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Journal Article

Citation

Zierold KM, Anderson HA. Am. J. Health Behav. 2006; 30(5): 525-532.

Affiliation

Assistant Professor, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, PNG Publications)

DOI

10.5555/ajhb.2006.30.5.525

PMID

16893315

Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate work characteristics and safety training among teenagers with severe work-related injuries. Methods: A questionnaire was administered to 6810 high school Wisconsin students in May 2003. Results: Fifteen percent of working teens reported being injured at work. Variables associated with severe injury included having a near-miss incident at work (AOR=8.72, 95%CI=5.51-13), working after 11:00 PM (AOR=4.21, 95%CI=2.08-8.53), and being asked to do something dangerous (AOR=2.59, 95%CI=1.53-4.39). Conclusions: Prohibiting teens from working long and late hours, improved safety training, and increased communication between teens and their coworkers and supervisors may help reduce the occurrence of injury.


Language: en

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