{"title":"社论:安全专业人员影响变革的力量。","authors":"Melvin L Myers","doi":"10.13031/jash.13984","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>In 2006, Cole et al. (2006) reported on tractor overturn-related injuries in Kentucky from a random sample of farmers that numbered 6,063 respondents. The highest number of people who experienced tractor overturns were operators 16 to 20 years old. In 2007, at a National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Tractor Safety Initiative meeting in Colorado, John Myers of NIOSH presented a map of the states with the highest overturn fatality rates: Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Illinois. Significantly, four of these states, including Kentucky, overlap the Appalachian region (Cole, 2007; Hard and Myers, 2001). In Kentucky, this region involves farming on slopes, as examined by Saman et al. (2012), who found a high-risk cluster of tractor overturns among ten Kentucky counties in the Appalachian region, with a 97% increased risk of overturn as compared to other Kentucky counties. In 1971, James Arndt of Deere & Company presented a 50-year review of rollover protective structures (ROPS) at a Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) conference. Arndt (1971) estimated that, over the previous 50 years, 30,000 operators had been killed when crushed by tractor overturns in agriculture and construction work. Since then, ROPS have been recognized as an effective device to prevent death in the event of a tractor overturn (Reynolds and Groves, 2000). Nevertheless, the epidemic of tractor-related deaths has continued into the modern era, and the cost of ROPS has been found to be a significant barrier to retrofitting tractors that lack ROPS (Myers et al., 1998). To provide a low-cost alternative, NIOSH safety engineers have designed, tested, and provided instructions for building and fitting cost-effective ROPS (CROPS) onto pre-ROPS tractors (i.e., tractors built before 1968) (Hard et al., 2016).</p>","PeriodicalId":45344,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Agricultural Safety and Health","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2020-06-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.13031/jash.13984","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial: The Power of Safety Professionals to Effect Change.\",\"authors\":\"Melvin L Myers\",\"doi\":\"10.13031/jash.13984\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><p>In 2006, Cole et al. (2006) reported on tractor overturn-related injuries in Kentucky from a random sample of farmers that numbered 6,063 respondents. The highest number of people who experienced tractor overturns were operators 16 to 20 years old. In 2007, at a National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Tractor Safety Initiative meeting in Colorado, John Myers of NIOSH presented a map of the states with the highest overturn fatality rates: Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Illinois. Significantly, four of these states, including Kentucky, overlap the Appalachian region (Cole, 2007; Hard and Myers, 2001). In Kentucky, this region involves farming on slopes, as examined by Saman et al. (2012), who found a high-risk cluster of tractor overturns among ten Kentucky counties in the Appalachian region, with a 97% increased risk of overturn as compared to other Kentucky counties. In 1971, James Arndt of Deere & Company presented a 50-year review of rollover protective structures (ROPS) at a Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) conference. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
2006年,Cole等人(2006)从肯塔基州随机抽样的6063名农民中报告了与拖拉机翻车相关的伤害。经历拖拉机翻车的人数最多的是16至20岁的操作员。2007年,在科罗拉多州举行的美国国家职业安全与健康研究所(NIOSH)拖拉机安全倡议会议上,NIOSH的约翰·迈尔斯(John Myers)展示了一幅地图,上面列出了翻车死亡率最高的几个州:田纳西州、肯塔基州、西弗吉尼亚州、俄亥俄州、宾夕法尼亚州和伊利诺伊州。值得注意的是,其中四个州,包括肯塔基州,与阿巴拉契亚地区重叠(Cole, 2007;Hard and Myers, 2001)。根据Saman等人(2012)的研究,在肯塔基州,该地区涉及斜坡耕作,他们发现在阿巴拉契亚地区的十个肯塔基县中存在拖拉机翻车的高风险集群,与肯塔基州其他县相比,翻车的风险增加了97%。1971年,美国迪尔公司的James Arndt在美国汽车工程师学会(SAE)会议上发表了一篇关于侧翻防护结构(ROPS) 50年发展的综述。Arndt(1971)估计,在过去的50年里,在农业和建筑工作中,有3万名操作员被拖拉机翻倒压死。从那时起,ROPS已被认为是一种有效的装置,以防止死亡的拖拉机翻车事件(雷诺兹和格罗夫斯,2000年)。尽管如此,与拖拉机相关的死亡流行病一直持续到现代,并且发现ROPS的成本是改装缺乏ROPS的拖拉机的一个重大障碍(Myers等人,1998年)。为了提供一种低成本的替代方案,NIOSH安全工程师已经设计、测试并提供了在pre-ROPS拖拉机(即1968年之前制造的拖拉机)上建造和安装具有成本效益的ROPS(庄稼)的说明(Hard et al., 2016)。
Editorial: The Power of Safety Professionals to Effect Change.
In 2006, Cole et al. (2006) reported on tractor overturn-related injuries in Kentucky from a random sample of farmers that numbered 6,063 respondents. The highest number of people who experienced tractor overturns were operators 16 to 20 years old. In 2007, at a National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) Tractor Safety Initiative meeting in Colorado, John Myers of NIOSH presented a map of the states with the highest overturn fatality rates: Tennessee, Kentucky, West Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Illinois. Significantly, four of these states, including Kentucky, overlap the Appalachian region (Cole, 2007; Hard and Myers, 2001). In Kentucky, this region involves farming on slopes, as examined by Saman et al. (2012), who found a high-risk cluster of tractor overturns among ten Kentucky counties in the Appalachian region, with a 97% increased risk of overturn as compared to other Kentucky counties. In 1971, James Arndt of Deere & Company presented a 50-year review of rollover protective structures (ROPS) at a Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) conference. Arndt (1971) estimated that, over the previous 50 years, 30,000 operators had been killed when crushed by tractor overturns in agriculture and construction work. Since then, ROPS have been recognized as an effective device to prevent death in the event of a tractor overturn (Reynolds and Groves, 2000). Nevertheless, the epidemic of tractor-related deaths has continued into the modern era, and the cost of ROPS has been found to be a significant barrier to retrofitting tractors that lack ROPS (Myers et al., 1998). To provide a low-cost alternative, NIOSH safety engineers have designed, tested, and provided instructions for building and fitting cost-effective ROPS (CROPS) onto pre-ROPS tractors (i.e., tractors built before 1968) (Hard et al., 2016).