Fatal occupational injuries in a southern state. 1997

D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill 27599-7400, USA.

Fatal occupational injuries were studied using data from medical examiners' reports in North Carolina for the years 1977-1991. Cases were defined as deaths due to accidents or homicide at the workplace, and populations at risk were estimated from the 1980 and 1990 US Censuses. Mortality rate ratios and proportionate mortality ratios were used as measures of association, and the population attributable risk percentage was used as an indicator of the burden of injury. Standard weights for direct age-adjustment of rates were obtained from the total state workforce. There were 2,524 eligible deaths-83 percent from unintentional traumatic injuries, 14 percent from homicide, and the remainder from other causes. This report focuses on unintentional trauma deaths, which were strongly associated with the wood production, fishing, and transportation industries. Elderly, African-American, and self-employed workers had higher fatality rates than members of other groups. Among male workers, motor vehicle crashes were the principal cause of death on the job, followed by falling objects, machinery, and falls. The industries contributing the largest proportions of these deaths were construction, trucking, agriculture, and logging (population attributable risk percentages were 16.8%, 8.8%, 7.9%, and 6.9%, respectively). The fatality patterns of female workers were different: Numbers of deaths from homicide and unintentional trauma were equal, and 27% of the latter deaths occurred in one catastrophic fire. Decentralized and rural industries were the most hazardous, but many deaths were outside the current jurisdiction of occupational safety and health agencies. These patterns suggest that greater scrutiny of such industries, through both research and intervention, is warranted.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D007221 Industry Any enterprise centered on the processing, assembly, production, or marketing of a line of products, services, commodities, or merchandise, in a particular field often named after its principal product. Examples include the automobile, fishing, music, publishing, insurance, and textile industries. Tertiary Sector,Industries,Sector, Tertiary,Sectors, Tertiary,Tertiary Sectors
D008297 Male Males
D008875 Middle Aged An adult aged 45 - 64 years. Middle Age
D009657 North Carolina State bounded on the north by Virginia, on the east and Southeast by the Atlantic Ocean, on the south by Georgia and South Carolina, and on the west by Tennessee.
D009784 Occupational Diseases Diseases caused by factors involved in one's employment. Diseases, Occupational,Occupational Illnesses,Disease, Occupational,Illnesse, Occupational,Illnesses, Occupational,Occupational Disease,Occupational Illnesse
D011041 Poisoning A condition or physical state produced by the ingestion, injection, inhalation of or exposure to a deleterious agent. Poisonings
D002423 Cause of Death Factors which produce cessation of all vital bodily functions. They can be analyzed from an epidemiologic viewpoint. Causes of Death,Death Cause,Death Causes
D002648 Child A person 6 to 12 years of age. An individual 2 to 5 years old is CHILD, PRESCHOOL. Children
D005260 Female Females
D006708 Homicide The killing of one person by another. Murder,Killing,Wrongful Death,Death, Wrongful,Deaths, Wrongful,Homicides,Killings,Murders,Wrongful Deaths

Related Publications

D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
December 1990, JAMA,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
August 1982, JAMA,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
November 2012, Occupational and environmental medicine,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
March 1985, MMWR. Morbidity and mortality weekly report,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
January 1991, Journal of occupational medicine. : official publication of the Industrial Medical Association,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
January 2011, International journal of occupational and environmental health,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
July 1995, Rhode Island medicine,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
June 2022, American journal of preventive medicine,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
March 2007, Occupational and environmental medicine,
D P Loomis, and D B Richardson, and S H Wolf, and C W Runyan, and J D Butts
January 1989, American journal of industrial medicine,
Copied contents to your clipboard!