
@article{ref1,
title="Banning the &quot;A word&quot;: where's the evidence?",
journal="Injury prevention",
year="2001",
author="Evans, S. A.",
volume="7",
number="3",
pages="172-175",
abstract="BACKGROUND: It is argued that use of the term &quot;accident&quot; has a negative effect on prevention efforts as the term implies that such events are due to chance. AIM: To test the hypothesis that use of &quot;injury&quot; in place of &quot;accident&quot; can influence professional attitudes towards &quot;accident/injury&quot; prevention. SETTING: Leeds Health Authority area serving the population (n=740,000) of the city of Leeds in the Yorkshire region of England. METHOD: A randomised comparative study. Altogether 183 health visiting staff in the Leeds area were randomised (by place of work) to one of two groups. Each group received a similar postal questionnaire assessing attitudes relating to accident/injury prevention. One group received a questionnaire using only accident terminology while the other used injury terminology throughout. RESULTS: Fifty responses in the accident group were received and 39 in the injury group. Analysis by Mann-Whitney U tests showed little difference in group responses. The only significant finding was that respondents in the &quot;accident&quot; group were more likely to rank &quot;accident prevention&quot; of higher importance relative to respondents in the &quot;injury&quot; group (median 2, 25%-75% quartiles 1.8-4.0 compared with median 4, 25%-75% quartiles 2.0-5.0, p=0.04). However, this may have been a chance finding due to the multiple comparisons made. CONCLUSIONS: This study has shown little difference in health visitor responses when &quot;accident&quot; is replaced with &quot;injury&quot;. It is possible that the effect of changing terminology is more nebulous--influencing society at large. However, it would be as well to recognise the lack of evidence and clarity relating to the terminology debate. Otherwise, there is a danger that the &quot;injury&quot; believers may become alienated from the &quot;accident&quot; diehards.  (term-accident-vs-injury)",
language="en",
issn="1353-8047",
doi="10.1136/ip.7.3.172",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/ip.7.3.172"
}