Department of Medicine, University of Vermont, Burlington 05405.
Using both historical analysis and personal reminiscence, thisarticle describes the development of injury control activitiessince about 1940, focusing particular attention on the riseand fall of the Public Health Service's Division of AccidentPrevention. By the 1940s and 1950s, modest but useful effortsin injury control research and programming had been made. The1960s and early 1970s then saw an explosion of new concepts,programs, and enthusiasm, but much of this soon dissipated.Since 1985 there has been a renaissance of interest and effort,and the development of a new cadre of injury control professionals.This progress is threatened, however, by both old and new problems.
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