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Comparative Study
Laceration injuries among workers at meat packing plants.
- Chunbo Cai, Melissa J Perry, Gary S Sorock, Russ Hauser, Kathleen J Spanjer, Murray A Mittleman, and Terry L Stentz.
- Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
- Am. J. Ind. Med. 2005 May 1; 47 (5): 403-10.
BackgroundEmployees in meat packing experience one of the highest occupational laceration injury rates in the US.MethodA retrospective study was conducted using OSHA 200 injury and illness logs and First Reports of Injury from two large US meat packing plants from 1998 to 2000. The total workers observed during the study period ranged between 2,449 and 2,682 per year.ResultsLaceration injury incidence rates in Plant 1 were 14.0 injuries per 200,000 person hours (per 100 workers per year) in 1998, 11.5 in 1999, and 8.3 in 2000, whereas in Plant 2 the overall incidence rate was 3.7 in 1998, 4.8 in 1999, and 3.0 in 2000. Laceration injury rates in Plant 2 were close to the expected OSHA recordable laceration injury rate in 1999 (3.0 per 100 workers per year), but Plant 1 was considerably higher. Plant 1 had a kill support department, and removed animal hides whereas Plant 2 did not. Handheld non-powered tools were the most common contact objects whereas the slaughter department had the highest number of injuries. Finger injuries from a handheld non-powered tool were the most frequent.ConclusionsFindings confirm the high rate of injury from laceration in this industry and indicate hazard varies across time into shift, task being performed, and type of tool being used.(c) 2005 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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