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Feb 9 - Feb 16,2003 |
Louis Francescutti a dean Renowned injury specialist sees much potential in new position By Nancy MacLeod
Originally Published: 2003-01-26
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Dr. Louis Hugo Francescutti
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World-renowned injury control researcher Dr. Louis Hugo Francescutti has a great opportunity before him. The well-known Italian-Canadian physician and lecturer was recently named, from a group of 31 highly qualified candidates, Campus Dean NOMS-West at Thunder Bay's Lakehead University. He will take over the position full-time in July, but recently began two days a week, traveling from the University of Alberta's Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry in Edmonton, where he currently is an Associate Professor in the Department of Public Health Sciences and the Division of Emergency Medicine. "I use the time commuting for paperwork," he says.
Dr. Francescutti has done very well for "a kid who couldn't speak a word of English in grade one." He grew up in Montreal in the Fifties, speaking Italian at home with his parents from Udine. "I still remember my teacher coming home every day to help me with English," he recalls. After receiving his B.Sc. at Concordia he did a combined MD/Ph.D. at the University of Alberta, and later a Master of Public Health degree and Preventative Medicine Residency at Baltimore's Johns Hopkins University.
During his 22 years in Edmonton he developed the original award-winning multimedia injury prevention programme for teenagers called HEROES. He helped establish the Alberta Centre for Injury Control and Research, and directed the design of special software that helps paramedics better do their job. He has made a name for himself going after injuries very aggressively. He is known to say that "there is no such thing as an accident."
"I have built a career trying to get people to view all injuries as a disease, to apply the same principles and epidemiology - use terms like host and agent," he says.
Francescutti's vision includes viewing all injuries as preventable, as he is persuasive as he explains it. "You need to understand there are two varieties of injuries," he states, "intentional, which can be personal, like suicide, and interpersonal violence, (child abuse, domestic violence, etc.). Then there is unintentional injury, which can be divided into motor vehicle and all the other stuff, whether is poisoning, falls, cuts." Using the example of falling off a dock he illustrates this further, by asking the important question of why. "Are you drunk? Is the dock not built right? Or if you slip on the ice, is it because no one put salt on it, because your shoes are poorly made, or you have trouble walking?"
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