Cover image for Living safely, aging well : a guide to preventing injuries at home
Title:
Living safely, aging well : a guide to preventing injuries at home
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Baltimore : The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2013
Physical Description:
204 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9781421411514

9781421411521

9781421411538

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30000010333745 RA777.6 D73 2013 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Older adults can stay healthy longer by avoiding injury at home.

As we age, our sense of balance and our vision, hearing, and cognition become less sharp. Aging-related changes greatly increase our risk of injury. In Living Safely, Aging Well , nationally recognized safety expert Dorothy A. Drago spells out how to prevent injury while cooking, gardening, sleeping, driving--and just walking around the house.

In the first part of the book, Drago describes the causes of injuries by type--falls, burns, poisoning, and asphyxia--and explains how to decrease the risk of each. She then explores the home environment room by room, pointing out potential hazards and explaining how to avoid them, for example, by installing night lights, eliminating glass coffee tables, and using baby monitors. Lively line drawings make it easy for readers to visualize risks and implement prevention techniques. Living Safely, Aging Well pays special attention to hazards encountered by people with Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia. A chapter devoted to health literacy helps people and caregivers make the best use of the medical care system and a chapter on driving helps evaluate when it is no longer safe to be behind the wheel.


Author Notes

Dorothy A. Drago, M.P.H., owns Drago Expert Services, which evaluates consumer product safety, designs safety communication, and provides litigation support. She previously worked as a senior analyst for the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and is author of From Crib to Kindergarten: The Essential Child Safety Guide , also published by Johns Hopkins.


Reviews 2

Publisher's Weekly Review

As safety expert Drago wisely points out, "how safe a person is depends on how he or she functions in and interacts with the immediate environment." In her latest book, Drago (From Crib to Kindergarten: The Essential Child Safety Guide) discusses aging, its associated injury risk, and offers avoidance strategies. She explains physical changes in vision, hearing, balance, smell, taste, touch, and the awareness of core body temperature, as well as cognitive changes, including age-related dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Having described the frailties of the characters, Drago then describes the places that are most dangerous-kitchen, bedroom, workshop, car-and counsels readers on the risks, both single and synergistic with age-related changes, that each holds for falls, burns, asphyxiation, poisoning, or accident. Finally, the author provides an extensive set of illustrations showing how to mitigate risk and prevent injury, lists of "what to do," and contact information for outside agencies and organizations, such as the AARP. This is a wonderful resource for anyone thinking about how to increase the safety of the home to allow for independence as people live longer. 27 b&w illus. (Jan.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Library Journal Review

The author, owner of a product safety evaluation company, has not written a fun book. From start to finish, this title dutifully and humorlessly relates all the bad things that can happen to us as we get older and all the grimly practical things we can do to avoid harming ourselves too badly as a result. There is an enormous amount of obvious advice here. If you are over 75, then your eyes/ears/nose/mind and/or sense of touch/smell/balance are weak. So don't light a cigarette near the oxygen tank. Don't use slippery scatter rugs. Don't leave loaded guns lying around. Don't drive. Don't wander near the pool alone. Eat right. Put a safety bar in the shower. Occasionally, the advice is less obvious. Not everyone knows that when electricity goes out, frozen food is good for 24 hours if the freezer is half full; 48 hours if full. Ditto the idea that one should wait a full ten minutes after leaving one's oxygen tank before lighting up that smoke, as flammable oxygen clings to clothes. VERDICT This is certainly a practical book, but much more effort could have gone into making it a readable one.-Cynthia Fox, Brooklyn (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Table of Contents

1 What's "Old" Got to Do with It?
2 Don't Fall!
3 Too Hot and Too Cold
4 Poisoning
5 Preventing Asphyxia
6 When Driving Is Dangerous
7 The\Backyard and the Workshop
8 All around the House
9 Seeing the Doctor
0 Appendix A
0 Appendix B
0 References
0 Index