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RESEARCHER:
David Fosbroke
AFFILIATION:
Division of Safety Research
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (304) 285-6010
PURPOSE:
Focus future construction safety research on high-risk sectors to address
the industry's most pressing injury problems.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
The construction industry is consistently among the industry sectors of
the U.S. economy with the highest rate of fatal and nonfatal injuries. In
1996, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 1,047 fatal injuries and 492,500
OSHA-recordable injuries in the construction industry, of which 227,400
involved lost or restricted work days.
Over the past decade, NIOSH has developed surveillance systems for fatal
and nonfatal injuries; conducted injury analyses in construction; conducted
field investigations and reported on construction workers killed in falls,
electrocutions, confined spaces, and machinery incidents; established model
construction safety and health programs in three states; and initiated the
assessment and redesign of several manual materials-handling tasks. Using
this information, Division of Safety Research (DSR) will focus on construction
research on high-risk sectors of the construction industry to address the
industry's most pressing injury problems. Traditional research techniques
(e.g., literature review, data analysis, and field evaluations) will be
integrated with information obtained from collaborations with internal and
external partners to identify and prioritize injury research needs.
Research initiated under this project covers a variety of construction topics,
including estimating the working lifetime risk of fatal occupational injury
by occupation and cause of death, developing a guide of worker injury prevention
measures for highway work zones, assessing the feasibility of surveying
industry trade association members regarding work-related injuries, evaluating
the efficacy of toolbox talks, analyzing the stability of scaffolding used
for fall arrest anchorage, and evaluating work zone interventions.
Through analysis of the construction industry, this project will provide
guidance to DSR research staff for identifying new research projects; provide
coordination between DSR, other construction safety research organizations,
federal regulatory agencies, and the NIOSH Construction Steering Committee;
and expand dissemination of construction research needs and results to the
research and construction communities.
KEYWORDS:
Work organization, injuries
RECENT CITATIONS:
Sweeney, M.H. et al. 2000. Health consequences of working in construction.
Ch. 10 in Construction Safety and Health Management, R.J. Coble,
J. Hinze, and T.C. Haupt, eds. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Chen, G-X., and D.E. Fosbroke. 1998. Work-related fatal injury risk of construction
workers by occupation and cause of death. Human and Ecological Rask Assessment,
v. 4, no. 6, pp. 1371- 1390.

RESEARCHER:
Thomas Lentz
AFFILIATION:
Education and Information Division
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 533-8260
PURPOSE:
Identify and characterize injuries and related causes in construction specialty
trades; survey small and large construction firms to identify hazards, training
needs, and other measures of safety awareness; and develop forums and materials
for creating awareness of hazards in construction specialty trades and intervention
and injury prevention strategies.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Of all major industry divisions in 1996, the construction industry experienced
the highest rate for nonfatal injuries (9.7 cases per 100 full-time workers)
with the highest rates among employers having 11 to 49 workers (11.3 cases
per 100 full-time workers). Among the specialty trades, the highest rates
were found for plumbing, heating, and air conditioning; electrical work;
roofing, siding, and sheet metal work; and miscellaneous special trade contractors.
Employees in the construction trades work predominantly for nonunionized
small businesses, with a majority (56%) of private sector work performed
in residential construction.
The high injury rates within the construction specialty trades will be addressed
through three main objectives: (1) Compilation of data on injuries, fatalities,
and related hazards in the plumbing, electrical, roofing, and miscellaneous
specialty trade industries; (2) identification, review, and evaluation of
the effectiveness of regional and national surveillance and intervention
programs targeting specific hazards and recommended safe practices in the
selected trades; and (3) promotion of hazard and safe practices awareness
through presentations to other state and federal agencies at professional
conferences; to labor, management, and contractors' groups; and in professional
journals and trade publications.
Information will be collected on the nature and magnitude of hazards and
related injuries in plumbing, heating, and air conditioning; electrical
work; roofing, siding, and sheet metal work; and miscellaneous specialty
trade contractors. NIOSH resources (i.e., health hazard evaluations, fatality
assessment and control evaluation reports), OSHA accident investigation
reports, and Bureau of Labor Statistics data will be used to obtain information
on hazards specific to these industries. Data from nonconventional surveil-lance
and intervention programs will also be utilized, such as the OSHA construction
accident reduction emphasis program in Florida. Because the construction
specialty trades are largely comprised of small contractors, this program
will address challenges associated with small businesses. Through a partnership
with the Rinker School of Building Construction, University of Florida at
Gainesville, surveys of safety programs and work practices for small and
large construction firms will be conducted. Data from these surveys will
be used to identify differences, if any, between safety practices and related
hazards for small and large construction contractors.
KEYWORDS:
Injury prevention, information
RECENT CITATIONS:
Lentz, T.J., and J. Hinze. 2002. Surveys of occupational safety and health
priorities in selected small and large construction firms. Presentation
at World Conference on Injury Prevention and Control, Montréal, Quebec,
Canada, May 12-15, 2002.
Lentz, T.J., J. Hinze, T. Harrison, R. Medlock, and T. Broderick. 2000.
Surveillance and intervention programs targeting injuries in the construction
industry. Roundtable session, National Occupational Injury Research Symposium,
Pittsburgh, PA, Oct. 17-19, 2000.
RESEARCHER:
Bryan Doney
AFFILIATION:
National Personal Protection Technology Laboratory
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (304) 285-6357
PURPOSE:
Identify methods for conducting surveillance of respirator use and programs
within the construction industry in collaboration with workers and companies.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
OSHA has estimated that approximately 18% of the 4.4 million workers in
the construction industries wear respirators, representing 33% of the 600,000
construction companies. During October 1997 through September 1998, OSHA
issued 427 citations for respirator regulation violations within the construction
industry.
This project resulted from observations at a January 1999 meeting of New
Jersey highway construction contractors in which the contractors voiced
frustration over the conflicts between hiring temporary construction workers
from union hiring halls and the OSHA respirator regulatory requirements
for fit-testing. It seemed evident that neither the companies nor OSHA were
completely comfortable with the feasibility of establishing and administering
efficient respirator fitting programs within this sector of the construction
industry.
A pilot study was developed to identify feasible mechanisms for surveillance
of respirator use within the construction industry. Six focus group meetings
were conducted with contractor members of the Society for Protective Coatings
(SSPC) from May through November 2000. The meetings allowed NIOSH to learn
more about previously reported difficulties with respirator use. The participants
conducted abrasive blasting and coatings experiments with different types
of respirators, from those using filtering facepieces to those using supplied
air. Barriers to respirator protection were categorized as administrative,
engineering, medical, and personal. Participants reported that respirators
were primarily used for lead, paint vapors, carbon monoxide, oxygen deficiency,
acid gas, arsenic, hydrogen sulfide, asbestos, silica, and welding fumes.
Three additional focus groups were held with construction company representatives
with the cooperation of the American Road and Transportation Builders Association
(ARTBA) in September 2001 through March 2002. Two additional focus groups
are planned. A proposal to conduct four focus groups with workers in the
road building industry in FY03 has been submitted.
KEYWORDS:
Respirators, surveillance
RESEARCHER:
Robert Roscoe
AFFILIATION:
Division of Surveillance, Hazard Evaluations, and Field Studies
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (513) 841-4424
PURPOSE:
Assist states in reducing the number of workers having blood lead concentrations
of 25 micrograms per deciliter or more to zero.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
During 2001, 9,943 adults with blood lead levels of 25 micrograms per deciliter
(µg/dL) or higher were identified by Adult Blood Lead Epidemiology and Surveillance
(ABLES) programs in 23 of 25 collaborating states. Extrapolated to the entire
United States, this figure indicates that about 15,500 adults had blood
lead levels of 25 µg/dL or more.
ABLES is a surveillance program for tracking and preventing elevated blood
lead levels among U.S. adults. ABLES data provide the public health community
with essential information for setting priorities for in-depth research,
intervention, and information dissemination. Reports cover all lead-exposed
adults, with about 33% of the reports involving construction workers. Cases
identified through ABLES surveillance are frequently referred by state officials
to state and federal occupational safety agencies for consultation or enforcement
and are used by these officials to target high-risk industries and occupations
for interventions and prevention, including bridge repair, home remodeling,
residential painting, furniture restoration, and plastics compounding.
In 2002, increased funding allowed the ABLES program to expand to 35 states
and collect individual data on age, gender, and industry (but no personal
identifiers) rather than aggregate data. These types of data will be more
useful to ABLES customers such as OSHA, HUD, and the U.S. Dept. of Transportation.
Typical state-level ABLES interventions include (1) conducting follow-up
interviews with physicians, employers, and workers, (2) investigating work
sites, (3) providing technical assistance, (4) providing referrals for consulta-tion
or enforcement, and (5) developing and disseminating educational materials
and outreach programs. NIOSH partners in various lead-reducing initiatives
include OSHA (National Emphasis Program on lead), the former Lead Industries
Association, Inc. (voluntarily lowering lead exposures), CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training, AFL-CIO (training workers about lead safety in construction),
and the Council of State and Territorial Epidemiolo-gists (encouraging surveillance
on adult exposures to lead in all states). Over the next 3 to 5 years, ABLES
plans include improving data standardization, improving the analysis of
trends and magnitude of adult lead exposure, and research to better describe
effective intervention programs.
KEYWORDS:
Lead, surveillance, intervention
RECENT CITATIONS:
Roscoe, R.J., W. Ball, J.J. Curran et al. 2002. Adult blood lead epidemi-ology
and survellance-United States 1998-2001. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report Surveillance Summaries, Dec. 13. V. 51, no. SS-11, 10 pp.
Scholz, P.F., B.L. Materna, D. Harrington, and C. Uratsu. 2002. Residential
and commercial painters' exposure to lead during surface preparation. American
Industrial Hygiene Association Journal, v. 63, pp. 22-28.
Materna, B.L., D. Harrington, P. Scholz, S.F. Payne, H.A. Stubbs, K. Hipkins,
E. Merideth, L. Kirsch, G. Lomax, P. Coyle, and C. Uratsu. 2002. Results
of an intervention to improve lead safety among painting contractors and
their employees. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, v. 41,
pp. 119-130.
RESEARCHER:
Larry Jackson
AFFILIATION:
Division of Safety Research
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (304) 285-5980
PURPOSE:
Collect nationally representative surveillance data on nonfatal occupational
injuries in a timely manner by sampling hospital emergency rooms with the
National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS).
RESEARCH SUMMARY: National surveillance of occupational injuries
is an essential prerequisite to the NIOSH mission of developing measures
to prevent such injuries. While NIOSH has an effective surveillance system
for fatal occupational injuries, nonfatal injury surveillance for the entire
U.S. workforce was not established until July 1995. Based on the National
Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS), we estimate that about 3.6
million workers are treated annually in emergency rooms for occupational
injuries.
NEISS is used to identify and characterize the work-related injury burden
in the United States, direct research and intervention efforts, and influence
occupational safety and health policy. Using NEISS, demographic information
about an injured worker, industry narratives, and a description of the injury
event are collected. National estimates of all work-related traumatic injuries
can be made, as well as estimates for injuries to special populations (e.g.,
children, women, African-Americans), industries (e.g., construction), and
types of injuries (e.g., eye injuries). Detailed telephone follow-up investigations
provide additional information on injury circumstances, worker characteristics,
safety precautions, and injury perceptions. The potential for gleaning injury
risk information from the NEISS telephone investigations is virtually unlimited.
The use of NEISS as an injury surveillance tool is cost effective because
the surveillance system is already established and maintained by the Consumer
Products Safety Commission. The NEISS data are collected from hospital emergency
department records. Work-related injury case data for all workers are transferred
to NIOSH on a monthly basis. Hospitals participating in NEISS were selected
from a stratified probability sample of all hospitals in the United States
and its territories. Each work-related NEISS record contains information
on the characteristics of the victim (e.g., age, sex, race), the injury
or illness (e.g., diagnosis, body part injured), source of injury, injury
event, and a narrative description.
KEYWORDS:
Surveillance, traumatic injuries, special populations
RECENT CITATIONS:
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 2001. Nonfatal occupational
injuries treated in hospital emergency departments-United States, 1998.
V. 50, no. 16, pp. 313-317.
Jackson, L.L. 2001. Nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses treated
in hospital emergency departments in the United States. Injury Prevention,
v. 7, Supplement I, pp. i21-i26.
RESEARCHER:
Bradley J. Husberg
AFFILIATION:
Division of Safety Research
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (907) 271-5259
PURPOSE:
Support and continue to develop the Alaska Trauma Registry (ATR) so it will
become a model trauma registry surveillance system for nonfatal work-related
injuries in Alaska.
RESEARCH SUMMARY: From 1980 through 1989, Alaska had a work-related
fatality rate five times greater than the United States as a whole. The
arctic and subarctic environments of Alaska provide a very hazardous work
setting, exacerbated by great distances, seasonal darkness, cold, and high
winds. The Alaska Trauma Registry (ATR) includes information from 1991 through
1999 for 39,143 injures that required hospitalization; 3,951 (10%) of these
injuries were classified as nonfatal work-related injuries. Logging (23/1000
per year) and construction (7/1000 per year) led the industry categories
with the highest injury rates. The construction industry also had the highest
total number of injuries (740) for the 9-year period.
Surveillance data of nonfatal, work-related injuries can come from various
sources. Originally designed for quality control of state trauma programs,
trauma registries contain many fields of information useful for injury surveillance:
demographics, geographic information, disability, medical cost, payment
source, cause of injury, discharge diagnosis, and severity scoring.
Information for the ATR is abstracted from medical record charts from all
23 hospitals in Alaska and sent to the Alaska Department of Health and Social
Services to be compiled into the ATR database. Analysis of the trend data
and identification of hazardous processes will lead to assessment and implementation
of injury prevention strategies targeted to high-risk areas, such as commercial
fishing (including aquaculture and diving), seafood processing, logging,
aviation, and construction. Specifically, information from the ATR will
be used to—
- Reduce morbidity resulting from work-related injuries in Alaska by
providing data that would allow the development of appropriate prevention
strategies,
- Facilitate comparisons of state, federal, and international data
on work-related injuries that permit trend analyses,
- Improve awareness of nonfatal work-related injury as a significant
health problem,
- Assist in the evaluation of work-related injury-prevention strategies,
and
- Facilitate research for preventing nonfatal work-related injuries.
To help focus on work-related injuries, additional information will be gathered
using comprehensive and mutually exclusive industry and occupation codes.
Training includes recognition, recording, and use of work-related information
for data collectors and hospital staff. Collaboration with external partners
will focus on injury prevention, trend analysis, and worker awareness training.
KEYWORDS:
Traumatic injuries, surveillance, injury prevention
RECENT CITATIONS:
Conway, G.A., J.M. Lincoln, B.J. Husberg, J.M. Manwaring, D.M. Bensyl, and
D.M. Choromanski. 2001. Alaska's model program for occupational injury prevention:
Applying surveillance for effective public health practice. International
Journal of Circumpolar Health, v. 60, pp. 714-726.
Conway, G.A., and B.J. Husberg. 1999. Cold-related nonfatal injuries in
Alaska. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, Supplement 1, Sept.,
pp. 39-41,
Husberg, B.J., G.A. Conway, M. Moore, and M. Johnson. 1998. Surveillance
for nonfatal work-related injuries in Alaska, 1991- 1995. American Journal
of Industrial Medicine, v. 34, pp. 493- 498.
RESEARCHER:
Linda Goldenhar
AFFILIATION:
University of Cincinnati Medical Center (513) 558-6936
CONSORTIUM:
Construction Safety Alliance
PURPOSE:
Develop a survey instrument to collect safety-related data from owners of
smaller (that is, fewer than 100 employees) construction companies.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Much of the previous construction-related safety research has focused on
the unionized sector and on large construction companies. While this work
has been extremely valuable in terms of identifying some of the major construction
hazards and safety- and health-related issues, it may be limited because
approximately 80% of the construction workforce are not members of a union
and 75% work for companies with fewer than 100 employees. In 2000, a telephone
survey instrument was designed to measure the commitment of small-to-medium-sized
companies to worksite health and safety. A pilot study using this survey
was conducted with a small number of open-shop highway construction contractors.
Findings indicated that while most (although not all) companies did provide
safety training to their workers, very little, if any, evaluation of the
effectiveness of the training was done.
The goal of the current study is to continue learning more about the status
of health and safety issues by collecting data from a national sample of
small-to-medium- sized contractors in other sectors of the industry. To
date, focus groups and interviews have been held with local contractors
representative of the target population. They were asked to review the survey
instrument and make comments. All comments have been incorporated into the
current version. The survey is being redesigned so that it can be self-administered
or completed via the Web.
A list of over 9,000 contractors meeting the specific criteria of size and
type has been purchased from Dun and Bradstreet. The Association of General
Contractors (a trade association for small, medium, and large contractors)
has indicated that it is interested in working with the principal investigator
to cross-reference its membership to the Dun and Bradstreet list and possibly
sending a support letter (or e-mail) to the final sample of randomly selected
contractors.
Findings from this study should provide health and safety practitioners
and members of the construction industry with a more realistic picture of
the commitment of small-to-medium-sized, open-shop contractors to health
and safety.
KEYWORDS:
Construction safety, survey, small business
RESEARCHER:
Carol Runyan
AFFILIATION:
University of North Carolina (919) 966-2251
PURPOSE:
Examine the work patterns, practices, and injury experiences among young
workers in the construction industry in North Carolina. Examine the knowledge
and attitudes of parents and employers of teen construction workers with
regard to teen work practices, injury risk, training, and supervision.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
U.S. Department of Labor statistics for 1994- 1998 show that young construction
workers faced risks of fatalities per hour worked twice the risks of all
construction workers aged 25-44. However, youth labor is complex, and youth
labor in construction is especially complex because of the structure of
the industry (many small-scale firms), the composition of the labor force
(growth of Latino workers), and the way work is done (seasonal and multiple
activities). No single data set or methodology can capture the complexity
of the problem or the diversity of the labor force.
Accordingly, our project involves multiple studies that use both quantitative
and qualitative data collection methods and includes collaboration among
universities, nonprofit organizations, and state agencies. One study includes
two telephone surveys of teen construction workers who worked during the
summers of 2000 (n = 123) and 2001 (n = 187) (completed), a mail survey
of employers of teens who worked during summer of 2001 (on-going), and a
telephone survey with parents of the same cohort of teen construction workers
interviewed in 2001 (currently underway). Work permits were used as the
sampling frame for all these surveys. A second study focused on young Latino
construction workers and involved face-to-face interviews with 50 workers.
Both quantitative and qualitative data were collected. A third study involved
secondary data analyses of injuries among teen construction workers in the
home building industry in North Carolina. This study was completed and the
findings were published in a journal article.
The teen telephone surveys have revealed that a significant number of teens
were engaged in hazardous tasks prohibited by North Carolina child labor
laws. For example, in 2001, 23% of the teen sample worked on power-driven
lifting equipment, 16% operated heavy equipment such as graders or excavators,
and 35% used power saws.
Results will be interpreted, and findings will be disseminated at a meeting
with various stakeholders so that recommendations for injury prevention
can be developed.
KEYWORDS:
Young workers, hazard identification, construction safety
RECENT CITATIONS:
Bowling, J.M., C.W. Runyan, M.D. Schulman, and J.A. Dal Santo. 2001. Use
of work permits for targeted studies and surveillance of high risk low incidence
teenage occupations. Presentation at American Public Health Association
Conference, Atlanta, GA, Oct. 2001.
Lipscomb, H.J., and L. Li. 2001. Injuries among teens employed in the homebuilding
industry in North Carolina. Injury Prevention, v. 7, pp. 205-209.
Treiber, L., M.D. Schulman, C.W. Runyan, J.M. Bowling, J.A. Dal Santo, and
H. Lipscomb. 2001. A descriptive study of young workers' experiences in
construction. Presentation at American Public Health Association Conference,
Atlanta, GA, Oct. 2001.
RESEARCHER:
Judith Glazner
AFFILIATION:
University of Colorado (303) 315-7939
PURPOSE:
Develop methods for cataloguing and coding data appearing in injury incident
descriptions found in standard First Reports of Injury (FRI) and Accident
Investigation Reports (AIR) and link these data with existing coded administrative
data. Analyze the linked data to identify and quantify factors contributing
to injury.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Construction workers not only have high rates of work-related injuries,
but they are among the most likely workers to experience serious injuries.
The combination of information from injury reports with an administrative
database containing claims, demographic data, and hours worked will provide
a rich source for describing injuries and the factors contributing to them.
The utility of these data will then be evaluated to test specific hypotheses
about factors differentially associated with different types of injury as
well as different levels of injury severity. The data will also be used
to determine direct costs of injury for high-risk groups of workers and
for specific factors contributing to injury.
Study aims will be accomplished by coding and analyzing data from standardized
FRI's and AIR's linked with an administrative database from construction
of the Denver International Airport. This database contains information
on over 4,600 workers' compensation claims, payroll and demographic data
on 32,081 workers who worked over 31 million hours on the airport, and company
characteristics for 769 contractors.
The results should allow identification of the causes of work-related injuries
and provide information useful for focusing specific prevention efforts
on the more costly risk factors in the construction industry. In addition,
the methods developed should have applicability to data from other occupational
groups.
KEYWORDS:
Surveillance, injuries, risk factors
RECENT CITATIONS:
Lowery, J.T., J.A. Borgerding, B. Zhen, J.E. Glazner, J. Bondy, and K. Kreiss.
1998. Risk factors for injury among construction workers at Denver International
Airport. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, v. 34, no. 2, pp.
113-120.
RESEARCHER:
Laura Welch
AFFILIATION:
MedStar Research Institute (202) 877-5466
PURPOSE:
Develop a credible measure of the amount of disability, disability retirement,
early retirement, and job change caused by injury, illness, and musculoskeletal
disease among roofers.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Standard, well-developed instruments and techniques will be used to survey
union construction workers at the time they leave their trade and 1 year
later. Questions will include reason for leaving, nature of injury or illness
if present, functional limitations at the time of leaving and after 1 year,
and the social and economic consequences of their decisions. This study
will focus on three groups of roofers: (1) those who leave the trade at
any time in their careers before retiring, (2) those who take early retirement;
and (3) those who apply for disability retirement. A comparable group of
roofers who continue to work will be interviewed also. Specifically we will—
- Determine what proportion of roofers leave the union before retirement
age, retire early, or apply for disability retirement because of a work-related
injury, work-related disease, or chronic medical condition;
- Determine what proportion of roofers who continue to work in the
trade have chronic symptoms from a work-related injury, work-related
disease, or chronic medical condition;
- Describe the social and economic impact of a work-related injury,
illness, or premature retirement caused by a medical condition;
- Evaluate changes in the social and economic status over time in roofers
who leave the union, retire early, or take disability retirement;
- Assess and describe the impact of work-related conditions and aging
on the ability of roofers to remain employed in their trade.
KEYWORDS:
Roofers, social impacts, economic impacts
RESEARCHER:
Sue Dong
AFFILIATION:
CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training (301) 578-8500
PURPOSE:
Estimate costs to workers not covered by workers' compensation and understand
the economic impact of injury and illness on construction workers, especially
self-employed workers.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
The more than 194,000 annual lost-workday injuries and illnesses in construction
result in considerable economic costs to workers, their families, employers,
and society, yet little research has been done on describing and measuring
these costs. Currently, information on the costs of injuries and illnesses
derives mainly from workers' compensation, but workers' compensation does
not address all costs, nor does it cover all workers. For example, little
information has been available on more than 2 million self-employed workers
in the construction industry.
This project is expected to (1) quantify costs of occupational injury and
illness and the burden on construction workers and their families, especially
the costs incurred by workers not typically addressed in existing approaches
to the problem, (2) determine who pays the costs of occupational injury,
illness, and disability according to workforce characteristics, and (3)
estimate the costs of leading injuries and illnesses in construction. The
Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS) and the National Health Interview
Survey (NHIS) will be linked together for this study.
The initial investigation of the data sets has been done. Variables related
to work-related injuries and medical expenditures selected from the Medical
Condition File and Full-Year Consolidated Data File have been merged. Because
of constraints under the confidentiality guidelines of the Agency for Healthcare
Research and Quality (AHRQ) (the agency sponsoring the survey), some MEPS
data cannot be released to the public. An application for using this confidential
data has been submitted and approved. Currently, the linkage file—1996 NHIS/1997
MEPS Public Use Person Record Linkage—has been obtained and will be used
to link MEPS and NHIS for the data analysis.
KEYWORDS:
Injury and illness, cost, workers' compensation, self-employment
RESEARCHER:
Sue Dong
AFFILIATION:
CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training (301) 578-8500
PURPOSE:
Characterize the construction industry and its workers and provide background
information for construction safety and health research.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
As described in the National Occupational Research Agenda, work organization
is influenced by factors such as economic conditions, technological changes,
demographic trends, and changing corporate and employment practices. These
trends may adversely affect work organization and may result in, for example,
increased work load demands, longer and more varied work shifts, and job
insecurity. However, the actual effects of these trends on the conditions
of work and on the well-being of workers have received little study.
This project is designed to characterize the construction industry and workers,
to observe the changes and trends, and to study the effects of these trends
on the conditions of construction work and on the safety and health of construction
workers. The project addresses wide issues using data from various sources,
including the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Census Bureau, Dun and Bradstreet,
and the Internal Revenue Service. This project will help people better understand
the construction industry, its workers, and related issues.
The major findings have been compiled into the third edition of The Construction
Chart Book-The U.S. Construction Industry and Its Workers and will be posted
on CPWR's Website and eLCOSH—the Electronic Library of Construction Occupational
Safety and Health.
KEYWORDS:
Workers, employment, job tenure, demographics, education, training, hours
worked, overtime, technology, wage, income, unionization, benefits
RECENT CITATIONS:
Dong, X. 2002. Diversity in the workplace: Trends and their safety and health
implications. In Power Through Partnerships: 12th Annual Construction
Safety and Health Conference, Proceedings (May 21-23, 2002, Rosemont,
IL).
Dong, X. 2001. Demographics of the construction and maintenance workforce.
Presentation at Transportation Research Board annual meeting, Washington,
DC.
Grob, H., X. Dong, E. Pollack, S. Schneider, and J. Seegal. 1998. The
Construction Chart Book, The U.S. Construction Industry and Its Workers,
2nd ed. Washington DC: CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training.
Grob, H., X. Dong, E. Pollack, S. Schneider, and J. Seegal. 1997. The
Construction Chart Book, The U.S. Construction Industry and Its Workers,
1st ed. Washington DC: CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training.
RESEARCHERS:
Jim Platner and Sue Dong
AFFILIATION:
CPWR – Center for Construction Research and Training (301) 578-8500
PURPOSE:
Examine the trends in the Hispanic construction workforce and analyze the
characteristics and relative risks for occupational injuries of Hispanic
construction workers.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
In recent years, the Hispanic population has dramatically increased in the
United States. Construction has become the sector of the workforce with
the highest percentage of Hispanic workers outside of agriculture, more
than tripling during the last two decades. At the same time, the incidence
of occupational injuries among this group are increasing, indicating that
the safety and health needs of Hispanics require special attention.
Injury (both fatal and nonfatal) and demographic (occupation, education,
age, and other) data on Hispanic workers in construction will be collected,
as well as information on the risk of workplace injuries. The findings will
help policy makers and those concerned with safety and health in the construction
industry better understand the issues of Hispanic construction workers.
The statistical analysis will be based on data from Current Population Surveys,
the Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, and the Survey of Occupational
Injuries and Illnesses.
Initial findings show that compared with nonHispanic construction workers,
Hispanic construction workers (1) are much younger, mostly noncitizens,
less educated, less unionized, and earn less wages, (2) are mostly employed
as unskilled or semiskilled workers with few managers or professionals,
and (3) have higher fatality rates and lower nonfatal injury and illness
rates. Given that both fatal and nonfatal rates should be proportional to
exposures to risk, nonfatal injuries and illnesses may be underreported
among Hispanic workers. Additional research is needed to evaluate factors
that place Hispanic construction workers at higher risk and to evaluate
the effectiveness of public health interventions targeted to eliminate this
disparity.
KEYWORDS:
Hispanic workers, demographics, work-related injury, fatality, safety and
health
RECENT CITATIONS:
Dong, X., and J. Platner. 2002. Workplace safety and health of Hispanic
construction workers. In Power Through Partnerships: 12th Annual Construction
Safety and Health Conference, Proceedings (May 21-23, 2002, Rosemont,
IL).
Dong, X., and J. Platner. 2002. Occupational fatalities in Hispanic construction
workers. Presentation at 130th Public Health Association meeting, Philadephia,
PA.

RESEARCHER:
Hongwei Hsiao
AFFILIATION:
Division of Safety Research
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (304) 285-5910
PURPOSE:
Study the human form to (1) collect data on human sizes in three dimensions
for better design of workplaces and personal protective equipment, (2) elucidate
the interaction between the human shape and anthropometric design decisions
for complex systems, and (3) provide fundamental information for human modeling
to evaluate strategies for preventing traumatic injuries.
RESEARCH SUMMARY:
Many of the anthropometric data available regarding the fit or design of
personal protective equipment (PPE) are two-dimensional and out of date.
Reliable information on sizing for civilians, women, and minorities is limited.
PPE's that are physically incompatible with workers' body shapes are not
likely to provide the level of protection and comfort required to permit
them to work productively.
A state-of-the-art whole-body laser scanner is being used to collect human
images and create a database. The scanner uses low-power laser light reflected
from the surface of the skin to generate a highly accurate image of the
human form. The first study on fall protection harness sizing was completed
using 98 subjects. A multivariate accommodation analysis has identified
15 representative body models for the "standard size" harness design. These
models can serve as a useful population to test harness design until a larger
survey of the nation's construction workers can be done. Data from 96 subjects
have been collected for the study on tractor cabs. A technical report on
anthropometric criteria for the design of farm tractor cabs will be available
next year. The research team continues to work with partners to develop
theories for quantifying three-dimensional human shapes and sizing information
for PPE designs.
The specific outputs from this project will be (1) an anthropometric guide
to aid users in the selection of the appropriately sized fall-protection
harnesses, (2) a sizing system for the design of fall-protection harnesses,
and (3) anthropometric criteria for the design of farm tractor cabs to increase
the safety of farm tractor operation.
KEYWORDS:
Protective equipment, fit-sizing, fall protection
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