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Journal Article

Citation

John Bailer A, Bena JF, Stayner LT, Halperin WE, Park RM. Am. J. Ind. Med. 2003; 43(3): 237-250.

Affiliation

Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio 45056-1641, USA. baileraj@muohio.edu

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/ajim.10184

PMID

12594771

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Industries and occupations vary with respect to the incidence of fatal injuries and their causes. METHODS: Fatalities from the National Traumatic Occupational Fatality database (years 1983-1994) serve as the basis for examining external cause of death code specific rates. Industries and occupations are compared with respect to rate and frequency of fatal injuries. In addition, external causes of injury (E-codes) are examined across all industries and occupations as well as within industries and occupations to evaluate which events would be identified by frequency ordered comparisons versus injury rate ordered comparisons. RESULTS: Machinery, electric current, homicide, falls, and transportation-related events are identified by high frequency and rate of occurrence. CONCLUSIONS: The external cause categories of homicide, machinery-related, motor-vehicle-related, electric current, and falls, account for over one-half of all occupational fatal injuries. Targeted interventions in homicide may be especially warranted in sales and service occupations and in the retail trade and services industries. In addition, younger workers might be targeted for special interventions designed to identify hazardous practices, procedures, and solutions to reduce fatalities associated with electrocution or falls from buildings.


Language: en

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