Living safe : a self-management program for people with visiion impairment / Tanya L. Packer [et. al.].
Material type: TextLanguage: English Publication details: Perth, W.A. : Curtin University of Technology, 2009.Description: vii, 130 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 30 cmDDC classification:- 613.660871 22
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Australian Emergency Management Library | BOOK | 613.660871 LIV (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 900102740 |
Spiral bound
Includes bibliography p. 123-130.
About the program -- Vision loss, personal safety and self-management: a review of the literature -- Planning and Preparation -- Session 1: Overview of living safe, self-management, preventative strategies and stress management -- Session 2: Building a strong base -- Session 3: Defensive manoeuvres: choke attacks and wrist grabs -- Session 4: Safety in the community -- Session 5: Weapon defence and safeguarding your home -- Session 6: Assertiveness training, crime prevention, revision and conclusion.
"Living Safe is a self-defence self-management program for people with vision loss. The Living Safe manual includes all the materials necessary for a health professional to initiate and facilitate a six-session or two-day intensive course on crime prevention and psychological and physical self-defence strategies for people with vision loss. Step-by-step instructions for establishing the course and recruiting participants, as well as instructions for conducting an individual pre-screening interview are provided. The program is underpinned by the principles of self-management. The Living Safe program grew out of the seminal work of David, Kollmar, and McCall (1998) who pioneered the first program relating to self-defence and crime prevention for people with vision loss at the Center for the Visually Impaired in Atlanta. Living Safe builds on this work by adding to the content and embedding the principles of self-management into a structured program tailored for people with vision loss. This protocol provides people with the opportunity to learn, practise and choose techniques to protect and defend themselves physically and psychologically from potential dangers in the home, workplace and community. Although the program is adaptable globally it has been written in the context of Australian society." -- website.
There are no comments on this title.