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Relationship of work injury severity to family member hospitalization.
Authors
Asfaw-AG; Bushnell-PT; Ray-TK
Source
Am J Ind Med 2010 May; 53(5):506-513
Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajim.20804 
NIOSHTIC No.
20036788 
Abstract
Background Working while under stress due to a family health event may result in injuries of greater severity. Work leave might mitigate such consequences. Data and Methods Workers compensation data far 33,817 injured workers and inpatient medical data for 76,077 members of their families were extracted from the 2002-2005 Thomson Reuters Medstat MarketScan Health and Productivity Management (HPM) and Commercial Claims and Encounter (CCE) datasets. Using a probit model, the impact of family hospitalization on the probability that a subsequent injury would be severe (above average indemnity costs) was estimated, adjusting for age, sex. hourly versus salaried status, industry sector state, and family size. Results Family hospitalization within 15 days before injury increased the likelihood that the injury would be severe (from 12.5% to 21.5%) and was associated with 40% higher indemnity costs and 50% higher medical costs. Hospitalizations over 30 days before injury had no impact. Conclusion The observed higher severity of work injuries following family hospitalizations suggests additional analyses may find higher injury rates as well, and that timely family leaves might help prevent severe workplace injuries.
Keywords
Accident-analysis; Accident-prevention; Families; Injuries; Injury-prevention; Medical-care; Medical-treatment; Psychological-effects; Psychological-stress; Risk-analysis; Statistical-analysis; Stress; Work-analysis; Work-performance; Author Keywords: severe workplace injury; family health status; outside workplace stress factors; work leave
Contact
Abay G. Asfaw, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, Office of the Director, 395 E Street, SW, Washington, DC 20201
CODEN
AJIMD8
Publication Date
20100501
Document Type
Journal Article
Email Address
hqp0@cdc.gov
Fiscal Year
2010
NTIS Accession No.
NTIS Price
Issue of Publication
5
ISSN
0271-3586
NIOSH Division
OD; DSHEFS; DART
Priority Area
Manufacturing; Services
Source Name
American Journal of Industrial Medicine
State
DC; OH
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