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Violence can affect people of all ages and backgrounds. Violence includes:
BCIRPU is working in a number of areas to understand and prevent violence-related injuries and deaths.
Traumatic Head Injury due to Child Maltreatment (THI-CM) is detected by the signs and symptoms resulting from the violent shaking of an infant or small child, and is the leading cause of death and injury in infants under the age of one-years-old. Prevent Shaken Baby Syndrome BC, a program of BC Children’s Hospital, has delivered the Period of PURPLE Crying® Program to parents across the province since 2009.
An estimated 230,000 women in Canada suffer severe physical violence at the hands of a partner every year, and up to 92% of these women may also experience a brain injury. BCIRPU partnered with Supporting Survivors of Abuse and Brain Injury through Research (SOAR) to create a Concussion Awareness Training Tool e-learning module for people who work with women survivors of IPV.
Violence can be prevented. The World Health Organization lists four steps to stop violence:5
1. Data Source: Discharge Abstract Database (DAD), Ministry of Health, BCIRPU Injury Data Online Tool, 2013-2017.
2. Data Source: Discharge Abstract Database (DAD), Ministry of Health, BCIRPU Injury Data Online Tool, 2012/13-2016/17.
3. Supporting Survivors of Abuse and Brain Injury Though Research. Available from: https://soarproject.ca/
4. Public Safety Canada. Info Sheet: Cyberbullying. Available from: https://www.publicsafety.gc.ca/cnt/rsrcs/pblctns/2015-r038/index-en.aspx
5. World Health Organization. “Violence and Injury Prevention.” Available from: https://www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/violence/en/