Injury and Violence Prevention: Behavioral Science Theories, Methods, and ApplicationsISBN: 978-0-7879-7764-1
Hardcover
576 pages
March 2006, Jossey-Bass
This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 10-15 days delivery time. The book is not returnable.
|
"Should be on the bookshelf of every researcher, practitioner,
and advocate striving to reduce the public health burden of injury
and violence. This well-written, comprehensive, and compelling book
has a great deal to teach students and professionals about the
theories underpinning the design, implementation, and evaluation of
behavioral change strategies."
— American Journal of Preventive Medicine
"This book would be an excellent resource for classroom teaching. The authors have provided thought-provoking examples of ‘real-life’ interventions. The book would be useful not only in a topical class on the issue of injury and violence but also in classes focused on behavior change theories and theory-based intervention development. I found new and innovative examples of interventions that I will use in classroom teaching.
I would recommend this book to public health professionals and
to teachers working with students of public health, health
education, nursing and medicine. The clarity of the writing and the
excellent examples make this book appropriate for both graduate-
and undergraduate-level students"
— Health Education Research
"The cohesive textbook Injury and Violence Prevention:
Behavioral Science Theories, Methods, and Applications offers
the reader a solid foundation for the involvement of psychology in
the field."
— Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books
"I highly recommend this book. It sets a new standard for the
next generation of injury and violence prevention programs."
— American Journal of Health Behavior
“The outstanding new text Injury and Violence
Prevention: Behavioral Science Theories, Methods, and
Applications is the first to focus on the application of
behavioral science to the problem of injury.
— Journal of the American Medical Association