Navy Program Addresses Summer Sports Risks
advertisement
Interact With Us
Best of 2011
Top Stories of 2011
The most popular stories of 2011. Did your favorites make our list?
Resource Center
Buyers Guide
Find industry businesses by product or service categories, view company profiles and more.
Club Industry Trade Show
Club Industry Show and Conference, held each October, is the premier event for fitness and wellness professionals. Find out more about Exhibitors, Events, and Education.
Industry Events & Trade Shows
The industry-wide calendar features listings for educational events, trade shows and more.
Classifieds
View classified ads for health club equipment and services, plus business opportunities and job postings.
Current Issue
Read stories from the latest print issue of Club Industry magazine.
Club info and News
Read news about some of the biggest names in the industry.
- 24 Hour Fitness
- Anytime Fitness
- Bally Total Fitness
- Crunch Fitness
- Club One
- Curves
- Equinox
- Gold's Gym
- Health Fitness Corp.
- LA Fitness
- Life Time Fitness
- Lifestyle Family Fitness
- Planet Fitness
- Plus One Management
- Powerhouse Gyms
- Snap Fitness
- Spectrum Athletic Clubs
- Sport & Health
- Town Sports International
- Sports Club Co.
- Urban Active
- Wellbridge
- Western Athletic Clubs
- World Gym
E-Newsletter Signup
Breaking news on the industry, people on the move, mergers and acquisitions and much more. Delivered weekly.
VIRGINIA BEACH, VA — Sailors and Marines are statistically more likely to be involved in a mishap when they are off-duty during summer months, according to officials at the Safety Office at Naval Air Station (NAS) Oceana in Virginia Beach, VA. Hoping to prevent that, officials hosted Hot Rods: Hazards of Recreational Off Duty Safety, a program that teaches sailors how to remain safe while enjoying summer recreational activities.
NAS Oceana Commanding Officer Capt. Patrick Lorge kicked off the session.
“When we go back and look at [a mishap], there's always a kind of link that we can say, ‘Where could we have stopped that from happening?’” Lorge says.
The program was divided into off-duty hazards such as those associated with common summer activities, organized sports, water sports, riding all-terrain vehicles and recreational parachuting, as well as a program on traffic safety.
Basketball also was a hot topic, as most in attendance did not realize it was a leading cause of injuries, especially to fingers, ankles, knees and shins. Paul Graveline, occupational health safety specialist for NAS Oceana, says many of those injuries could be prevented by using Occupational Risk Management, which includes walking the court and looking for hazards, conducting proper warm-up and cool down exercises, and avoiding alcohol while playing.
Commanding Officer Cmdr. Peter Matisoo made the talk mandatory for his entire squadron.
“It's always worth the investment, and I do consider it an investment to take the time, stop, pause and think about how we're doing business,” he says. “I just want our sailors to think and apply the same level of rigor, the same level of discipline to off-duty things as they do to on-duty things.”
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.











Acceptable Use Policy blog comments powered by Disqus