Agencies Work Together to Educate Kids
As emergency workers descended upon the scene of a two vehicle accident with serious injuries, Seniors at Beverly High School were given the opportunity to witness tragedy in order to prevent it. They watched two of their classmates die and several others struggle for life as firefighters and EMT’s cut their car apart in a desperate effort to free them. Fortunately, this time it was just a mock crash intended to get out a message.
“The scene is typical for a significant accident. We try to make it as lifelike as possible without getting anyone hurt” said Deputy Chief Paul Cotter. All vehicles are strategically placed by New Beverly Auto who also makes the cars safe for students to be in while firefighters are working by removing all of the vehicle glass and fluids. While fire crews went to work on the car prying off doors, cutting off the roof Paramedics and EMT’s from Northeast Regional Ambulance work inside and outside the car to stabilize the critically injured until they can be safely removed from the scene.
All the while Seniors sit across from the scene watching, some chuckle while others cry. All of them get the message as two of the victims are pulled from the cars and placed on the hot top with sheets over them. They represent two of their classmates that won’t have a chance to graduate, go to college, get married or have kids. Lives cut short as the result of a single moment’s error in judgment, an error that will haunt a network of families and friends for years to follow.
While the scenario is playing out, statistics from the State Department of Public Health and Executive Office of Public Safety were read.
Agencies involved were the School Department and Student Groups, Beverly Police, Fire and Emergency Management, North East Regional Ambulance, Campells and Grondin Funeral Homes, New Beverly Auto.
Statistics
· 430 people died in Massachusetts crashes in 2006
· Approximately 57% of the people killed in motor vehicle crashes in Massachusetts were unrestrained.
· Young drivers were at highest risk for fatal motor vehicle crashes. Drivers 20-24 years old had the highest rates of motor vehicle traffic deaths, followed by teenagers 15 - 19 years old. Adults 75 and over had the third highest rate of motor vehicle traffic deaths. Motor vehicle crashes killed more young adults ages 15-24 than any other injury.
· Men in Massachusetts are 2 times more likely to die from motor vehicle injuries than are women.
· nearly 90,000 Massachusetts residents in 2005 required hospital in-patient and emergency department treatment for injuries related to motor vehicle crashes (including occupants, motorcyclists, pedestrians, and bicyclists
· 53% were not wearing seatbelts
· 40% (174) were alcohol related
· 34% (148) were speed related
· 21% (91) occurred at intersections
· 14% (61) were pedestrians
· 12% (50) were motorcycle riders
· 1% (6) were bicycle riders
Traumatic Brain Injury
· In 2005, the estimated total economic cost to Massachusetts for motor vehicle crashes was over $6.4 billion. This figure only accounts for acute medical care and does not include rehabilitation costs.
· From 1995 to 2005, 38% of Traumatic Brain Injury deaths were to young adults 15 -24 years old.
· Motor vehicle injuries to occupants were the third leading cause of traumatic brain injury death in Massachusetts between 1995 and 2005.
· In FY 2005, motor vehicle injuries to occupants accounted for more than a quarter of all Traumatic Brain Injury hospitalizations.
Heavy drinking is especially dangerous for teenagers, whose brains are still developing, and alcohol-related damage incurred at a young age can have long-term effects. A recent study by the National Institutes of Health suggests that the region of the brain that inhibits risky behavior is not fully formed until age 25. This information serves as a wakeup call to parents, physicians, elected officials, law enforcement officials, purveyors of alcohol – including the alcohol industry – and teens themselves. Many people believe that underage drinking is an inevitable “rite of passage” that adolescents can easily recover from because their bodies are more resilient, but the opposite is true.
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