
@article{ref1,
title="The New Zealand child work-related fatal injury study: 1985-1998",
journal="New Zealand medical journal",
year="2004",
author="Lilley, R. and Feyer, Anne Marie and Langley, John Desmond and Wren, John",
volume="117",
number="1194",
pages="U891-U891",
abstract="AIMS: To estimate the numbers and rates of work-related fatal injury for children under the age of 15 years. METHODS: Potential cases of work-related injury deaths of persons aged &lt;15 years of age were identified from the national electronic mortality data-files for the period 1985-1998 inclusive. The circumstances of the death in each fatality incident were reviewed directly from coronial files to determine work-relatedness. RESULTS: A total of 87 workplace work-related fatalities were identified. The vast majority of children identified were fatally injured while a bystander to another person's work. Workplace bystander involvement was found to vary by age, with the majority of workers identified aged 10-14 years old. With a third of all fatalities, the agricultural industry was the most common industry for workplace work-related fatalities in children. In the period 1985-94, children &lt;15 years of age were found to account for 46% of New Zealand's total workplace bystander deaths. CONCLUSIONS: Children contribute significantly to the overall burden of work-related fatal injury in New Zealand, especially as bystanders to other people's work. The high contribution to bystander deaths by children aged &lt;15 years suggests that hazard control in certain work settings is lacking.",
language="",
issn="0028-8446",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}