Archive for the ‘musculoskeletal injuries’ tag
The Dangers of School Bus Arm Violators to Children
March 20th, 2015 at 6:58 pm
For many parents, the act of seeing their children off to school every day is routine. Each morning, children get on a bus and head to school for the day. At the end of the school day, children get back on the bus and return home. However, every year, children end up in the emergency room—instead of at school or home—when they become victims of school transportation-related accidents.
According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), since 2001, 1,236 fatal motor vehicle traffic crashes have been classified as school transportation-related. An average of 137 fatalities per year are school transportation-related crashes.
Additionally, 123 children under the age of 19 have been killed in school transportation-related crashes since 2001. Twenty-six percent were killed by different vehicles involved in the crashes. Forty percent of the children killed in these school transportation-related accidents were between the ages of 5 and 7. Although many of these accidents may be due to the negligence of a school bus driver or another vehicle’s driver, many children become victims because of a driver’s failure to obey a school bus’s warning lights and stop sign arm as children are boarding or getting off the bus.
Every year, the National Association of State Directors of Pupil Transportation Services (NASDPTS) conducts a one-day survey across the country to find out how many drivers illegally pass stopped school buses. In 2014, 29 states took part in the survey, including school districts in Connecticut. More than 98,000 school buses nationwide participated. The results of last year’s survey indicated more than 75,966 drivers illegally passing school buses in one day. With the majority of school districts on a 180 day school year schedule, that comes out to more than 13 million vehicle drivers ignoring—or not seeing—the school bus stop arm in an extended position.
The reasons drivers illegally pass school buses include distracted driving, speeding, weather conditions, or driving under the influence of drugs and/or alcohol. When struck by a vehicle, the severity of a child’s injuries is determined by factors including the speed the vehicle was traveling, the size of the vehicle, and at what angle the child is struck.
Studies show that the most common injuries to children who are hit by cars include injures to the head (traumatic brain injuries) and neck, followed by musculoskeletal injuries.
If your child has suffered injuries in an accident caused by a negligent driver, please contact an experienced Westport personal injury attorney to find out what legal recourse you may have for your child’s pain and loss.
BLS Finds Nurses More Susceptible to Chronic Back Injuries
February 19th, 2015 at 7:00 am
When most people think of nurses, they imagine a person who is there to care for the sick and injured. However, it is becoming a more common scenario for nurses to end up on the other end of the stethoscope and in need of medical care themselves. According to data gathered from the Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), nurses suffer from over 35,000 occupational back and other injuries every year. These injuries are serious enough to cause a halt to lifestyle and missed days at work.
Those particularly susceptible to back injuries are nursing assistants and orderlies. In fact, musculoskeletal injuries to nursing-field workers occur triple the amount than they do for construction workers. Moreover, these workers have more of these types of injuries than truckers, warehouse workers, and stock clerks. The BLS statistics also reveal that the main way these injuries occur is from lifting and moving patients.
The hospital industry has recently come under fire for failing to develop safe patient handling protocols in order to protect nursing staff from chronic back injuries. There has been much criticism of hospital administrators for not making this issue a top priority, even from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA). A spokesperson from OSHA says the agency’s hands are tied in protecting nurses unless new laws are passed granting OSHA the powers to do so.
There are safety protocols which could easily be put in place to protect nursing staff, and some hospitals have already implemented them. One hospital, which uses a procedure referred to as “safe patient handling” has already seen an 80 percent reduction in back injuries to nurses—their staff has received extensive training on safe lifting and special machines are used to lift the patients.
If you are a member of the nursing field and have suffered from back, neck, or other musculoskeletal injuries, contact an experienced Westport personal injury attorney to find out what legal recourse you may have for your pain and loss.