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Your
Personal Safety
The world we live in today is much safer than the one known by
your parents and grandparents. Even considering the constant bombardment
of news to the contrary, the government and industry have taken some
major steps to protect us all. In almost everything we do, we are
surrounded by protection based on safety experience from the past.
You'll be safer - - but only if you have a strong feeling for
safety. Why? Because many of the safety factors developed to protect you
function only if you do something about them. Do you buckle your seat
belt every time you get in the car? Do you cross the street at
crosswalks instead of jaywalking? Do you walk or jog on the left side of
the road so that you are facing oncoming traffic? These are just a few
of the things that you know and can do something about.
We all must acknowledge the fact that we bear some of the
responsibility for making our environment safe and safety is thinking
about other people, too. Because in this safety awareness, we can take
steps to help others. For instance, a jagged piece of metal and certain
types of broken bottles on the street can cause tire problems to cars.
Broken glass on the beach might also send someone to the hospital for
stitches. When you take time to clean up things such as broken bottles,
etc., you're taking a big step toward protecting others.
An accident is something that happens to you and to others. It's
easy to think that these accidents just happen. Buy they don't. They're
not just bad luck or bad breaks that come to you out of nowhere. An
accident is never supposed to happen. It isn't planned and it isn't
deliberate. Accidents are caused!
An accident can be caused by an unsafe condition. Look at your
automobile. It can be a typical example of an unsafe condition. Bad
brakes and unsafe tires, faulty headlights, loose steering, and, yes,
even dirty windshields and side windows can cause accidents, and they
are all unsafe conditions. And along this same line, we need to consider
unsafe acts as also contributing to the cause of accidents. These are
not "conditions." They are what you, or someone else, does or
doesn't do. A good example is jaywalking. You know it's dangerous to
walk out between parked cars to cross the street, but it's easier than
walking down to the next corner.
Both unsafe conditions and unsafe actions exist, and either one
can cause accidents. But you can put the two together, as well. That car
with the poor brakes, and all the other unsafe conditions, isn't unsafe
at all until someone starts to use it. It's the act of using that causes
the accident. Oh sure, the car was at fault, but the driver of that car
was the ultimate cause of the accident.
You will find many unsafe conditions in your daily life, but most
of them become truly unsafe based on your own actions related to them.
What causes you to act in an unsafe way? Is it carelessness? Poor judgment,
were you at the wrong place at the wrong time?
There's never a total absence of risks in our lives. Risks are
voluntary actions and can be managed. Emergencies can be met and
handled, but it takes know-how and constant awareness. What you can't
prevent, you can usually compensate for or protect against.
Safety experts classify accidents in four broad categories: Motor
vehicle, work and job related, home, and public. The public category
excludes motor vehicle and work accidents in public places. It covers
sports and recreation (swimming, hunting, etc.), air, water, or land
transportation excluding motor vehicle and public building accidents.
On the average, there are 10 accidental deaths and about 1,000
disabling injuries every hour during the year. About one-half of the
deaths occur in motor vehicle accidents while about one-third of the
injuries occur in and around the home.
It's not hard to imagine adding yourself to the accident
statistics. Any day of the week, you'll be swamped with stories in the
newspapers and on television about the many tragic accidents going on
all over the country and it seems to be getting worse all the time. And
in every case the victim was somebody who did not plan or expect that
they would be hurt or killed.
In a matter of seconds, everything you were ever going to do and
be can be snuffed out. At the least, you suffer pain and inconvenience
from an accident. At worst, an accident kills or damages you for life.
Safety saves you, but it does more than that. Mix each safety
ingredient with all of your day to day activities. An use common sense
in everything you do.
Safety in your home is a combination of mind and matter. You mind
must be constantly aware of the home safety dangers. The matter is the
safety condition of your home. The
safety condition of your home isn't a case of rebuilding things to make
it safe. It's more the disposal of dangerous items, and a case of good
housekeeping. A safe home has a place for everything, and that along
with the right mental attitude about keeping those things in place is
just good housekeeping.
The home is the most frequent place for injury accidents to
occur, and it is second only to motor vehicle accidents for the number
of deaths in the country today. Family members are busier than ever
rushing in and out so it's easy to understand how careless mistakes are
often made.
When you read the daily newspaper or watch newscasts on TV,
you'll see that home accidents can be classified in two major ways.
There are things that can totally disrupt your entire community - - such
as earthquakes, tornadoes, storms and floods.
And then there are those kinds of accidents that are centered in
your own home, and not involving the whole community. These are things
like fires, local earth sliding, flooding and wind damage.
You will need to consider both types when thinking about safety
at home. For the community - wide disasters, you may or may not receive
any outside help for a considerable period of time, and you must be
prepared to survive on your own home resources. With the second type,
your home may be destroyed, but some help should be there from the
outside, early in the experience. Most cities and communities have some
agencies and organizations in place to assist the public in times of
severe emergencies.
It is wise for everyone to do a home safety check on a regular
basis and get the family members involved. Naturally, every family needs
to develop its own plan because every house and every family is
different.
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