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Choking, Aspiration, and Suffocation
Appendix - Choking, Aspiration,
and Suffocation
References
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B, Ginsburg MJ, Li G. The injury fact book. New York, NY: Oxford University
Press, 1992.
2. Harris CS, Baker SP, Smith
GA, Harris RM. Childhood asphyxiation by food: a national analysis and overview.
JAMA, 1984; 251(17): 2231-2235.
3. Kraus JF. Effectiveness
of measures to prevent unintentional deaths of infants and children from suffocation
and strangulation. Public Health Reports, 1985; 100(2): 231-240.
4. Bain K, Faegre ML, Wyly
RS. Behavior of young children under conditions simulating entrapment in refrigerators.
Pediatrics, 1958; 22: 628-647.
5. Tertinger DA, Greene BF, Lutzker JR. Home safety: development and validation of one
component of an ecobehavioral treatment program for abused and neglected children.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1984; 17(2): 159-174.
6. Rimell FL, Thome A, Stool
S, Reilly JS, Rider G, Stool D, Wilson CL. Characteristics of objects that cause
choking in children. JAMA, 1995; 274(22): 1763-1766.
7. Deppa SW. Human factors
analysis: choking incidents in children. US Consumer Product Safety Commission.
Washington, DC, 1983.
8. Drago DA, Winston FK, Baker SP. Clothing drawstring entrapment in playground slides
and school buses. Archives of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, 1997; 151: 72-77.
9. Sunde K, Wik L, Naess A, Steen PA. Impact of a child first aid wall calendar on
lay people's skills and knowledge of infant CPR. Resuscitation, 1998; 36: 59-64.
10. Tinsworth D, McDonald J. Special study: injuries and deaths associated with children's
playground equipment. US Consumer Product Safety Commission, 2001; 33.
11. Rauchschwalbe R, Mann C. Pediatric window-cord strangulations in the United States, 1981-1995.
JAMA, 1997; 277 (21): 1696-1698.
12. Nakamura S, Wind M, Danello MA. Review of hazards associated with children placed
in adult beds. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med, 1999; 153: 1019-1023.
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