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RESEARCHER: Jane
Seegal
AFFILIATION:
CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training (301) 578-8500
PURPOSE:
Reduce the high toll in injuries, illnesses, and deaths in construction
by making top-quality information on safety and health easily accessible
to workers and others.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
eLCOSH is a user-friendly, searchable Website (www.elcosh.org.)
containing more than 500 documents on construction safety and health. More
than 30 of the postings are in Spanish (along with a Spanish site map),
and some documents are provided in other languages, such as Creole, Italian,
and Polish. The intended audience is anyone interested in improving construction
safety and health in the construction industry, including researchers, but
a key goal is to provide workers with information about how to protect themselves.
Contributors include federal and state agencies, newspapers, trade magazines,
university researchers, and labor unions. The collection includes pocket
cards and brochures for workers, Power Point presentations, checklists,
statistics, and information on regulations in the United States and elsewhere.
Some of the documents are not available anywhere else.
A few one-page postings written by the staff of CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training provide basic information that is often hard to pin down, such as
"When do you need fall protection?" The site is organized by hazard,
trade, (type of) job site, and other, with a separate
section on training and more than 40 annotated links to other sites on construction
safety and health. eLCOSH is updated quarterly and provides a What's
New section. A 7-minute CD-ROM presentation (in English) provides a
tour of the site and is available upon request. The site was first posted
in August 2000. As of September 2001, eLCOSH had 12,500 visits per month
and 57,500 hits.
KEYWORDS:
eLCOSH, database, training, hazards, trades, prevention, workers, Web, Internet,
safety, health
RECENT CITATIONS:
Seegal, J., and S. Benjamin. 2002. A Web-based resource for construction
safety and health. Applied Occupational and Environmental Hygiene,
v. 17, no. 4, pp. 244-46.
RESEARCHER:
Sue Dong
AFFILIATION: CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training (301) 578-8500
PURPOSE:
Monitor the health and safety of workers in the construction industry, provide
ongoing measures to assess the effectiveness of interventions, and provide
detailed data on the health and safety of workers in each construction trade
quickly so they can be used to answer questions raised by people in the
construction industry, by researchers, and by the general public.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
The data from the Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI) and the Annual
Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses (both put out by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics [BLS]) are used to follow trends in the health and safety
of workers. CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training (CWPR) has obtained CFOI
data on all work-related fatal injuries annually from BLS since 1992 and
is completing an analysis that looks at trends in death rates from 1992
through 2000. These data indicate that death rates in the construction industry
have remained roughly unchanged at around 14 deaths per 100,000 full-time
workers. In those occupations with consistently high death rates—laborers,
roofers, ironworkers, and electrical workers—the accident narratives have
provided useful clues to aid in the development of targeted interventions.
Since 1992, CPWR has been charting trends in nonfatal injury rates in the
construction industry using the annual survey data. Although these data
show a downward trend in nonfatal injury rates, questions remain regarding
the validity of the trend. About 20%-25% of the workers in the construction
trades are self-employed and therefore are excluded from the survey; in
addition, the survey includes only the private sector. Others factors that
may lead to underreporting of injuries are that (1) many occupational diseases
have long latency periods and often go untracked and (2) injuries among
temporary workers at work sites are usually reported to staffing agencies
that are not considered part of the construction industry. These and other
reasons lead us to believe that the number of nonfatal injuries and illnesses
in construction are significantly underreported. Discussions are being held
with OSHA to study ways to improve record-keeping systems for OSHA's 300
logs that form the basis of the survey.
A third project at the Data Center aims to assess the effects of training
interventions on work-related injuries among construction laborers in Washington
State. We have been able to link data on workers' compensation claims and
safety training received by some 600 members of the Northwest Laborers'
Health and Welfare Fund during 1993-1994. Although we are in the initial
stages, we hope this study will provide evidence that safety and health
training can be an effective intervention.
KEYWORDS:
Data analysis, injury, illness, fatalities, rates, trends, training
RECENT CITATIONS:
Pollack, E.S., and R.T. Chowdhury. 2001. Trends in work-related death and
injury rates among U.S. construction workers, 1992-1998. Silver Spring,
MD: CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training.
The figure is a reduced view of the Website screen.
RESEARCHERS:
Mark Carrozza and Ronald Freyberg
AFFILIATION:
University of Cincinnati Medical Center (513) 556-5077
CONSORTIUM:
Construction Safety Alliance
PURPOSE:
Develop a scalable database to warehouse data on occupational fatalities,
injuries, and illnesses in the construction industry collected from disparate
sources.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Data on occupational fatalities, injuries, and illnesses in the construction
industry currently exists in many national, regional, and state data systems.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) annually reports on the number of workplace
injuries, illnesses, and fatalities; state information on fatal accidents
is available through NIOSH's Fatal Accident and Circumstance Epidemiology
(FACE) system; and the National Center for Health Statistics' (NCHS) National
Health Interview Survey (NHIS) produces accident and injury data based on
its annual nationwide survey. More-detailed safety and health data are collected
at the individual worker level and are maintained by labor unions, individual
construction companies, and trade associations.
A single, scalable database was designed and developed that is capable of
housing this information from both a summary level (for example, BLS and
FACE data) and at the worker level. The database was developed using Microsoft
SQL Server, version 7.0, and can grow efficiently and economically as new
data are collected.
A limited Web-based application was also developed that allows access to
the data over the Internet. The custom application, developed using the
Internet "middleware" software ColdFusion, takes the user's selection criteria
and builds a query using standard structured query language (SQL) statements.
SQL is then used to query the underlying SQL database and returns the results
to the user's Web browser. The combination of Microsoft SQL Server and ColdFusion
produces a highly scalable and reliable application that allows users to
access and summarize quickly the comprehensive information maintained in
the database.
This database will provide a single, comprehensive means of access to data
that describe the health and safety status of the construction industry.
Longitudinal data will allow investigations of possible trends over time
for selected safety and health outcomes. Individual worker characteristics
can be linked to health and safety outcomes. The data could also be used
to generate hypotheses for epidemiology studies or, ultimately, to suggest
strategies aimed at reducing fatalities, injuries, and illnesses in the
construction industry.
KEYWORDS:
Database, construction safety, Website
The figure is a reduced view of the Website screen.
RESEARCHER:
Daniel Halpin
AFFILIATION:
Construction Safety Alliance Purdue University (765) 494-2244
PURPOSE:
Provide other construction stakeholders, including small-to-medium-sized
construction company managers, health departments, safety professionals,
and workers, with practical, up-to-date safety and health information.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
The Website contains pertinent summaries of research from partners in the
Construction Safety Alliance (CSA) and safety education and training material
relating to the focus areas of CSA's research projects. The Website serves
as a clearinghouse for construction safety and health education and information
resources. It also provides links to other relevant Websites, such as those
maintained by NIOSH, OSHA, the Construction Industry Institute, CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training, the Construction Safety Association of Ontario,
and the Principal Contractors Safety Alliance. The Website is designed to
be user friendly and easily understandable to both safety professionals
and construction workers.
The Website also allows users to query the data and download extracts for
additional analysis. The data are accessible at two levels.
- The first level includes only CSA access for sharing data and information
resources associated with ongoing research and surveillance projects.
This access is password-protected for CSA members and their designated
collaborators.
- The second level is for general use for accessing all information,
published data, and resources as CSA makes it available. This level
requires no password and will be advertised in trade journals and other
construction-related publications.
The Website is currently being tested by construction safety professionals
and at this stage primarily serves as a communication portal for CSA members.
The prototype Website can be accessed through the link (https://engineering.purdue.edu/CSA).
More information will be added as research projects within CSA are developed.
KEYWORDS:
Website, construction safety, database, safety education, safety training
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This paper appears in the eLCOSH website with the permission of the author
and/or copyright holder and may not be reproduced without their consent. eLCOSH is an
information clearinghouse. eLCOSH and its sponsors are not responsible for the accuracy of
information provided on this web site, nor for its use or misuse.
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