home safety
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Author(s):  
Alwyna Sandy ◽  
Anne Jenefer. G ◽  
Aarthika R ◽  
Aarthy D ◽  
Abirami S ◽  
...  

Introduction: Children are like butterflies. They really love to explore the living surroundings they live. The environment they live has many potential hazards. Unintentional injuries are mainly responsible for many injury and death in children especially under five children. But most of the potential risks can be avoided if the parents of under five children are aware of the risk factors in their surroundings and children should be properly taken care by their parents. There are many causes of injury and death among children but most of the leading causes are Drowning, Falling, Burns, Choking and Poisoning. Educating and giving awareness to parents about the preventive measures which should be adopted to prevent these injuries can save the children especially under five thereby reducing the mortality rate upto 90 percentage. Statement of Problem: A Study to Assess the level of Knowledge and Attitude regarding Home safety measures on unintentional injuries among mothers of under- five children at Paediatric units, Pondicherry Institute of Medical Sciences, Puducherry. Objectives: 1. To assess the level of knowledge and attitude regarding home safety measures on unintentional injuries among mothers of under five children. 2. To find out the association between level of knowledge and attitude regarding home safety measures on unintentional injuries among mothers of under five children with selected demographic variables. Methodology: Data was collected over a period of one week in march 2020.Exploratory research approach is used in this study and descriptive research design is used to assess the knowledge and attitude regarding home safety measures on unintentional injuries among mothers of under five children. Mothers of under five children who fulfil inclusion criteria were selected using Purposive Sampling Technique and the sample size is 67. Data was collected using structured questionnaire. The data collected will be analysed by using descriptive and inferential statistics. Fisherman exact test was used to test the association between level of knowledge regarding home safety measures on unintentional injuries among mothers of under five children with selected demographic variables. Results: In the present study, level of knowledge of mothers of under five children regarding home safety measures on unintentional injuries revealed that 21(31.34%) were having inadequate knowledge, 37(55.22%) mothers were having moderately adequate knowledge, 9 (13.43%) mothers were having adequate knowledge regarding home safety measures on unintentional injuries. The level of attitude of mothers of under five children regarding home safety measures revealed that 67(100%) of the mothers were having favourable attitude regarding home safety measures on unintentional injuries. Conclusion: The researchers gave health education leaflets to all the mothers of under-five children in order to improve the knowledge of the mother so that risks of unintentional injury can be reduced thereby reducing mortality rate of under five children.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 1033-1033
Author(s):  
Jennifer Yahner ◽  
Jeanette Hussemann

Abstract Women in the United States can live into their 80s, 90s, and even 100s—outliving men nearly five years on average. Over the next four decades, the number of women aged 85 years and older will nearly triple in size. Many will live alone and in poverty, with increasingly fewer supports on which to rely as they age. Although women can spend their lives caring for children, partners, and parents, often while working multiple jobs, as they grow older, many find their physical, emotional, and financial needs cannot be met. Using data recently collected for the Urban Institute’s EMPOWER: Building Late-Life Resilience study, with funding from the National Institute of Justice, we examine the needs of low-income women aged 85 years and older (N=35) living alone in Arizona communities. We explore issues of home safety perceptions and social isolation and study their relationship to women’s physical, emotional, and financial wellbeing.


Author(s):  
P.C. Prabhu Kumar ◽  
P. Penchala Prasanth ◽  
P. Hemalatha ◽  
Karthik J Kulakarni

A fully automated house must ensure all the appliances must be connection and provide a smart way of working for the human. The insight of Internet of Things (IoT) network provision the necessary platform to implement the automated home. The proposed system emphasizes, how all the appliances would be connected to IoT to ensure fully automated home. In this framework the smart home has been divided into various areas like smart kitchen, smart gardening, home safety and security system, and smart lightning system. The reliable protocol stack has been utilized to provide efficient communication along with proper security measures. The reliable protocol suite works on top of MQTT and TCP to ensure reliable communication. The smart gateway utilized for this framework and provides firewall security as with a two-phase filtering mechanism as well as scalability. among all the appliances in the home.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lara B. McKenzie ◽  
Kristin J. Roberts ◽  
Rebecca J. McAdams ◽  
Mahmoud Abdel-Rasoul ◽  
Orie Kristel ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Leading causes of unintentional child injury such as poisoning and falls are preventable, and the majority occur in the home. Numerous home safety interventions have been developed and tested to increase safety behaviors; however, no smart phone-based applications (apps) have been developed and evaluated for this purpose. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether a mobile technology-based health behavior change intervention, the Make Safe Happen® app, was an effective tool to increase safety knowledge and safety actions/behaviors for the prevention of child unintentional injuries in and around the home. Methods Data were collected in pretest and posttest online surveys from an existing nationwide population-based survey panel. Intervention subjects were randomized to organically (participant-driven) use the Make Safe Happen® app for 1 week, which provided home safety information and the ability to purchase safety products, while control participants were assigned to download and use an app about a topic other than home safety. The primary outcomes of safety knowledge and home safety actions were assessed by using linear mixed model regressions with intention-to-treat analyses. Results A total of 5032 participants were randomized to either the intervention (n = 4182) or control (n = 850) group, with 2055 intervention participants downloading and entering their participant IDs into the Make Safe Happen® app. The online posttest survey was completed by 770 intervention and 283 control subjects. Mean knowledge parent safety score increased at a greater rate for intervention than control subjects (p < 0.0001), and at posttest was significantly higher for intervention than control subjects (p < 0.0001). The percentage of intervention subjects who reported doing all one-time and repeated safety actions significantly increased from pretest to posttest (p < 0.0001 and p = 0.0001, respectively), but there was no change among the control subjects (p = 0.1041 and p = 0.9755, respectively). At posttest, this percentage was larger for intervention than control subjects only for repeated safety actions (p = 0.0340). Conclusions The mobile application significantly improved safety knowledge and safety actions for participants using the Make Safe Happen® app, although loss to follow-up was a limitation. The results of this study indicate the usefulness of widespread distribution and use of the Make Safe Happen® app. Trial registration numberNCT02751203; Registered April 26, 2016.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 69-73
Author(s):  
Md. Abdullah Al Rakib ◽  
Md. Moklesur Rahman ◽  
Md. Sohel Rana ◽  
Md. Sanjib Islam ◽  
Fysol Ibna Abbas

In this paper, we worked on how to control home apparatuses, safety, and security systems utilizing GSM innovation by utilizing a cell phone. We will likewise show that we can control the apparatuses even without a phone by sending an ordinary call. The favorable position of utilizing GSM innovation is that we can handle home appliances from any place in the world. This system permits the proprietor to control the appliances and to get a feedback status of the home apparatuses by sending calls just as through a portable application. For the home security system, we are utilizing an antitheft announcing system that will report the proprietor by sending a message and ringing a call. Likewise, for the security system, when fire or gas spillage is expected to occur, it will also report the proprietor by sending a call. Subsequently, by utilizing GSM innovation, it gives remote access to the gadgets to be controlled.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 240-259
Author(s):  
Awatif Elsharkawy ◽  
Marwa Abouheiba
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 248-254
Author(s):  
Hongrui ZHU ◽  
◽  
Mehri YASAMI ◽  

In attempting to tackle the alleged digital discriminatory practices, Airbnb has established a series of non-discrimination policies, and the recent one was that guests’ photos will not be disclosed to hosts until they accept the booking requests from prospective guests. This new non-discrimination policy has sparked heated discussion among the hosts. This study sets out to explore the overlooked narratives of Airbnb hosts towards this recent non-discrimination policy. A total of 1,211 posts shared by numerous hosts were collected from the Airbnb community website. These posts were analyzed by undertaking a co-occurrence analysis to identify key concepts and the connections among these key concepts that revolved around the new non-discrimination policy. Nine key concepts, namely, home, safety, stranger, risk, hotel, third-party booking, trust, community, and discriminate, and their connections, were presented in a visual network generated via Gephi to show what concerned the hosts after Airbnb implementing this policy. This study also offers insights into why such a new policy that aimed at fighting against discrimination on Airbnb may put hosts at a disadvantaged position or vulnerable status. It also offers significant practical implications regarding the important roles played by photos on Airbnb.


2021 ◽  
pp. jech-2021-216613
Author(s):  
Trevor Hill ◽  
Carol Coupland ◽  
Denise Kendrick ◽  
Matthew Jones ◽  
Ashley Akbari ◽  
...  

BackgroundUnintentional home injuries are a leading cause of preventable death in young children. Safety education and equipment provision improve home safety practices, but their impact on injuries is less clear. Between 2009 and 2011, a national home safety equipment scheme was implemented in England (Safe At Home), targeting high-injury-rate areas and socioeconomically disadvantaged families with children under 5. This provided a ‘natural experiment’ for evaluating the scheme’s impact on hospital admissions for unintentional injuries.MethodsControlled interrupted time series analysis of unintentional injury hospital admission rates in small areas (Lower Layer Super Output Areas (LSOAs)) in England where the scheme was implemented (intervention areas, n=9466) and matched with LSOAs in England and Wales where it was not implemented (control areas, n=9466), with subgroup analyses by density of equipment provision.Results57 656 homes receiving safety equipment were included in the analysis. In the 2 years after the scheme ended, monthly admission rates declined in intervention areas (−0.33% (−0.47% to −0.18%)) but did not decline in control areas (0.04% (−0.11%–0.19%), p value for difference in trend=0.001). Greater reductions in admission rates were seen as equipment provision density increased. Effects were not maintained beyond 2 years after the scheme ended.ConclusionsA national home safety equipment scheme was associated with a reduction in injury-related hospital admissions in children under 5 in the 2 years after the scheme ended. Providing a higher number of items of safety equipment appears to be more effective in reducing injury rates than providing fewer items.


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