CDC logo
Safer Healthier People
CDC Home CDC Search CDC Health Topics A-Z
NIOSH - National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

Skip navigation links Search NIOSH  |  NIOSH Home  |  NIOSH Topics  |  Site Index  |  Databases and Information Resources  |  NIOSH Products  |  Contact Us

Search for NIOSH Publications: NIOSHTIC-2

NIOSHTIC-2 Search Results

      Advanced Search  |  Help  |  About  |  Feedback 
Terms: 20035881
1 - 1 of 1 Bibliographic entries
All record(s) shown.
Save All   |   Save Page
View Saved    |    Download
Select check boxes to automatically save entries, or use 'save all' or 'save page' links above.
Back to Results
Nonfatal work-related motor vehicle injuries treated in emergency departments in the United States, 1998-2002.
Authors
Chen-GX
Source
Am J Ind Med 2009 Sep; 52(9):698-706
Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajim.20726 
NIOSHTIC No.
20035881 
Abstract
Background: Current data on nonfatal work-related motor vehicle injuries are limited and fragmented, often excluding government workers, self-employed workers, and workers on small farms. This study seeks to bridge the present data gap by providing a national profile of nonfatal work-related motor vehicle injuries across all industries and occupations. Methods: Study subjects were people who suffered nonfatal work-related motor vehicle injuries and were treated in a hospital emergency department in the United States. Subjects were identified from a stratified probability sample of emergency departments. National estimates and rates were computed. Results: From 1998 to 2002, the average annual rate of nonfatal work-related motor vehicle injuries was 7 injuries per 10,000 full-time equivalents. The rate was three times higher in men than in women. The rates were higher in workers 15-19 years of age and in workers 70 years or older Justice, public order and safety workers had the largest number of injuries, and taxicab service employees had the highest injury rate of all industries. Truck drivers had the largest number of injuries, and police and detectives, public service employees had the highest injury rate of all occupations. Conclusion: Future efforts need to develop and enhance the use of surveillance information at the federal and state level for work-related nonfatal motor vehicle injuries. Prevention efforts need to address occupational motor vehicle safety for both commercial truck/bus drivers and workers who are not commercial drivers but who drive light motor vehicles on the job.
Keywords
Accident-analysis; Accident-rates; Accidents; Accident-statistics; Age-factors; Drivers; Injuries; Motor-vehicles; Occupational-health; Occupational-safety-programs; Qualitative-analysis; Safety-measures; Safety-practices; Safety-programs Statistical-analysis; Work-analysis; Work-environment; Worker-health; Worker-motivation; Work-operations; Work-organization; Work-performance; Workplace-studies; Work-practices; Author Keywords: motor vehicle injury; motor vehicle crash; occupational injury; emergency department; surveillance
Contact
Guang X. Chen, Analysis and Field Operations Branch, Division of Safety Research, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, 1095 Willowdale Road, MS/1811, Morgantown, WV 26505
CODEN
AJIMD8
Publication Date
20090901
Document Type
Journal Article
Email Address
gchen@cdc.gov
Fiscal Year
2009
NTIS Accession No.
NTIS Price
Issue of Publication
9
ISSN
0271-3586
NIOSH Division
DSR
Priority Area
Transportation, Warehousing and Utilities
Source Name
American Journal of Industrial Medicine
State
WV
Page 1 of 1
All record(s) shown.

File Formats Help:

Adobe PDF file
How do I view different file formats (PDF, DOC, PPT, MPEG) on this site?double arrows.