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Fatal work injury counts, 1992-2001
SOURCE:
US Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census of Fatal
Occupational Injuries, 2000
Fatal work injury counts in the private construction industry, 1992-2001
Numbers and rates of fatal occupational injuries by industry division,
2001
NOTE: Data exclude fatalities resulting from September 11 terrorist
attacks.
SOURCE: US Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census of
Fatal Occupational Injuries, 2001.
Rate = (Fatal work injuries/Employment) x 100,000 workers. Employment
data extracted from the 2001 Current Population Survey (CPS). The fatality
rates were calculated using employment as the denominator; employment-based
rates measure the risk for those employed during a given period of time,
regardless of exposure hours. Occupations
in the private construction industry with the highest number of fatalities,
2001

*Selected occupations had a minimum of 40 fatalities and 45,000 employed
workers in 2001..
NOTE: Data exclude fatalities resulting from September 11 terrorist
attacks.
SOURCE: US Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census of
Fatal Occupational Injuries, 2001
Distribution
of fatalities in the construction industry and to all workers by event,
2001
Distribution of falls to lower level by detailed event, 2001
Fatalities in the private construction industry by location, 2001

Fatalities to construction workers and all workers by age, 2001
Fatalities to
construction workers and all workers by race or ethnicity, 2001
Construction Laborers
- High number
of fatalities - 349 in 2001
- Fatality rate
was 34 per 100,000 workers in 2001
- Leading events
- transportation incidents (33%), and falls (26%)
- Hispanic construction
laborer fatalities have more than doubled since the Census began in
1992 from 50 to 120 in 2001
Carpenters
- 112 fatalities
in 2001
- Fatality rate
in 2001 was 8 per 100,000 workers
- Leading event
- falls (63%)
- 30% of fatalities
are to Hispanic workers
Roofers
- 78 fatalities
in 2001
- Fatality rate
in 2001 was 36 per 100,000 workers
- Leading events
- falls (73%)
- 28% of fatalities
to roofers were to Hispanic workers
Electricians
- 109 fatalities
in 2001
- Fatality rate
in 2001 was 13 per 100,000 workers
- Leading event
- electrocutions (51%)
Structural metal
workers
- Highest fatality
rate of occupations in construction industry with 58 fatalities per
100,000 workers
- Relatively small
number of fatalities with 45 in 2001
- Leading event
- falls (89%)

For More Information:
cfoistaff@bls.gov
for fatalities
oshstaff@bls.gov for non-fatal
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