to deliver program to every
school in the United States in January 2007.
13Youth Safety Outreach
2006 Disaster Preparedness Program Lowes Store
Outreach Initiative HSC distributed 64,000 copies
of the Get Ready with Freddie DVD through
Lowes Build and Grow clinics on Saturday,
October 7, 2006.
14 Safe Steps Falls Prevention Program
- Falls are the 1 cause of home injury deaths,
especially for adults 65. - Promotes home modifications, medication tracking
and physical activity - Includes an educational video, wall poster and
falls prevention activities - Three-year study to evaluate effectiveness being
conducted by UNC through CDC grant - Reach 11,000 older adult activity
centers
15Home Safety Literacy Project
16 What Is Literacy?
- Using printed and written information to
function in society, to achieve ones goals, and
to develop ones knowledge and potential. - --National Assessment of Adult Literacy
17Why Does Health Literacy Matter?
- Studies that have investigated the issue
report that limited literacy skills are a
stronger predictor of an individual's health
status than age, income, employment status,
education level, and racial or ethnic group. - Partnership for Clear Health Communications
18Background
- Adults with low literacy are considered at
high-risk from fires as a result of several
factors, including - Their inability to read and understand current
English-language community safety messages - Inability to read or comprehend product
information, including instructions for using
smoke alarms - Most of the fire safety material in use by fire
departments nationally are written at the
- 6th-11th grade reading level
19National Assessment of Adult Literacy (NAAL)
- Conducted by U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Educational Statistics - Released December 2005
- Interviewed 19,714 participants ages 16 or older
in homes and prisons across the United States
20The Three Literacy Scales
- Prose literacy understanding continuous text
arranged in sentences and paragraphs (e.g., news
stories, brochures) - Document literacy comprehending noncontinuous
text in various formats (e.g., job applications,
payroll forms, bus schedules, maps, tables, food
and drug labels) - Quantitative literacy identifying and
performing computations (e.g., checkbooks, order
forms, interest - on loans)
21 Literacy Levels Described
in NAAL
- Below basicranges from being nonliterate in
English to being able to do only the most simple
and concrete tasks such as signing a form, adding
the amounts on a bank deposit slip, or reading a
short text to find out what a patent is allowed
to drink before a medical test. - Basicability to perform simple and everyday
literacy activities such as using a TV guide to
find out what programs are on at a specific time,
comparing the ticket prices for two events,
searching a pamphlet for prospective jurors to
find out how people were selected for the jury
pool. - Intermediateability to perform moderately
challenging literacy activities such as
identifying a specific location on a map,
consulting reference materials to determine which
foods contain a particular vitamin, or
calculating the total cost of ordering specific
office supplies from a catalog - Proficientability to perform more complex and
challenging literacy - activities such as comparing viewpoints in two
editorials - interpreting a table about blood pressure, age,
and physical - activity and computing and comparing the cost
per ounce - of food items
22Key Findings
- 14 of the population (30 million adults)
function at the lowest or Below Basic level on
prose tasks - 29 of the population (63 million adults)
function at the second or Basic level on prose
tasks - 55 of the population (118 million adults) have
only Basic or Below Basic quantitative skills
23 Risk Factors for Limited Literacy
- Low income
- Unemployed
- Elderly
- Did not finish high school
- Minority ethnic group
- Recent immigrant to United States who does
- not speak English
- Born in the United States but English is
- second language
24Adult Safety Outreach
2005-2006 Home Safety Literacy Project HSC has
established partnerships with ProLiteracy
Worldwide and Oklahoma State Universitys Fire
Protection Publications to research and develop
new easy-to-read fire safety and disaster
preparedness information for adults enrolled in
literacy programs. Reach 9,000 (Phase I) and
15,000 (Phase II) adult literacy teachers and
Expert Network members
25Home Safety Literacy Project Objectives
- Provide high-quality, tested fire education
instruction - Provide deliberate and effective outreach
- Pair fire and literacy experts at the community
level - Ensure little or no impact on fire service or
literacy provider budget or staffing
26Pilot Tests
- Seven urban and rural areas of the U.S. conducted
a pilot test of the Home Safety Literacy Project - San Bernardino, CA
- Washington, DC
- Palm Beach, FL
- Montgomery County, MD
- Poteau, OK
- Philadelphia, PA
- Plano, TX
27Formative Evaluation Results
- Literacy providers and fire service members from
the seven pilot sites were trained in 2004 to
implement and evaluate the projects
instructional approach and specialized materials - Results from pilot test were evaluated through an
independent formative evaluation process
immediately following the conclusion of the
pilot/field test. - Conclusion focus on a few key messages and
develop different materials for various reading
levels
28Home Safety Literacy Project Kit
29 HSLP Components
- Overview video and computer slide show
- Pictographs
- Readers 2 levels
- Tabloid, News for You
- Posters
- Tearpads
- Pencils
- Community Leaders Guide
- Literacy Teachers Users Manual
30 Key Messages
- Installing and maintaining smoke alarms
- Creating and practicing a home fire escape plan
- Developing a communications plan for disasters
- Assembling Ready-to-Go and Ready-to-Stay kits
31Results
- Fire Safety Teaching Aids
- Technically accurate
- Meet national literacy standards
- Highly Illustrated
- Easy to read
- Meet stringent national fire safety standards
- Content includes
- Home fire safety skills
- How to apply key fire protection measures in the
home - Installing and maintaining adequate smoke alarm
protection - Emergency escape preparedness
32Summative Evaluation Sites
- Fifteen urban and rural areas of the U.S. were
selected to help the Home Safety Council conduct
a summative evaluation of the Home Safety
Literacy Project. An additional 15 communities
served as control sites. Experimental sites
included -
- Camp Verde, AZ
- Dekalb County, GA
- Wabash County, IN
- Columbus, MS
- Tunica, MS
- Hickory, NC
- Wilson, NC
- Rochester, NY
- Lima, OH
- Chambersburg, PA
- Westerly, RI
- College Station, TX
- Prince William County, VA
- Tacoma, WA
- Jamesville, WI
33 Summative Evaluation Results
- Adult students who participated in the Home
Safety Literacy Project learned more fire safety
messages than adult students who did not
participate in the project. - A greater number and percent of adult students
who participated in the Home Safety Literacy
Project had smoke alarms installed in their homes
than adult students who did not participate in
the project. - A greater number and percent of adult students
who - participated in the Home Safety Literacy
Project created - fire escape plans for their homes than
adult students who - did not participate in the project.
34 Fire Department Challenges
- Overcoming student reluctance to have
firefighters come into their homes, - Communicating with non-English speaking
populations, - Developing a schedule to install smoke alarms in
the homes of adult students within the timeframe
of a firefighters work week, and - Targeting an adult student population who
actually needs smoke alarms installed in - their homes.
35Adult Safety Outreach
- 2006-2007 Reaching Those Who Teach Project
- HSC received 1 million from the DHS/FEMA for a
third year of funding. Key components - Survey of fire safety education in partnership
with Johns Hopkins School of Public Health - New fire safety materials for preschoolers,
elementary school students, middle schoolers, and
older adults through Weekly Reader - Best practices in fire safety education
conference in Washington, DC, January 10-12, 2007
36 Home Safety Month 2006
- Salute to Home Safety Awards Dinner
- Media 140 million impressions
- Materials 30,000 via e-store, Expert Network,
corporations, safety groups
- Theme Hands on Home Safety
- Sub-theme Light it up, lock it up, test it
- Omnibus poll older adult safety by HarrisSafe
Haven report - Web activity 185 increase over 2005
- Webinar 80 participants
37The Expert Network
- HSC established the Expert Network to provide
fire and life safety educators with reliable and
effective home safety teaching tools.
- Nearly 4,000 members 90 from local fire
departments. - Additional educators include nurses, public
health educators, literacy teachers and community
safety advocates.
38 Public Policy Initiatives
- Introduce and support health and safety
legislation Keeping Seniors Safe from Falls Act
of 2006 with requested annual funding of 35
million - Increase HSCs visibility on Capitol Hill and
acknowledge Congressional support for HSCs
mission Leadership awards to Senators Burr and
Specter and Representatives Davis and Andrews
39Public Policy Initiatives
- Partner with federal and non-governmental
agencies Affiliation with DHSs Citizen Corps
which reaches 72 of the US population - Secure funding - 50,000 earmark for development
of GSA curriculum kit through CDC - Participate in targeted coalition efforts
Campaign for Public Health (495) and Falls Free
Coalition (65)
40Recent and Upcoming Safety Observances
- Home Security Week (July)
- Garage Safety Week (August)
- Falls Safety Month (September)
- National Preparedness Month (September)
- Fire Safety Month (October)
- Ladder Safety Week (November)
41 2006 Awards for Home Safety Council
- Two Silver Anvil Awards from the Public Relations
Society of America (Home Safety Month 2005 and
BRGs year-round media efforts) - Institute for Health Literacy Award for
Innovative Health Literacy Program (Home Safety
Literacy Project) - DC Chapter of the American Marketing Association
(Great Safety Adventure) - CFSI/Motorola Mason Lankford Fire Service
Leadership Award (Meri-K Appy) - Sprinkler Advocate of the Year (Meri-K Appy)
42Additional Information
Please contact Angela Mickalide, Ph.D.,
CHES Director of Education and Outreach Home
Safety Council 1250 Eye St., NW, Ste.
1000 Washington, DC 20005 202-330-4907 Angela.mick
alide_at_homesafetycouncil.org www.homesafetycouncil.
org