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Journal Article

Citation

Roys MS. Appl. Ergon. 2001; 32(2): 135-139.

Affiliation

Building Research Establishment Ltd, Garston, Watford, UK. roysm@bre.co.uk

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11277505

Abstract

An estimated 2.5 million injuries, and a further 4000 deaths in the UK in 1995 were due to home accidents. About 230,000 of these injuries and 497 deaths resulted from falls on stairs. When exposure is taken into account, stairs are one of the most hazardous locations in buildings. Of these falls, those where the person falls forward are most likely to cause severe injuries. One aspect of stair design, the "going" (the horizontal distance between two consecutive nosings) can be changed to decrease the potential number of serious trip accidents. Builders should therefore be encouraged to build stairs with larger goings.


Language: en

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