DAY ONE | THURSDAY 6 NOVEMBER 2014 8:15am 9am Registration Mihi whakatau | Ray Ropata, Ngati Toa & Ngati Porou 9:15am Introduction | Justine Ropata, General Manger, Injury Prevention Aotearoa 9:20am Welcome and housekeeping | Mike King, MC 9:30am Opening address | Chai Chuah, Acting Director General at Ministry of Health 10am Keynote & a conference sponsor | Dr Megan McKenna, General Manager Injury Prevention at ACC _________________________________________________________________________________ MORNING TEA | DOWN AT THE PARK 10:30am _________________________________________________________________________________ 11am 11:45am Keynote | Dr Candy Cookson Cox, Lakes DHB Child and Youth Mortality Co-ordinator Keynote | Dr Paul Quigley, Emergency Medicine Specialist _________________________________________________________________________________ LUNCH | DOWN AT THE PARK 12:30pm _________________________________________________________________________________ 1:30pm Guest speaker | Mike King, The Key to Life Charitable Trust 2:15pm Keynote | Vic Tamati, It’s not OK Champion 3pm Keynote | Sue Mackwell, National Children’s Director at Children’s Action Plan | Working together to protect vulnerable children. _________________________________________________________________________________ AFTERNOON TEA | DOWN AT THE PARK 3:45pm _________________________________________________________________________________ 4:15pm Injury Prevention Aotearoa caucus meetings Māori caucus | IN THE VEGE PATCH New Zealand caucus | IN THE PLAYHOUSE 4:45pm Injury Prevention Aotearoa AGM | ON THE LAWN 5:45pm END OF DAY SESSIONS Pacific caucus | UNDER THE SHADY TREE _________________________________________________________________________________ 6:45pm12:30am BBQ DINNER & DANCE | DOWN AT THE PARK Te Manaia 2014 Award presentation Guest speaker | Billy Graham, Naenae Youth Charitable Trust Entertainment | Uncle Monkey Dress | smart casual with dancing shoes Please arrive promptly by 6:45pm to receive a complimentary drink and be seated by 7pm. A cash bar will be operating. NOTE: THE CONFERENCE PROGRAMME IS STILL IN DRAFT FORM AND SUBJECT TO CHANGES. _________________________________________________________________________________ DAY TWO | FRIDAY 7 NOVEMBER 2014 8:30am Welcome | Justine Ropata, General Manager of Injury Prevention Aotearoa Concurrent sessions: each are 25 minutes long with 5 mins in between to move rooms if required. ____________________________________________________________________________________________ Location THE LAWN THE PLAYHOUSE THE SHADY TREE THE VEGE PATCH 8:45 10:15am More than just a talk fest – the value of supporting Community Coalitions. All accredited Safe Communities in NZ are the result of many years of collaborative partnership and leadership. This presentation provides an overview of the model and selected examples of community coalitions. Whaia te Mauriora lessons in Māori suicide prevention 1997-2014. This presentation tracks our progress and lessons learned from strategies and interventions in Māori suicide prevention from 1997-2014. Down the Back Paddock. Educating local primary school children about safety on rural properties. Puataunofo Come Home Safely. Pacific solutions for Pacific issues. Pacific issues require Pacific solutions. Puataunofo workshops achieve more than just pitching a health and safety message at people. Tania Peters – Safe Communities Foundation NZ. __________________ Things we lost in the fire. The Fire Service presents their new approach to reduce loss, injury and death from fire through carefully targeted and evaluated fire prevention strategies. Todd O’Donoghue – NZ Fire Service. __________________ Responding to the burden of alcoholrelated unintentional and intentional injuries in NZ. Alcohol’s role in injuries and violence, recommendations to address the burden and Alcohol Healthwatch’s efforts to progress these recommendations. Dr Keri Lawson-Te Aho – University of Otago. __________________ Sheroes in our Backyard. Women Refuge’s Shero campaign is about engaging & empowering youth, and collaborating with others to prevent domestic violence in young people’s relationships and lives. Ruth MacIntyre – Women’s Refuge Shero. __________________ Making home our safest place. This presentation will describe Aviva’s new and innovative strategic response to family violence in Canterbury, including the organisation’s multiple post-quake service developments, innovations and results. Tessa Sturley & Kerry Miles – Waimakariri District Council. __________________ Titahi Bay School Bike Track: Improving Cycle Safety. A project that united students, parents and the wider community. Improved health, physical activity, kept students road safe and improved bike handling skills. Wendy Barry – Safer Porirua & Nicky Severinsen - Titahi Bay School. __________________ Young Drivers Make Good Assets. In Auckland North, we don’t see young drivers as danger on our roads. An unlicenced person behind the wheel is the real danger. Wayne Williams – Safer North. Nicola Woodward – Aviva Family Services. Natia Tucker – Auckland Council & Moni Hogg – Moni Hogg Consulting. __________________ Exploring the data collection process for a regional trauma registry in New Zealand. Trauma-registries inform injury epidemiology & prevention, and evaluate performance. We investigated the datacollection process of a regional registry and their potential impact on data quality. Dr Bridget Kool – University of Auckland. __________________ How Good is Good Enough? Perceptions of swimming competency and drowning prevention. Swimming competence is assumed to have a protective value when swimming in open water. Perception of competence will affect its value in drowning prevention. Teresa Stanley – Watersafe Auckland. G. Raj Singh – Alcohol Healthwatch. ________________________________________________________________________ 10:15 am MORNING TEA | DOWN AT THE PARK ________________________________________________________________________ 10:45am 12:15pm Young adults, risky drinking and alcoholrelated injury. Creating a Community of Caring Men - a local Moving to reduce injuries for carers. Carers NZ & Home and Community Injury Prevention Campaigns for Children Reducing alcoholrelated injury means intervening early to reduce consumption. Sustaining change means shifting the drinker’s motivations to get drunk and to glorify the consequences. men’s response to family violence in Tairawhiti. Tauawhi Men’s Centre – our journey so far, our ideas and vision for a movement and community of caring men – awareness, prevention and intervention. Kevin Harper – ACC. __________________ Tim Marshall – Tauawhi Men’s Centre. __________________ Atawhai – an iwi approach to reducing the risks of drugs and alcohol, recruitment into gangs through youth mentoring. Ngati Porou are reclaiming their youth by investing in their future potential. Whiti Timutimu – National Police Headquarters. __________________ Jade Speaks Up: collaborating to create a resource to keep our children safe around family violence. Opportunity to see Jade Speaks Up animated film and user guides to support all children’s safety around frightening situations. Elaine Dyer – Violence Free Waitakere. Mates & Dates - ACC’s new programme to prevent sexual and dating violence. This session will describe the development of a new, best practice healthy relationships programme aimed at reducing sexual and dating violence. Sandra Dickson – ACC. __________________ Parenting teens – the good, the bad and the ugly. A collaborative community education project in Waimakariri. Parents can be the most influencing factor in young people’s lives. This education project seeks to empower, inform and guide parents with teenage challenges. Health Association are working with ACC to create resources for carers who are assisting people to move at home. Julie Haggie – Home & Community Health Assn. __________________ “Be Safe – just have one.” This presentation will provide an overview of the sensible drinking campaign run by Te Takere Youth Space and driven by youth in the Horowhenua community. Wendy Fraser – Te Takere. __________________ Children + Learning by Doing = Marlborough Clued-Up Kids! Marlborough Clued-Up Kids is an interactive safety programme which supports children to learn about personal safety and react in a safe manner. Monica McKone & Marlborough Child Safety Group Representatives. __________________ Wendy Howe – Waimakariri District Council. by Children. The Safekids Aotearoa Creative Quest. How do you convince children to wear a helmet? We asked students to help us make helmets cool – and you’d be surprised at what they came up with! Anthony Rola – Safekids Aotearoa. __________________ Child injury data reveals that we need to do more. Auckland Council and Safekids Aotearoa developed child injury profiles for the Auckland region. A national first, they encourage a collective approach to reduce child injuries. Kathryn Martin – Auckland Council & Heather Robertson – Safekids Aotearoa. __________________ Keeping injury prevention on local government’s agenda – the value of community coalitions. This presentation describes the added value of community coalitions to local government and the opportunities and challenges that may arise. Amanda Kelly – Auckland Council. _____________________________________________________________________________ 12:15pm LUNCH BREAK | DOWN AT THE PARK 12:45pm POLITICAL PANEL | ON THE LAWN (TBC) ______________________________________________________________________________ 1:15 3:15pm A simple conversation diminishing the impact of alcohol and increasing citizen participation with formal agencies. This is a reminder of the power of conversations with community. When we see an issue, we can wonder where to start. A simple conversation can be the catalyst of wider change. Sgt Stephen Jones – Riccarton Police & Alisa Davies – ACC. __________________ E Tu Whānau – Growing Ownership and Action. Addressing the issues of violence within Whānau, through community action. Growing local action and ownership about a Charter for Te Ao Māori. Ann Dysart. ____________________ Creating Safer Bars – Who are you? Safer Bars Project. The Who Are You Safer Bars Project works to enable staff working in hospitality to identify and Lifejacket bylaw – collaboration for policy change. As a result of collaboration between Watersafe Auckland, Auckland Council and PIPA, the Navigation Safety Bylaw was adopted, introducing compulsory wearing of lifejackets. Teresa Stanley – Watersafe Auckland, Natia Tucker – Auckland Council & Sandy Harrop - Pasifika Injury Prevention Aukilana. __________________ Understanding Disability for Māori 24 Months After Injury. Māori experience considerable injury and disability disparities compared to non-Māori. This paper aims to identify pre-injury and injury-related predictors of disability 24 months post-injury for a group of injured Māori. Dr Emma Wyeth – University of Otago. __________________ Graduated Driver Licence Conditions: Evidence Lifejacket Education – education assisting policy change. Initiatives including Land-based Fishing projects, Pacific Church Lifejacket Hubs, School Loan Schemes and PLD for teachers have assisted in community support for lifejacket policy change. Teresa Stanley – Watersafe Auckland. __________________ Keeping our children injury-free: household safety evidence from Growing Up in New Zealand. This presentation will provide evidence about household safety and home injury for the first two years of life of the children in Growing Up in New Zealand. Sarah Berry – University of Auckland. __________________ decrease sexually aggressive behaviour and increase bystander interventions. Hayley Adams - Who Are You Safer Bars Alliance & Fiona McNamara – Sexual Abuse Prevention Network. __________________ Rural Safety – reducing harm to children using school buses. Concerns about the number of children killed or seriously injured when crossing the road from a school bus have finally resulted in a sign trial for slower speeds past a school bus. Lucy Cotterill – Rural Women New Zealand. __________________ Retaining our Safe Community status. West Auckland, formally Waitakere City, has held International Safe Community status since 1999. This presentation will provide an overview on how the West Auckland community maintained this status independently under the new Auckland Council structure. Tuini Hakaraia-Tino & Carolynne Stone – Safer West. Safer Porirua: Feeling Safe, Being Safe. A short film that documents the progress made by six of our local projects in Porirua towards reducing injury, preventing crime and preparing for an emergency event. Jay Marson & Karina Ratana – Waitangirua Action Group, Robyn Moore – Pukerua Bay Residents Association & Ken Ta’ase – Junior Neighbourhood Support. __________________ ‘The safety of our children is no accident’ – unravelling and negotiating the arena of child product safety in New Zealand. Who are the key stakeholders, and what mechanisms are in place to safeguard and improve the safety of products our children use? Heather Robertson – Safekids Aotearoa. __________________ Towards a zero drowning toll for under 5’s – the bath mat project. For 3+ years bath mats have been provided to Plunket families and drowning prevention discussed in a move to reduce the risk of young children drowning. Sue Campbell – Plunket. from the NZ Drivers Study on young driver views, compliance and traffic offences. Graduated Driver Licensing is the key transport policy to reduce young driver crash risk. This paper describes views and compliance with GDLS and GDLS offences. Dr Rebecca Brookland – University of Otago. __________________ The role of conspicuity in bicycle crashes involving a motor vehicle. This presentation will discuss if and how physical vs. attention conspicuity plays a role in preventing bicycle crashes involving a motor vehicle in New Zealand. Sandar Tin Tin – University of Auckland. __________________ Cold-Water Immersion Training in Inexperienced Swimmers Reduces Cold Shock Response. When suddenly immersed in cold water, humans typically exhibit the cold shock response. This study shows that short term training can attenuate the response. Associate Professor Chris Button – University of Otago. _______________________________________________________________________________ 3:15 – 4:15pm FAREWELL DRINKS & NIBBLES | DOWN AT THE PARK ________________________________________________________________________________
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