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Injury Prevention & Control Program (IPCP)

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Injury Prevention & Control Program (IPCP), Organized by 2022 UNICEF.

“Because what we do today, we do for Generations.

OBJECTIVES.

Injury is a major public health problem, particularly in urban minority communities. This paper evaluates the impact of the Safe Block Project, a comprehensive injury prevention trial, on home hazards and injury prevention knowledge in a poor urban African-American community. METHODS. Nine census tracts in the community were allocated to either the intervention area or the control area. The intervention, carried out by trained community outreach workers, consisted of (1) home modification for simple prevention measures, (2) home inspection accompanied by information about home hazards, and (3) education about selected injury prevention practices. Approximately 12 months after the intervention, random samples of control and intervention homes were assessed for home hazards and injury prevention knowledge. RESULTS. A significantly larger proportion of intervention homes than control homes had functioning smoke detectors, syrup of ipecac, safely stored medications, and reduced electrical and tripping hazards. No consistent differences were observed between control and intervention homes on home hazards requiring major effort to correct. CONCLUSIONS. There was a distinct difference between control and intervention homes with respect to safety knowledge and home hazards requiring minimal to moderate effort to correct. The Safe Block Project could serve as a model for future urban injury prevention efforts.

We have long been facing the problems of thousands of small and medium-sized organizations around the world, resulting from the inability to break above the local impact and establish cooperation with other organizations with similar goals, or the indifference of authorities to their needs. Visit Please https://www.internationalguideline.com/static/pdfs/Quick_Reference_Guide-10Mar2019.pdf
 
 
Making roads safer for children in the Philippines

Making roads safer for children in the Philippines

Read the story

Children’s way to school – the journey of worry

Children’s way to school – the journey of worry

Read the story

Shaping urbanization for children

A handbook on child-responsive urban planning

See the full report

Taking appropriate action

Key practice: Managing child injuries and accidents at home

 

Millions of children are on the move. Some are driven from their homes by conflict, poverty or climate change; others leave in the hope of finding a better life. Far too many encounter danger, detention, deprivation and discrimination on their journeys, at destination or upon return.

It doesn’t have to be this way. The suffering and exclusion of migrant and displaced children is not only unacceptable, but also preventable. A child is a child, no matter why she leaves home, where she comes from, where she is, or how she got there. Every child deserves protection, care and all the support and services she needs to thrive.

Yet, too often migrant and displaced children face numerous challenges in transit, at destination and upon return, often because they have few – or no – options to move through safe and regular pathways whether on their own or with their families. They may be forced into child labour, pressed into early marriage, exposed to aggravated smuggling, subjected to human trafficking, and put at risk of violence and exploitation or. They often miss out on education and proper medical care, and don’t find it easy to feel at home in the communities they arrive in; trying to learn a new language and fit into a new culture can make things especially hard. These difficulties have lasting physical and psychological effects and can prevent children on the move from reaching their full potential. The challenges have been compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The solution

Children should be safe from violence and be able to grow up with their families. They shouldn’t have to miss school or be scared to visit the doctor. They shouldn’t be discriminated against because of where they come from. They should be able to feel at home – wherever they find themselves and wherever home is.

Children around the world, regardless of where they are from and why they have left their homes, should be treated the same

UNICEF works around the world to help protect the rights of migrant and displaced children. We provide life-saving humanitarian supplies in refugee camps. We run child-friendly spaces – safe places where children on the move can play, where mothers can rest and feed their babies in private, where separated families can reunite. We support national and local governments to put in place laws, policies, systems and services that are inclusive of all children and address the specific needs of migrant and displaced children, helping them thrive.

UNICEF/UN0326766/Moreno Gonzalez

UNICEF also collects, analyses and disseminates data and gathers evidence about the situation and individual experiences of children and young people on the move. We help keep families together. We work to end child immigration detention by helping governments put in place alternative community- and family-based solutions. We work with governments, the private sector and civil society. We empower children and youth on the move with cutting-edge solutions, partnering with them and making their voices heard.

The solutions exist, and they’re attainable. Learn more about our Agenda for Action to support children on the move.

The Global Refugee Compact

The Global Refugee Compact is an international agreement that sets the building blocks for a stronger, more predictable and more equitable international response to large refugee situations. The Compact, adopted in 2018, gives the international community and host countries a roadmap to better include refugees in national systems, societies and economies, to enable them to contribute to their new communities and to secure their own futures. The four key objectives of the Compact are: to ease pressures on host countries; increase refugee self-reliance; expand access to resettlement and other solutions; and support conditions in countries of origin for refugees to return in safety and dignity.

UNICEF is strongly committed to the Global Compact on Refugees and is working to help reach its objectives. UNICEF has developed a ‘Blueprint for Joint Action’ with UNHCR to renew our common commitment to the rights of refugee children and the communities that host them, and to support their inclusion and access to vital services. The blueprint documents good practices from our work around the world in support of refugee children and young people, as well as those of host communities.

UNICEF

The Global Compact for Migration

The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration is a landmark agreement that for the first time recognizes that children are central to migration management. It shows that UNICEF’s six-point Agenda for Action is doable and provides a framework to bring it to life. UNICEF actively participated in the 18 months of negotiations that led to the final document – including by facilitating the active participation of young migrants in this process. The Compact was adopted at an intergovernmental conference in Marrakech, Morocco, in December 2018. UNICEF is working to translate the commitments that governments agreed to in the Compact document into real change and positive impact in the lives of children on the move around the world, including as a member of the UN Network on Migration.

UNICEF

Uprooted children and COVID-19

Migrant workers, refugees and their families often live in the most disadvantaged urban areas, where access to essential services is already limited – services under even heavier strain as COVID-19 has spread. Migrant and refugee children can also be confined in detention centres, live with disabilities, or be separated from their families, making them difficult to reach with accurate information in a language they understand.

Compounding all this, misinformation on the spread of COVID-19 exacerbates the xenophobia and discrimination that migrant and displaced children and their families already faced. 

As governments roll out the COVID-19 vaccines, it is essential that all persons in a country have equitable access – including refugees, asylum seekers, internally displaced people and migrants. Inclusive vaccine plans and strategies are essential to reduce the death and disease burden of COVID-19. 

Excluding migrants and displaced persons will have long-term consequences for social cohesion and stability. Not only does it present an immediate health risk for communities, but it also fuels xenophobia and stigma that could unleash violence and further exclusion from services. In addition, many migrants are supporting the COVID-19 response at the frontline and play an important role in keeping essential sectors running. They are therefore essential for service continuity and socio-economic recovery from the pandemic.  

Children uprooted in a changing climate

The climate is changing everywhere, but uprooted children and young people – whether living in protracted displacement, refugee camps, urban slums or bustling mega cities – are among the most exposed to its impacts, with the least access to essential services to build resilience.

Strengthening services and systems for children and young people who move, and ensuring safe migration is an option for children and young people affected by climate change, is essential. After all, safe and productive migration can be an important strategy in helping young people adapt. It is also critical that action is taken to minimize the risk of climate-related displacement, including by reducing global emissions and including children and young people on the move in resilience building efforts.

But children should not be viewed as passive bystanders in tackling these challenges. Children and young people uprooted can also be key agents for change. They have critical skills, experiences and ideas we need to better mitigate and adapt to climate change and must be partners in shaping solutions.

Read more about the impact of climate and UNICEF’s response here.

UNICEF

Stories of migrant and displaced children and their families

Photo Essay

Refugee children carry memories of home

No matter where they’re from or why they left, refugee and displaced children are children first

See the story

Link: http://max.test/injury-prevention/

Providing protection and hope to Cambodian migrant workers

Access to COVID-19 vaccines has turned uncertainty into hope

Visit the site

Link

Surviving as a refugee through COVID-19 in South Africa

Improving access to holistic services for children on the move

Visit the site

Link

Rohingya and Bangladeshi adolescents build friendships

A UNICEF-supported social hub is helping to promote social cohesion between refugee and host communities

Visit the site

Resources

That is, why at IHRC we have developed a new project to help such organizations spread their wings, to appear in the global work of protecting human rights, to help the excluded, the poor and the needy.

BIG CAN MORE, which is why we are pleased to announce that the International Human Rights Commission – IHRC establishes Participation in United Organizations is open to all Organizations – regardless of their size, place of action or wealth – working for the broadly understood good of humanity.

 The rules of joining are very simple, just fill out the form available at http://max.test/business-profile and send to the e-mail by support@maxviewgroup.com  along with a copy of the registration documents, details of the founders and composition of the Board and its logo. An accession agreement will be sent for signature to organizations that submit valid applications. After signing it by the Organization and a representative of United Organizations, information about joining will be published on IHRC websites.

The rules for participation are not complicated either. Joining the United Organizations means that the acceding organization, its representatives and members accept the following obligations:

 

1. Conducting a local humanitarian campaign minimum 4 times a year (preferably in each quarter) for the benefit of persecuted, poor or excluded people.
2. Conducting a minimum of 2 times a year (preferably in each half-year) a supra-local humanitarian action with another organization for the benefit of persecuted, poor or excluded people.

 

3. Use during the preparation and implementation of the above actions logos and/or other United Organizations markings and organizations participating in the given action.

 

4. Preparation of the press release and photo service from the above actions documenting its conduct and submission to the Federation on e-mail adress    support@maxviewgroup.com for their promotion on global services related to the IHRC.

 

5. In addition, the Organization joining the United Organizations is obliged to share and promote outside the values ​​recognized by members of the Federation and promote its image, logo and other markings in its current operations.

 

VERY IMPORTANT:

 

May not be a member of United Organizations, which unlawfully using logos, signs or other terms assigned to other organizations, with particular emphasis on supranational organizations such as the UN, as well as similar signs and terms that may be misleading as to the membership of the Organization or its associations. An Organization that cooperates with such is also not welcome.

 

Attention ! “United Organizations -UO” is not part of the United Nations

We wait and invite you to co-operate for a better tomorrow

Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program


The Delaware Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program provides services for residents who reside in long-term care settings as well as those who live in other settings (such as their homes) and receive home and community-based services with access to advocacy, complaint investigation and resolution, facility monitoring visits, and witnessing of advance health care directives.

Under the federal Older Americans Act (OAA) every state is required to have an Ombudsman Program that addresses complaints and advocates for improvements in the long-term care system. Each state has an Office of the State Long-Term Care Ombudsman (Office), headed by a full-time State Long-Term Care Ombudsman (Ombudsman) who directs the program statewide. Across the nation, staff and thousands of volunteers are designated by State Ombudsmen as representatives to directly serve residents.

Ombudsman is a Swedish word that means advocate or representative of the people. In the Delaware Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program, Ombudsman representatives empower and support residents by:

  • Protecting residents rights
  • Promoting dignity and choice
  • Meeting privately with residents
  • Assisting residents to identify and resolve concerns
  • Helping residents to file complaints and appeals
  • Connecting residents to legal and community services
  • Providing education on long-term care settings
  • Advocating for quality care

Effective immediately! All long-term care facilities must allow visitation, including during an outbreak. On November 12th, 2021, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) updated its federal visitation guidance. That guidance requires long-term care facilities to allow indoor visitation “at all times and for all resident’s…” View the CMS Current Guidance (updated March 10, 2021) and the CMS Nursing Home Visitation FAQ.

The Delaware Long-Term Care Ombudsman Program is funded by the federal and state government. There is no cost to residents or families for Ombudsman services. All complaints are confidential.


FOR MORE INFORMATION
Email the State Ombudsman: DHSS_OSEC_Ombudsman@Delaware.gov,
Contact the State Ombudsman:
1-855-773-1002
 

Ombudsman Program Information



 

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Affiliations
Affiliations
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“Because what we do today, we do for Generations.

OBJECTIVES.

Injury is a major public health problem, particularly in urban minority communities. This paper evaluates the impact of the Safe Block Project, a comprehensive injury prevention trial, on home hazards and injury prevention knowledge in a poor urban African-American community. METHODS. Nine census tracts in the community were allocated to either the intervention area or the control area. The intervention, carried out by trained community outreach workers, consisted of (1) home modification for simple prevention measures, (2) home inspection accompanied by information about home hazards, and (3) education about selected injury prevention practices. Approximately 12 months after the intervention, random samples of control and intervention homes were assessed for home hazards and injury prevention knowledge. RESULTS. A significantly larger proportion of intervention homes than control homes had functioning smoke detectors, syrup of ipecac, safely stored medications, and reduced electrical and tripping hazards. No consistent differences were observed between control and intervention homes on home hazards requiring major effort to correct. CONCLUSIONS. There was a distinct difference between control and intervention homes with respect to safety knowledge and home hazards requiring minimal to moderate effort to correct. The Safe Block Project could serve as a model for future urban injury prevention efforts.

We have long been facing the problems of thousands of small and medium-sized organizations around the world, resulting from the inability to break above the local impact and establish cooperation with other organizations with similar goals, or the indifference of authorities to their needs.
Making roads safer for children in the Philippines

Making roads safer for children in the Philippines

Read the story

Children’s way to school – the journey of worry

Children’s way to school – the journey of worry

Read the story

Shaping urbanization for children

A handbook on child-responsive urban planning

See the full report

Taking appropriate action

Key practice: Managing child injuries and accidents at home

 

Millions of children are on the move. Some are driven from their homes by conflict, poverty or climate change; others leave in the hope of finding a better life. Far too many encounter danger, detention, deprivation and discrimination on their journeys, at destination or upon return.

It doesn’t have to be this way. The suffering and exclusion of migrant and displaced children is not only unacceptable, but also preventable. A child is a child, no matter why she leaves home, where she comes from, where she is, or how she got there. Every child deserves protection, care and all the support and services she needs to thrive.

Yet, too often migrant and displaced children face numerous challenges in transit, at destination and upon return, often because they have few – or no – options to move through safe and regular pathways whether on their own or with their families. They may be forced into child labour, pressed into early marriage, exposed to aggravated smuggling, subjected to human trafficking, and put at risk of violence and exploitation or. They often miss out on education and proper medical care, and don’t find it easy to feel at home in the communities they arrive in; trying to learn a new language and fit into a new culture can make things especially hard. These difficulties have lasting physical and psychological effects and can prevent children on the move from reaching their full potential. The challenges have been compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The solution

Children should be safe from violence and be able to grow up with their families. They shouldn’t have to miss school or be scared to visit the doctor. They shouldn’t be discriminated against because of where they come from. They should be able to feel at home – wherever they find themselves and wherever home is.

Children around the world, regardless of where they are from and why they have left their homes, should be treated the same

UNICEF works around the world to help protect the rights of migrant and displaced children. We provide life-saving humanitarian supplies in refugee camps. We run child-friendly spaces – safe places where children on the move can play, where mothers can rest and feed their babies in private, where separated families can reunite. We support national and local governments to put in place laws, policies, systems and services that are inclusive of all children and address the specific needs of migrant and displaced children, helping them thrive.

UNICEF/UN0326766/Moreno Gonzalez

UNICEF also collects, analyses and disseminates data and gathers evidence about the situation and individual experiences of children and young people on the move. We help keep families together. We work to end child immigration detention by helping governments put in place alternative community- and family-based solutions. We work with governments, the private sector and civil society. We empower children and youth on the move with cutting-edge solutions, partnering with them and making their voices heard.

The solutions exist, and they’re attainable. Learn more about our Agenda for Action to support children on the move.

The Global Refugee Compact

The Global Refugee Compact is an international agreement that sets the building blocks for a stronger, more predictable and more equitable international response to large refugee situations. The Compact, adopted in 2018, gives the international community and host countries a roadmap to better include refugees in national systems, societies and economies, to enable them to contribute to their new communities and to secure their own futures. The four key objectives of the Compact are: to ease pressures on host countries; increase refugee self-reliance; expand access to resettlement and other solutions; and support conditions in countries of origin for refugees to return in safety and dignity.

UNICEF is strongly committed to the Global Compact on Refugees and is working to help reach its objectives. UNICEF has developed a ‘Blueprint for Joint Action’ with UNHCR to renew our common commitment to the rights of refugee children and the communities that host them, and to support their inclusion and access to vital services. The blueprint documents good practices from our work around the world in support of refugee children and young people, as well as those of host communities.

UNICEF

The Global Compact for Migration

The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration is a landmark agreement that for the first time recognizes that children are central to migration management. It shows that UNICEF’s six-point Agenda for Action is doable and provides a framework to bring it to life. UNICEF actively participated in the 18 months of negotiations that led to the final document – including by facilitating the active participation of young migrants in this process. The Compact was adopted at an intergovernmental conference in Marrakech, Morocco, in December 2018. UNICEF is working to translate the commitments that governments agreed to in the Compact document into real change and positive impact in the lives of children on the move around the world, including as a member of the UN Network on Migration.

UNICEF

Uprooted children and COVID-19

Migrant workers, refugees and their families often live in the most disadvantaged urban areas, where access to essential services is already limited – services under even heavier strain as COVID-19 has spread. Migrant and refugee children can also be confined in detention centres, live with disabilities, or be separated from their families, making them difficult to reach with accurate information in a language they understand.

Compounding all this, misinformation on the spread of COVID-19 exacerbates the xenophobia and discrimination that migrant and displaced children and their families already faced. 

As governments roll out the COVID-19 vaccines, it is essential that all persons in a country have equitable access – including refugees, asylum seekers, internally displaced people and migrants. Inclusive vaccine plans and strategies are essential to reduce the death and disease burden of COVID-19. 

Excluding migrants and displaced persons will have long-term consequences for social cohesion and stability. Not only does it present an immediate health risk for communities, but it also fuels xenophobia and stigma that could unleash violence and further exclusion from services. In addition, many migrants are supporting the COVID-19 response at the frontline and play an important role in keeping essential sectors running. They are therefore essential for service continuity and socio-economic recovery from the pandemic.  

Children uprooted in a changing climate

The climate is changing everywhere, but uprooted children and young people – whether living in protracted displacement, refugee camps, urban slums or bustling mega cities – are among the most exposed to its impacts, with the least access to essential services to build resilience.

Strengthening services and systems for children and young people who move, and ensuring safe migration is an option for children and young people affected by climate change, is essential. After all, safe and productive migration can be an important strategy in helping young people adapt. It is also critical that action is taken to minimize the risk of climate-related displacement, including by reducing global emissions and including children and young people on the move in resilience building efforts.

But children should not be viewed as passive bystanders in tackling these challenges. Children and young people uprooted can also be key agents for change. They have critical skills, experiences and ideas we need to better mitigate and adapt to climate change and must be partners in shaping solutions.

Read more about the impact of climate and UNICEF’s response here.

UNICEF

Stories of migrant and displaced children and their families

Photo Essay

Refugee children carry memories of home

No matter where they’re from or why they left, refugee and displaced children are children first

See the story

Link

Providing protection and hope to Cambodian migrant workers

Access to COVID-19 vaccines has turned uncertainty into hope

Visit the site

Link

Surviving as a refugee through COVID-19 in South Africa

Improving access to holistic services for children on the move

Visit the site

Link

Rohingya and Bangladeshi adolescents build friendships

A UNICEF-supported social hub is helping to promote social cohesion between refugee and host communities

Visit the site

Resources

That is, why at IHRC we have developed a new project to help such organizations spread their wings, to appear in the global work of protecting human rights, to help the excluded, the poor and the needy.

BIG CAN MORE, which is why we are pleased to announce that the International Human Rights Commission – IHRC establishes Participation in United Organizations is open to all Organizations – regardless of their size, place of action or wealth – working for the broadly understood good of humanity.

 The rules of joining are very simple, just fill out the form available at http://max.test/business-profile and send to the e-mail by support@maxviewgroup.com  along with a copy of the registration documents, details of the founders and composition of the Board and its logo. An accession agreement will be sent for signature to organizations that submit valid applications. After signing it by the Organization and a representative of United Organizations, information about joining will be published on IHRC websites.

The rules for participation are not complicated either. Joining the United Organizations means that the acceding organization, its representatives and members accept the following obligations:

 

1. Conducting a local humanitarian campaign minimum 4 times a year (preferably in each quarter) for the benefit of persecuted, poor or excluded people.
2. Conducting a minimum of 2 times a year (preferably in each half-year) a supra-local humanitarian action with another organization for the benefit of persecuted, poor or excluded people.

 

3. Use during the preparation and implementation of the above actions logos and/or other United Organizations markings and organizations participating in the given action.

 

4. Preparation of the press release and photo service from the above actions documenting its conduct and submission to the Federation on e-mail adress    support@maxviewgroup.com for their promotion on global services related to the IHRC.

 

5. In addition, the Organization joining the United Organizations is obliged to share and promote outside the values ​​recognized by members of the Federation and promote its image, logo and other markings in its current operations.

 

VERY IMPORTANT:

 

May not be a member of United Organizations, which unlawfully using logos, signs or other terms assigned to other organizations, with particular emphasis on supranational organizations such as the UN, as well as similar signs and terms that may be misleading as to the membership of the Organization or its associations. An Organization that cooperates with such is also not welcome.

 

Attention ! “United Organizations -UO” is not part of the United Nations

We wait and invite you to co-operate for a better tomorrow

 

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The South-East Asia Region accounts for approximately one third of the global total number of injury-related deaths as well as the total disabilityadjusted life years (‎DALYs)‎ lost to injury. However, injury has long been a neglected public health problem in the Region. Even though medical professionals have a critical role in treating trauma victims as well as promoting injury-prevention activities, it has been observed that the present medical and nursing curriculum in the Member States does not adequately cover violence and injury prevention. Consequently, several intercountry consultations were held to identified the gap regarding violence and injury prevention education, and the core areas for strengthening injury prevention and control (‎IPC)‎ in medical and nursing education. Based on these findings, a group of experts prepared this handbook on injury prevention and control for use in undergraduate medical curricula, considering the core competencies required and the learning process needed to achieve the competencies. This handbook also describes the approaches for strengthening communication, counseling, and advocacy skills, which are especially critical for violence and injury prevention.
Citation
World Health Organization. Regional Office for South-East Asia. (‎2011)‎. Injury prevention and control: a handbook for undergraduate medical curriculum. WHO Regional Office for South-East Asia. https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/205348
Document number
SEA-Injuries-15
 
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Injury Prevenstion & Control Program (IPCP),

How UNICEF is responding & Affiliations of IPCP

founder Mr. Muhammad Iftekher Alam & IDM no BGDbn- 0979977134 UNICEF & WHO –WHS22_NG542.

Quick Response...

Contact Us Please...

Asian Office#14 Purana Paltan, Dhaka-1000,Bangladesh. European Office#72Bezed Cad,Yellahum Mah.Eyupsultan, Istanbul

info@maxviewgroup.com

support@maxviewgroup.com

+905314979088

http://max.test/injury-prevention/

     © 2022 Maxview Group & Non profitable organozation Right Resived |                                                                                                                    copyright / confidentiality penalty $ 1 million according to Article 6 of the agreement, the competent is arbitration court.