Television Spots |
Sedentary“Sedentary” is a 30- and 60- second spot that humorously depicts the very serious problem of obesity. Share these spots with your viewers and get them thinking – or more importantly – moving.
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Radio Spots |
RepetitiveMore and more kids are training too hard and specializing in one sport. That means that they are performing the same musculoskeletally stressful activities over and over again. Whether they are swimming, pitching, tumbling or serving – a childhood overuse injury occurs in the duplication of the same movements.
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Print - PSA |
A crash in California almost took her leg. A bomb blast in Iraq helped save it.
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The story at orthoinfo.org/dominique or for more information, visit ota.org.
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS) and the Orthopaedic Trauma Association (OTA) want to increase awareness about the many new advances and technologies in orthopaedic care that come from what is learned while treating war-related injuries.
Today, about 70 percent of war wounds are musculoskeletal injuries and 7 percent of those with major extremity wounds also sustain loss of limbs. Trauma surgeons’ war experiences make lasting contributions to orthopaedic surgery, benefiting not only the troops but also civilians around the world. Those contributions also helped save Dominique’s leg. In fact, her orthopaedic surgeon says that his experience treating war wounds as a military surgeon armed him with the skills to treat Dominique.
The story at orthoinfo.org/dominique.
Download Press-Ready PDFs
orthoinfo.org/dominique
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En Español |
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AAOS Members Only:
You can order - at no cost while supplies last - posters, postcards, and a "How To" which provides information on using these public service messages in your local community.
For more information contact Pat Julitz in the Public Relations Department by phone or email, 847-384-4036, julitz@aaos.org
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