9 September 2008 Media Statement
Alcohol injuries a focus of latest injury prevention plan
Increasing awareness of the link between alcohol and injury and the need for greater safety in the home are key
priorities of the third New Zealand Injury Prevention Strategy Implementation Plan, says ACC Minister Maryan Street.
Details of the plan, outlining the country’s key injury prevention activities for 2008-2011, were released by Maryan
Street today.
“The plan will move New Zealand closer to achieving the vision and goals of the strategy originally released in 2003 by
building on previous plans to create: a safe New Zealand becoming injury free; a safety culture; and safe environments.
“The activity outlined in the plan relates to the strategy’s ten key objectives and aims to improve outcomes on three
main fronts: addressing serious injury; quickly translating emerging evidence into action; and achieving cultural
change.
“The plan includes steps to strengthen activity around the impact that alcohol has on injury. Recent evidence shows that
alcohol plays a significant role in falls, motor vehicle accidents, drownings and assaults. These are four of the six
`injury priority areas’ which account for 80 per cent of all deaths and serious injury in New Zealand,” says Maryan
Street.
“Research released in 2005 found that 51 per cent of alcohol-related deaths were due to injury. Other research indicates
the total cost of alcohol-related harm in New Zealand is over $2 billion a year, excluding mortality costs.
“Ministry of Transport figures for the year ending 2006 reveal alcohol and drugs were a contributing factor in 99 fatal
traffic crashes, 409 serious injury crashes and 1128 minor injury crashes. The social cost of those crashes was
estimated at about $725 million.
“The continual increase of accidents in the home is another focus of the strategy and was the subject of NZ Safety Week
earlier this month,” Maryan Street said.
“One in seven New Zealanders is injured in the home and these injuries cost a huge $377 million last year alone. The
most recent findings showed that while 55% of New Zealanders know there is a risk of injury at home, only 15% think it
could happen to them.
“A further goal outlined in the plan is to strengthen community safety and injury prevention through the accreditation
of 18 New Zealand cities as International Safe Communities by 2011. With Porirua City achieving International Safe
Community status in August there are currently eight in New Zealand.
“We will reach that goal through better urban design, better road user behaviour, more anti-violence messages and
greater injury prevention awareness .
“The injury prevention strategy is a whole of government one. Achieving a reduction in injuries must be a key priority
for all of New Zealand. It’s great to see so many government agencies and non-government organisations taking
responsibility for a variety of projects in the latest plan.”
“In addition to a variety of new projects, work such as the New Zealand Injury Prevention Database will continue as part
of the plan. The database now has more than 500 entries of injury prevention initiatives being delivered around the
country,” Maryan Street said.
The full NZIPS Implementation Plan for 2008-2011 is available at www.nzips.govt.nz
ENDS