孤独农业工人伤亡情况综述

Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.13031/jash.15523
Aaron Etienne, W. Field, Noah Joel Haslett
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引用次数: 0

摘要

农业工人孤独死亡的频率和严重程度尚不清楚,但发现比预期的要高。农业工人经常承担被认为独自可以完成的复杂或危险的任务。在记录和审查的368例农业工人单独病例中,74%导致死亡。所分析的独行工人事故的主要原因是拖拉机翻车。摘要进行了研究,以探讨在确定受害者在事件发生时独自工作的农业伤害和死亡的性质和程度。在目前的数据收集方法中,漏报单独农业工人受伤和死亡的事件分类被认为是一个空白,文献中缺乏对这一问题的讨论。目前的事件报告策略完全否定了关于受害者在受伤时是否独自一人的数据。在2016年至2021年的五年间,研究人员分析了来自几个州的大约1000份个人农业伤害和死亡事件报告。共有368起事件被记录在案,其中农业工人在受伤时被明确认定为独自工作。从现有的案例数据中分析了事件原因、受害者的年龄范围和性别、一年中的时间以及受害者被发现前的几个小时。在这些事件中确定的促成因素包括:(1)农业工人完成公认的危险任务的频率被认为是独自完成的;(2)与偏远地区紧急医疗或救援服务(EMS)的距离;(3)工人与主管、同事或家庭成员之间缺乏沟通;(四)通信设备被缠绕、困住或者有其他损坏,物理接入有困难的;(5)由于在偏远、丘陵或树木繁茂的地区缺乏信号塔和信号,不存在或不佳的蜂窝网络覆盖。受害者往往在事件发生数小时甚至数天后才被发现独自工作,导致74%的死亡率明显高于受伤时其他人在场的情况。关键词:农事伤害,事故伤害及死亡率,农工,拖拉机翻车。
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A Summary of Lone Agricultural Worker Injuries and Fatalities
Highlights The frequency and severity of lone agricultural worker fatalities is unknown and was found to be higher than expected. Agricultural workers frequently take on complex or hazardous tasks perceived to be doable alone. Of the 368 lone agricultural worker cases documented and reviewed, 74% resulted in a fatality. The leading cause of lone worker incidents analyzed was tractor rollover. Abstract. Research was conducted to explore the nature and magnitude of agricultural injuries and fatalities where the victim was determined to be working alone at the time of the incident. Underreporting of lone agricultural worker injuries and fatalities as an incident classification was identified as a gap in current data collection methods, and discussion of the problem was lacking in the literature. Current incident reporting strategies have fully negated data regarding whether the victim was alone at the time of injury. Approximately 1,000 individual agricultural injury and fatality incident reports from several states were analyzed over a five-year period from 2016 to 2021. A total of 368 incidents were documented in which the agricultural worker was clearly identified as working alone at the time of the injury. Incident causes, age range and sex of the victim, time of year, and hours before the victim was found were analyzed from available case data. Contributing factors identified in these incidents included: (1) the frequency of agricultural workers completing recognized hazardous tasks perceived to be doable alone; (2) distance from emergency medical or rescue services (EMS) in remote areas; (3) lack of communication between the worker and their supervisors, coworkers, or family members; (4) difficulties in physically accessing communication devices if entangled, entrapped, or otherwise impaired; and (5) non-existent or poor cellular coverage due to a lack of towers and a lack of signal in remote, or hilly or wooded areas. Victims working alone were often not found for hours or even days after the incident occurred, resulting in the 74% fatality rate of the sample being significantly higher than situations in which others were present at the time of injury. Keywords: Farm-related injuries, Incident injury and fatality rates, Lone agricultural workers, Tractor rollover.
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