BMJ, doi: 10.1136/bmjusa.01070002, (Published 5 September 2002)

Letters

RAPID RESPONSES FROM BMJ.COM

As of June 25th, 62 rapid responses had been posted on bmj.com in response to the editorial on banning "accidents." Barry Pless and I distilled the negative commentary into 10 key arguments, and prepared responses to each of them, which we posted as our own rapid response. A sampling of the original rapid responses (after editing), along with our reply, is presented below.---EDITOR

    "Accident" should not be purged
    Accident looking for somewhere to happen
    BMJ takes leadership role
    Some daft terminology
    Accidents do happen!
    Injevents?
    If you need more convincing, look to Katmandu

"Accident" should not be purged

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

This article originally appeared in BMJ USA

EDITOR---The irrationality of the lay public, who need to be educated in the "facts" of injury epidemiology, is a seductive thesis, but sadly it has no basis in evidence. Detailed qualitative work 1 2 has demonstrated that the "lay" public largely share the understanding of public health professionals---that accidents are predictable, and ultimately preventable, at least in theory, and that luck has little part to play in the distribution of injury. They also understand the prevention paradox: that population-level knowledge of the risk factors for accidental injury is of little help in explaining any specific individual event, except perhaps in retrospect.

Attempts to create a terminology with unnecessary neologisms, unique to medical journals, are likely to alienate further those professionals who work with communities on accident prevention.3 We already have a perfectly adequate generic term to cover the range of events that . . . [Full text of this article]


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