The incidence of construction site injuries to women in Delhi: capture-recapture study

Abstract Background In India, the construction sector provides the main alternative to agricultural work - seasonal migration to and from construction work is widespread and construction work remains the second-largest employer of women in the country behind agriculture. Occupational injuries, which...

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Main Authors: Sajjan S. Yadav, Phil Edwards, John Porter
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-05-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10930-6
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spelling doaj-b84761f29c6745fa81be847730ca06812021-05-09T11:04:02ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-05-012111810.1186/s12889-021-10930-6The incidence of construction site injuries to women in Delhi: capture-recapture studySajjan S. Yadav0Phil Edwards1John Porter2Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance, Government of IndiaEpidemiology and Statistics, Department of Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineDepartment of Global Health and Development, London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineAbstract Background In India, the construction sector provides the main alternative to agricultural work - seasonal migration to and from construction work is widespread and construction work remains the second-largest employer of women in the country behind agriculture. Occupational injuries, which kill over 300,000 people annually, are a serious public health concern. However, data on construction site injuries to women are lacking, as India does not publish statistics on occupational injuries and illnesses. Our objectives were to: Estimate the number of women injured in construction site accidents in Delhi; and to estimate and compare the annual construction site injury rates per 100,000 workers of males and females in Delhi. Methods We conducted a two-sample capture-recapture study using data for accidents reported to the Delhi Police, Employee State Insurance Corporation (ESIC), and Commissioners of Workmen Compensation (CWC) of Delhi Government. The capture-recapture method has been used in epidemiology, to estimate morbidity and mortality using multiple, overlapping, but incomplete data sources. This study is based on the injuries reported from construction site accidents in Delhi in 2017. We linked the data from each of the data sources using the name, gender, and age of each injured person, the date and place of the accident, and the name of the employer. We used the Chapman estimator to estimate the total incidence of construction injuries in Delhi. Results We estimated that there was a total of 37 female construction site workers injured (17 fatal and 20 non-fatal) in Delhi in 2017. There was a total of 1043 male construction site workers injured (236 fatal and 807 non-fatal). FIRs ascertained two-thirds (68%) of all injuries to females but only one third (34%) of those to males. The annual construction site injury rate per 100,000 workers of females was 82.26 (95%CI: 57.92 to 113.39). The annual construction site injury rate per 100,000 workers of males was 146.5 (95%CI: 137.7 to 155.6). There was strong evidence (p = 0.001) that the overall construction site injury rate per 100,000 workers of females was about one half the rate of males [rate ratio 0.56 (95%CI: 0.40 to 0.78)]. There was no evidence (p = 0.601) that the rates of fatal injuries differed in males and females (rate ratio 1.14 (95%CI: 0.70 to 1.87). Conclusions This study is the first to estimate the incidence of injuries to female construction site workers in India. The overall injury rate of female construction workers was over half as great as the rate of males. This implies that female construction workers face a not insignificant risk. Hence, safety measures (e.g., personal protective equipment) that are appropriate and culturally acceptable to Indian women are needed.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10930-6IndiaConstructionInjuriesCapture re-captureFirst information reportsSafety
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sajjan S. Yadav
Phil Edwards
John Porter
spellingShingle Sajjan S. Yadav
Phil Edwards
John Porter
The incidence of construction site injuries to women in Delhi: capture-recapture study
BMC Public Health
India
Construction
Injuries
Capture re-capture
First information reports
Safety
author_facet Sajjan S. Yadav
Phil Edwards
John Porter
author_sort Sajjan S. Yadav
title The incidence of construction site injuries to women in Delhi: capture-recapture study
title_short The incidence of construction site injuries to women in Delhi: capture-recapture study
title_full The incidence of construction site injuries to women in Delhi: capture-recapture study
title_fullStr The incidence of construction site injuries to women in Delhi: capture-recapture study
title_full_unstemmed The incidence of construction site injuries to women in Delhi: capture-recapture study
title_sort incidence of construction site injuries to women in delhi: capture-recapture study
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Background In India, the construction sector provides the main alternative to agricultural work - seasonal migration to and from construction work is widespread and construction work remains the second-largest employer of women in the country behind agriculture. Occupational injuries, which kill over 300,000 people annually, are a serious public health concern. However, data on construction site injuries to women are lacking, as India does not publish statistics on occupational injuries and illnesses. Our objectives were to: Estimate the number of women injured in construction site accidents in Delhi; and to estimate and compare the annual construction site injury rates per 100,000 workers of males and females in Delhi. Methods We conducted a two-sample capture-recapture study using data for accidents reported to the Delhi Police, Employee State Insurance Corporation (ESIC), and Commissioners of Workmen Compensation (CWC) of Delhi Government. The capture-recapture method has been used in epidemiology, to estimate morbidity and mortality using multiple, overlapping, but incomplete data sources. This study is based on the injuries reported from construction site accidents in Delhi in 2017. We linked the data from each of the data sources using the name, gender, and age of each injured person, the date and place of the accident, and the name of the employer. We used the Chapman estimator to estimate the total incidence of construction injuries in Delhi. Results We estimated that there was a total of 37 female construction site workers injured (17 fatal and 20 non-fatal) in Delhi in 2017. There was a total of 1043 male construction site workers injured (236 fatal and 807 non-fatal). FIRs ascertained two-thirds (68%) of all injuries to females but only one third (34%) of those to males. The annual construction site injury rate per 100,000 workers of females was 82.26 (95%CI: 57.92 to 113.39). The annual construction site injury rate per 100,000 workers of males was 146.5 (95%CI: 137.7 to 155.6). There was strong evidence (p = 0.001) that the overall construction site injury rate per 100,000 workers of females was about one half the rate of males [rate ratio 0.56 (95%CI: 0.40 to 0.78)]. There was no evidence (p = 0.601) that the rates of fatal injuries differed in males and females (rate ratio 1.14 (95%CI: 0.70 to 1.87). Conclusions This study is the first to estimate the incidence of injuries to female construction site workers in India. The overall injury rate of female construction workers was over half as great as the rate of males. This implies that female construction workers face a not insignificant risk. Hence, safety measures (e.g., personal protective equipment) that are appropriate and culturally acceptable to Indian women are needed.
topic India
Construction
Injuries
Capture re-capture
First information reports
Safety
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-10930-6
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