• J. Occup. Environ. Med. · Nov 2007

    Occupational injury costs and alternative employment in construction trades.

    • Geetha M Waehrer, Xiuwen S Dong, Ted Miller, Yurong Men, and Elizabeth Haile.
    • Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, Calverton, MD 20705, USA. waehrer@pire.org
    • J. Occup. Environ. Med. 2007 Nov 1;49(11):1218-27.

    ObjectiveTo present the costs of fatal and non-fatal days-away-from-work injuries in 50 construction occupations. Our results also provide indirect evidence on the cost exposure of alternative construction workers such as independent contractors, on-call or day labor, contract workers, and temporary workers.MethodsWe combine data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics on average annual incidence from 2000 to 2002 with updated per-case costs from an existing cost model for occupational injuries. The Current Population Survey provides data on the percentage of alternative construction workers.ResultsConstruction laborers and carpenters were the two costliest occupations, with 40% of the industry's injury costs. The 10 costliest construction occupations also have a high percentage of alternative workers.ConclusionsThe construction industry has both a high rate of alternative employment and high costs of work injury. Alternative workers, often lacking workers' compensation, are especially exposed to injury costs.

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