An epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers

Sawmill jobs rank among the most hazardous occupations in Canada due to the high work-related injury morbidity and fatality rates. As little is known about the circumstances of fatal injuries in this workforce, a study of all fatal injuries (on-the-job and off-the-job) among sawmill workers was unde...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barroetavena, Maria Cristina
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12849
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-12849
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-128492018-01-05T17:36:30Z An epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers Barroetavena, Maria Cristina Sawmill jobs rank among the most hazardous occupations in Canada due to the high work-related injury morbidity and fatality rates. As little is known about the circumstances of fatal injuries in this workforce, a study of all fatal injuries (on-the-job and off-the-job) among sawmill workers was undertaken. The study population comprises over 26,000 workers from the British Columbia Sawmill Workers Cohort. We combined data from this database with B.C. Coroners Service (BCCS) and Workers' Compensation Board (BCWCB) data to analyze the facts surrounding the occurrence of fatal injuries among sawmill workers during 1950-1990. This study consisted of three components: 1) an analysis of the usefulness of the data sources available for surveillance of work-related injuries, 2) an analysis of work-related fatalities among sawmill workers for the period 1950-1990, and 3) an analysis of all fatal injuries in this workforce during 1950-1990. The WCB records alone identified more work-related fatalities than the BCCS files alone (95.4% vs. 81.8%). Each data source has specific limitations precluding a complete count of fatal injuries at the workplace. Forty cohort members were fatally injured while working at a sawmill. The work-related fatality rate was 18.3 per 100,000 person-years. The risk of fatal work-related injury was lower during 1970-1990 than during 1950-1969. Crude fatality rates were higher among workers older than 35 years and in the occupational categories of "machine operators/clearers/sorters" and "mobile equipment operators". Factors related to the workplace physical and socio-cultural environment (e.g. unsafe work station, defective equipment, safety policies) were the main contributors to fatal injuries. When compared to the general male population, sawmill workers had fewer deaths than expected from every injury type except "being caught by machinery". The group of "skilled labour" workers had the lowest risk of dying from motor vehicle crashes and suicides. Fatal motor vehicle crashes and suicides were highest among workers living in isolated mill towns. These findings have implications for prevention. Effective countermeasures should not only address a combination of factors related to the environment, the injury event and the person but these interventions should be evaluated in terms of cost-effectiveness. Medicine, Faculty of Population and Public Health (SPPH), School of Graduate 2009-09-16T20:32:51Z 2009-09-16T20:32:51Z 2001 2001-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12849 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 7889864 bytes application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description Sawmill jobs rank among the most hazardous occupations in Canada due to the high work-related injury morbidity and fatality rates. As little is known about the circumstances of fatal injuries in this workforce, a study of all fatal injuries (on-the-job and off-the-job) among sawmill workers was undertaken. The study population comprises over 26,000 workers from the British Columbia Sawmill Workers Cohort. We combined data from this database with B.C. Coroners Service (BCCS) and Workers' Compensation Board (BCWCB) data to analyze the facts surrounding the occurrence of fatal injuries among sawmill workers during 1950-1990. This study consisted of three components: 1) an analysis of the usefulness of the data sources available for surveillance of work-related injuries, 2) an analysis of work-related fatalities among sawmill workers for the period 1950-1990, and 3) an analysis of all fatal injuries in this workforce during 1950-1990. The WCB records alone identified more work-related fatalities than the BCCS files alone (95.4% vs. 81.8%). Each data source has specific limitations precluding a complete count of fatal injuries at the workplace. Forty cohort members were fatally injured while working at a sawmill. The work-related fatality rate was 18.3 per 100,000 person-years. The risk of fatal work-related injury was lower during 1970-1990 than during 1950-1969. Crude fatality rates were higher among workers older than 35 years and in the occupational categories of "machine operators/clearers/sorters" and "mobile equipment operators". Factors related to the workplace physical and socio-cultural environment (e.g. unsafe work station, defective equipment, safety policies) were the main contributors to fatal injuries. When compared to the general male population, sawmill workers had fewer deaths than expected from every injury type except "being caught by machinery". The group of "skilled labour" workers had the lowest risk of dying from motor vehicle crashes and suicides. Fatal motor vehicle crashes and suicides were highest among workers living in isolated mill towns. These findings have implications for prevention. Effective countermeasures should not only address a combination of factors related to the environment, the injury event and the person but these interventions should be evaluated in terms of cost-effectiveness. === Medicine, Faculty of === Population and Public Health (SPPH), School of === Graduate
author Barroetavena, Maria Cristina
spellingShingle Barroetavena, Maria Cristina
An epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers
author_facet Barroetavena, Maria Cristina
author_sort Barroetavena, Maria Cristina
title An epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers
title_short An epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers
title_full An epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers
title_fullStr An epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers
title_full_unstemmed An epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers
title_sort epidemiologic investigation of injury mortality among sawmill workers
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12849
work_keys_str_mv AT barroetavenamariacristina anepidemiologicinvestigationofinjurymortalityamongsawmillworkers
AT barroetavenamariacristina epidemiologicinvestigationofinjurymortalityamongsawmillworkers
_version_ 1718589205714567168