Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Preventable Injuries Kill Dozens Of Canadians Daily And Cost Billions To Economy

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2015 12:13 PM
    TORONTO — Preventable injuries kill dozens of Canadians every day and cost the country's economy billions of dollars, says a new report released Wednesday.
     
    The report by Parachute, a group focusing on injury prevention, examined all injuries across the country in 2010.
     
    Preventable injuries were responsible for about 43 deaths a day and were the top cause of death among Canadians aged 1 to 44, the report said. They also claimed the lives of more children than all other causes.
     
    Injuries such as falls, drowning and transport accidents drained $27 billion from the economy.
     
    "The simple fact is almost all of these injuries and deaths could have been prevented," the report said.
     
    In 2010, preventable injuries in Canada resulted in:
     
    — 15,866 deaths
     
    — 231,596 Canadians hospitalized
     
    — Nearly 3.5 million emergency room visits
     
    — More than 60,000 Canadians either partially or permanently disabled
     
    — $15.9 billion in direct health-care costs
     
    — $26.8 billion in total economic costs (including costs related to reduced productivity from hospitalization, disability and premature death)
     
    Falls were the top preventable injury and the biggest drain on the economy accounting for $6.7 billion or 42 per cent of direct costs of injury.
     
    Suicide and transport accidents were the leading cause of indirect costs of injury, both accounting for $2.1 billion.
     
    Parachute said the data shows that the preventable injuries' cost and death toll have continued to rise since 2010, and the group forecasts an economic impact of $33 billion and a daily death toll of 46 people for 2015.
     
    The numbers will continue to increase, the report said, without active steps to reduce Canada's preventable injury rate.
     
    "The good news is that the vast majority of the injuries described in this report are both predictable and preventable," the report concludes.
     
    "It is time to take comprehensive, effective action that will prevent injuries and save lives."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Christy Clark Looks Forward To Working With Alberta Premier-Elect Rachel Notley

    Christy Clark Looks Forward To Working With Alberta Premier-Elect Rachel Notley
    VICTORIA — B.C. Premier Christy Clark says she's looking forward to working productively with Alberta premier-elect Rachel Notley for a prosperous West.

    Christy Clark Looks Forward To Working With Alberta Premier-Elect Rachel Notley

    Canada Post Gives Online Shoppers More Options For Shipping Their Order

    Canada Post Gives Online Shoppers More Options For Shipping Their Order
    The postal service said Wednesday that FlexDelivery will allow customers to decide exactly which post office receives the delivery of their online order.

    Canada Post Gives Online Shoppers More Options For Shipping Their Order

    Canadian Man Sentenced On U.S. Child Porn Charges After Emailng Undercover Agent

    Canadian Man Sentenced On U.S. Child Porn Charges After Emailng Undercover Agent
    PORTLAND, Maine — A Canadian man has been sentenced to 8 1/2 years in a U.S. prison for emailing images of child pornography to an undercover federal agent in Maine.

    Canadian Man Sentenced On U.S. Child Porn Charges After Emailng Undercover Agent

    2 Charged In Fatal Shooting Of Canadian After Kentucky Derby Plead Not Guilty

    2 Charged In Fatal Shooting Of Canadian After Kentucky Derby Plead Not Guilty
    Police have said 49-year-old Scott Hunter of Toronto was shot to death while trying to fight off three people who robbed him at random after he attended the famed horse race.

    2 Charged In Fatal Shooting Of Canadian After Kentucky Derby Plead Not Guilty

    Woman Denied Fishing Captain Licence Because Of Her Gender: Human Rights Tribunal

    Woman Denied Fishing Captain Licence Because Of Her Gender: Human Rights Tribunal
    The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal has ruled that a Nova Scotia aboriginal community discriminated against a female member by denying her work in the local fishing industry because of her gender.

    Woman Denied Fishing Captain Licence Because Of Her Gender: Human Rights Tribunal

    'Change Has Finally Come:' NDP's Rachel Notley Promises Albertans New Ideas

    'Change Has Finally Come:' NDP's Rachel Notley Promises Albertans New Ideas
    The New Democrats, under leader Rachel Notley, swept all 19 constituencies in Edmonton on Tuesday and made significant inroads in previously barren NDP territory in Calgary, Lethbridge and rural Alberta.

    'Change Has Finally Come:' NDP's Rachel Notley Promises Albertans New Ideas