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Table
Table
Table
Table
Table
Table

1. Number and percent distribution of fatal occupational
2. Number and percent distribution of fatal work injuries
3. Number and percent distribution of fatal occupational
4. Number and percent distribution of fatal occupational
5. Source documents used to compile information on fatal
6. CFOI participating state agencies and telephone numbers

Technical information:
G. Toscano
(202) 606-6175
Media contact:
K. Hoyle
(202) 606-5902

USDL - 93 - 406
FOR RELEASE: 10 a.m. EDT
Friday, October 1, 1993

FIRST NATIONAL CENSUS OF FATAL OCCUPATIONAL INJURIES
REPORTED BY BLS
About one-third of the 6,083 fatalities due to work injuries in 1992
resulted from highway accidents or homicides, each of which accounted for over
1,000 deaths. Falls and workers being struck by objects followed, leading to
nearly 600 workers' deaths apiece. These findings are from the first national
Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the
U.S. Department of Labor.
The BLS census uses multiple sources to identify, verify, and profile
fatal work injuries. Key information about each workplace fatality (occupation
and other worker characteristics, equipment being used, and circumstances of
the event) is obtained by cross-referencing the source records, for example,
death certificates, workers' compensation records, and reports to federal and
state agencies. Table 5 lists the data sources used in the BLS Census of
Fatal Occupational Injuries.
1992 Census Profiles
The incidence of fatal work injury for certain groups of workers is
greater than their proportion of total employment. These groups include men;
the self employed; older workers (age 55 and over); those in farming and
transportation-related occupations; and those in agriculture, mining, and
construction industries. Major findings of the BLS census follow:
* Highway vehicle accidents led all other events, accounting for 18 percent
of the 6,083 fatal occupational injuries in 1992. (See table 1.)
* Homicides were a close second, accounting for 17 percent of the fatally
injured workers in 1992. Homicides were, by far, the most frequent
manner in which women workers were fatally injured.
* A large majority of the fatally injured workers were 25-54 years old.
Workers age 55 and over, however, had a higher risk of a fatal injury
than their 12 percent share of employment.
* Over nine-tenths of the fatally injured workers were men, well above
their 55 percent share of the nation's employment. (See table 2.) Men
are fatally injured more often than women workers primarily because of
differences in the industries and occupations where men and women
typically work.

* The self employed and those working in family businesses accounted for 20
percent of the workplace fatalities--double their share of the nation's
workers.
* Occupations with the largest number of worker fatalities included:
Operators of transportation equipment; farm workers; construction trades;
handlers, helpers, and laborers; and salesworkers. (See table 3.)
- 2 * Among industry groups with the largest number of fatal work injuries were
agricultural crop production, special trades construction contractors
(for example, roofing and electrical work), trucking and warehousing, and
local government (for example, police and firefighters). (See table 4.)
Data on workplace fatalities by state are available from the state
agencies participating with BLS in the census program. Participating agencies
and their telephone numbers are listed in table 6 of this release.

Background of the program
The 1992 Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, part of the recently
redesigned BLS safety and health statistics program, provides a complete
count of fatal work injuries. The annual Survey of Occupational Injuries and
Illnesses, conducted since 1972, has been redesigned to generate worker and
case characteristics of nonfatal workplace injuries and illnesses in addition
to frequency counts and incidence rates by industry. Initial results from
the 1992 survey will be released this December.
The Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries program is a federal/state
cooperative venture developed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics to compile a
comprehensive, accurate, and timely measure of fatal work injuries that occur
during the year. The census approach to compiling data on fatal work injuries
was initially tested by BLS in a cooperative effort with the Texas Department
of Health during 1988. The study, which collected fatality data
retrospectively for 1986, showed that: (1) Multiple data sources, including,
at times, a followup questionnaire, are necessary to produce an accurate
count; (2) matching individual fatalities across data sources is feasible;
(3) for each incident, characteristics of the worker and the circumstances
are commonly available from administrative reports; and (4) timeliness is
important in maximizing response for verification purposes.
The census approach was tested again during 1990-91 to determine whether
the same kind of data could be obtained from multiple data sources on a current
basis. That study, which was conducted in cooperation with the Texas Workers'
Compensation Commission and the Colorado Department of Health, was successfully
concluded in May 1991.
Thirty-two states and New York City participated in the 1991 BLS census
program. The program was expanded to include all 50 states and the District of
Columbia during 1992. Funding for the annual census is shared equally between
BLS and the cooperating states.

- 3 TECHNICAL NOTES
Methods

Data for the Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries are compiled from
various state and federal administrative sources--including death certificates,
workers' compensation reports and claims, reports to various regulatory
agencies, and medical examiner reports--as well as news reports. Multiple
sources are used because studies have shown that no single source captures all
on-the-job fatalities. Source documents are matched so that each fatality is
counted only once. To ensure that a fatality occurred while the decedent was
at work, information is verified from two or more independent source documents,
or from a source document and a followup questionnaire. Approximately 30 data
elements are collected, coded, and tabulated, including information about the
worker, the fatal incident, and the machinery or equipment involved.
Definitions
For a fatality to be considered within the scope of the program, the
decedent must have been employed (that is working for pay, compensation, or
profit) at the time of the event, engaged in a legal work activity, or present
at the site of the incident as a requirement of his or her job. These criteria
are generally broader than the criteria used by federal and state agencies
administering specific laws and regulations.
Data presented in this release include deaths occurring in 1992 that
resulted from traumatic occupational injuries. An injury is defined as any
intentional or unintentional wound or damage to the body resulting from acute
exposure to thermal, mechanical, electrical, chemical, or other form of energy
or from the absence of such essentials as heat or oxygen caused by a specific
event or incident or series of events within a single workday or shift.
Included are open wounds, intracranial and internal injuries, heatstroke,
hypothermia, poisonings and asphyxiations resulting from a short-term exposure
(limited to the worker's shift), suicides and homicides, and work injuries
listed as underlying or contributory causes of death.
Information on work-related fatal illnesses are excluded from the BLS
census and the attached tables because of the latency period of many
occupational illnesses and the resulting difficulties associated with linking
illnesses to work. Partial information on fatal occupational illnesses,
compiled separately, is available to researchers upon request. A total of
1,361 illness cases were collected and coded in 1992. These cases were
primarily heart attacks that occurred at work.
Federal/state agency coverage
Several federal and state agencies have jurisdiction over workplace safety
and health. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) and
affiliated agencies in states with approved safety programs cover the largest
portion of America's workers. However, accidents occurring in several other
industries, such as coal, metal and nonmetal mining, and transportation on
water, rails, or in the air, are excluded from OSHA coverage because they are
covered by other federal agencies, such as the Mine Safety and Health
Administration, the U.S. Coast Guard, the Federal Railroad Administration, and
the Federal Aviation Administration. Fatalities occurring in industries
regulated by federal agencies other than OSHA accounted for about 11 percent of
the fatal work injuries for 1992.
- 4 Fatalities occurring among several other groups of workers are generally
not covered by any federal or state agencies. These groups include selfemployed and unpaid family workers, which accounted for about 20 percent of the
fatalities; laborers on small farms, accounting for about 5 percent of the
fatalities; and state and local government employees in states without OSHAapproved safety programs, about 4 percent. (About one-half of the states have

approved OSHA safety programs which include state and local government
employees in their coverage.)

The Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries includes data for all fatal work
injuries, whether they are covered by OSHA or other federal or state agencies
or are outside the scope of regulatory coverage. Thus, any comparison between
the BLS census counts and those released by other agencies should take into
account the different coverage and definitions being used.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS: BLS thanks the participating states for their efforts in
implementing this new program and appreciates the efforts of all state and
federal agencies that submitted source documents used to identify fatal work
injuries. Among these agencies are the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration; the National Transportation Safety Board; the Department of
Justice (Bureau of Justice Assistance); the Mine Safety and Health
Administration; the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; the National
Institute for Occupational Safety and Health; the Employment Standards
Administration (Federal Employees' Compensation and Longshore and Harbor
Workers' divisions); the Department of Energy; the state vital statistics
registrars, coroners, and medical examiners; the state departments of health,
labor, and industries, and workers' compensation agencies; the state highway
departments; and the state farm bureaus.

##############################################################################
PUBLIC USE DATABASE
A public use database will be available on diskette in February 1994.
Because the Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries data are collected under a
pledge of confidentiality, all personal identifiers will be deleted from the
research file. The database will include about 30 data elements for each
workplace fatality (for example, demographics of the deceased, nature of the
injury), along with a short narrative on how the incident occurred. The
database diskette will be available at cost from BLS. To place an order for
the diskette, contact Cheong Underwood at 202-606-7789.
The national Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries database will not
identify the state where the fatality occurred. State-specific data on
workplace fatalities may be requested from state agencies participating with
BLS in the census program. (See table 6.)
DEVELOPMENTAL FATALITY RATES
On a developmental basis, fatality counts from the BLS census were
combined with information on employment to estimate how frequently groups of
workers sustain fatal work injuries. The results of this work, along with
information about their interpretation and limitations, will be published in
a future issue of the BLS Monthly Labor Review. For additional information,
contact the Office of Safety, Health, and Working Conditions at 202-606-6175.

Table 1. Number and percent distribution of fatal occupational
injuries by event or exposure, 1992
-----------------------------------------------------------Fatalities
Event or exposure1
Number
Percent
-----------------------------------------------------------Total.......................

6,083

100

Transportation accidents............
Highway accidents.................
Collisions between vehicles,
mobile equipment...............
Noncollision accidents..........
Nonhighway accidents (farm,
industrial premises).............
Aircraft accidents................
Workers struck by vehicle.........
Water vehicle accidents...........
Railway accidents.................

2,441
1,121

40
18

553
292

9
5

436
350
342
110
66

7
6
6
2
1

Assaults and violent acts...........
Homicides.........................
Shooting........................
Stabbing........................
Self-inflicted injury.............

1,216
1,004
822
82
183

20
17
14
1
3

Contacts with objects and equipment.
Struck by object..................
Struck by falling object........
Struck by flying object.........
Caught in or compressed
by equipment or objects..........
Caught in or crushed in
collapsing materials.............

1,001
558
360
79

16
9
6
1

312

5

110

2

Falls...............................
Fall to lower level...............
Fall on same level................

590
500
60

10
8
1

593
334

10
5

118
109
76

2
2
1

167

3

Exposures to harmful substances or
environments.......................
Contact with electric current.....
Exposure to caustic, noxious,
or allergenic substances.........
Oxygen deficiency.................
Drowning, submersion............
Fires and explosions................

Other events and exposures2........
75
1
-----------------------------------------------------------1 Based on the 1992 BLS Occupational Injury and Illness
Classification Structures.
2 Primarily includes the category "Bodily reaction and
exertion."
NOTE: Totals for major categories may include subcategories not
shown separately. Percentages may not add to total due to
rounding.
SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, in cooperation with
federal and state agencies, Census of Fatal Occupational
Injuries, 1992

Table 2. Number and percent distribution of fatal work injuries
by selected worker characteristics, 1992
---------------------------------------------------Fatalities

Characteristic
Number
Percent
---------------------------------------------------Total fatalities.............

6,083

100

4,876
1,207

80
20

Men............................
Women..........................

5,657
426

93
7

Both sexes:
Under 20 years................
20 to 24 years................
25 to 34 years................
35 to 44 years................
45 to 54 years................
55 to 64 years................
65 years and over.............

169
528
1,521
1,511
1,143
751
460

3
9
25
25
19
12
8

5,069
608
166
240

83
10
3
4

508

8

Employment status
Wage and salary workers........
Self-employed1.................
Sex and age

Race
White..........................
Black..........................
Asian or Pacific Islander......
Other..........................
Hispanic origin
Hispanic2......................

-----------------------------------------------------------1 Includes paid and unpaid family workers and may include
owners of incorporated businesses, or members of partnerships.
2 Persons identified as Hispanic may be of any race.
NOTE: Percentages may not add to totals because of rounding.
SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, in cooperation with
federal and state agencies, Census of Fatal Occupational
Injuries, 1992

Table 3. Number and percent distribution of fatal occupational
injuries by occupation, 1992
-----------------------------------------------------------Fatalities
Occupation1
Number Percent
-----------------------------------------------------------Total fatalities......................... 6,083
100
Managerial and professional specialty......
Executive, administrative,
and managerial..........................
Professional specialty...................
Technical, sales, and administrative

694

11

437
257

7
4

support...................................
Technicians and related support..........
Sales occupations........................
Administrative support
occupations, including clerical.........

814
199
497

13
3
8

118

2

Service occupations........................
Protective service.......................

526
273

9
4

Farming, forestry, and fishing.............
Farming occupations......................
Forestry and logging occupations.........

931
680
155

15
11
3

Precision production, craft, and repair....
Mechanics and repairers..................
Construction trades......................
Supervisors............................
Carpenters.............................
Electricians...........................

1,054
269
578
88
86
83

17
4
10
1
1
1

Operators, fabricators, and laborers.......
Machine operators, assemblers,
and inspectors..........................
Transportation and material
moving occupations......................
Motor vehicle operators................
Truck drivers........................
Taxicab drivers and chauffeurs.......
Material moving equipment operators....
Handlers, equipment cleaners,
helpers, and laborers...................
Construction laborers..................
Other laborers.........................

1,882

31

223

4

1,100
856
685
106
163

18
14
11
2
3

559
226
170

9
4
3

1542

3

Military occupations (Resident Armed Forces)

-----------------------------------------------------------1 Based on the 1990 Census of Population Occupational
Classification System.
2 Includes 16 workers not reported as active duty military, but
reported as working in a military occupation.
NOTE: Totals for major categories may include subcategories
not shown separately. Percentages may not add to totals because
of rounding. There were 28 fatalities for which there was
insufficient information to determine an occupational
classification.
SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, in cooperation with
federal and state agencies, Census of Fatal Occupational
Injuries, 1992

Table 4. Number and percent distribution of fatal occupational
injuries by industry, 1992
-----------------------------------------------------------|
Fatalities
SIC code1 | Industry
Number
Percent
-----------------------------------------------------------|
Total fatalities.................. 6,083
100
|

Private industry...................

5,384

89

01-02,07-09| Agriculture, forestry, and fishing....
01
|
Agricultural production--crops......
02
|
Agricultural production--livestock..
07
|
Agricultural services...............

800
401
164
136

13
7
3
2

10-14
12
13

| Mining................................
|
Coal mining.........................
|
Oil and gas extraction..............

182
60
83

3
1
1

15-17
15
16
17

| Construction..........................
|
General building contractors........
|
Heavy construction, except building.
|
Special trades contractors..........

903
169
240
494

15
3
4
8

20-39
20
24

| Manufacturing.........................
|
Food and kindred products...........
|
Lumber and wood products............

751
93
220

12
2
4

40-42,44-49| Transportation and public utilities...
41
|
Local and interurban transit........
42
|
Trucking and warehousing............
45
|
Air transportation..................
49
|
Public utilities....................

884
124
443
93
86

15
2
7
2
1

50,51

| Wholesale trade.......................

244

4

52-59
54
55
58

| Retail trade..........................
|
Food stores.........................
|
Auto dealers and gas stations.......
|
Eating and drinking places..........

710
205
108
187

12
3
2
3

60-67

| Finance, insurance, and real estate...

118

2

70-89
73

| Services..............................
|
Detective, guard, and other
|
business services..................
|
Auto repair, services, and parking..

725

12

200
73

3
1

|

699

11

75
91-97

Government2........................

| Federal...............................
241
4
| State.................................
112
2
| Local.................................
338
6
-----------------------------------------------------------1 From Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1987 edition.
2 Also includes workers employed by governmental organizations in
other SICs. There were 8 fatalities to workers employed by
foreign or regional governmental agencies.
NOTE: Totals for major categories may include subcategories not
shown separately. Percentages may not add to totals because of
rounding. There were 67 fatalities for which there was insufficient
information to determine a major industry classification within
private industry.
SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, in cooperation with federal and
state agencies, Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries, 1992

Table 5. Source documents used to compile information on fatal
work injuries, 1992

----------------------------------------------------------Fatalities
Source document
Number1
Percent
----------------------------------------------------------Total........................
6,083
100
Death certificates1.............
State workers' compensation
reports........................
Coroner, medical examiner,
and autopsy reports............
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) reports2..

5,633

93

2,434

40

3,768

61

News media......................
Followup questionnaires3........
State motor vehicle reports.....
Other federal reports4..........
Other reports5..................

2,077
1,504
485
328
2,033

1,926

32
34
25
8
5
33

----------------------------------------------------------1 The total of source documents (20,188) exceeds the total of
verified cases (6,083) because two or more source documents were
used to substantiate each case. Note that some source documents
were received only upon request. In general, these included
autopsy, coroner, and medical examiner reports; followup
questionnaires; and state motor vehicle reports.
The number of death certificates shown includes some death
certificates initially not marked "at work." Seventy-five
percent of the death certificates that the states initially
received were marked "at work."
2 This figure is not a comprehensive count of fatalities
reported to or investigated by OSHA, but represents the available
OSHA reports used to identify or substantiate a work injury
fatality in the CFOI program.
3 Includes telephone followup for missing data and for
clarification of inconsistent data.
4 Includes reports received from the Mine Safety and Health
Administration, the Employment Standards Administration, the
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health's Fatal
Accident Circumstances and Epidemiology program, the Department
of Justice, the Department of Energy, and the National
Transportation Safety Board.
5 Includes reports received from other organizations, such as
state farm bureaus, local police departments, and emergency
medical services.
SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, in cooperation with
federal and state agencies, Census of Fatal Occupational
Injuries, 1992

Table 6.
STATE
Alabama

CFOI participating state agencies and telephone numbers
AGENCY
Department of Labor

TELEPHONE #
(205) 242-3460

Alaska
Arizona
Arkansas
California
Colorado
Connecticut
Delaware
District of Columbia
Florida

Department of Labor
Industrial Commission
Department of Labor
Department of Industrial Relations
Department of Health
Labor Department
Department of Labor
Commission of Public Health
Department of Labor & Emp. & Security

(907)
(602)
(501)
(415)
(303)
(203)
(302)
(202)
(904)

465-4520
542-3739
682-4542
703-5661
692-2164
566-4380
577-2889
727-0682
922-8953

Georgia
Hawaii
Idaho
Illinois
Indiana
Iowa
Kansas
Kentucky
Louisiana
Maine

Department of Labor
Dept. of Labor and Industrial Relations
Industrial Commission
Department of Public Health
Department of Labor
Department of Employment Services
Department of Health and Environment
Labor Cabinet
Department of Employment and Training
Bureau of Labor Standards

(404)
(808)
(208)
(217)
(317)
(515)
(913)
(502)
(504)
(207)

656-3032
586-9005
334-6050
785-1873
232-2682
281-5151
296-5641
564-2454
342-3126
624-6442

Maryland
Massachusetts
Michigan
Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana
Nebraska
Nevada
New Hampshire

Division of Labor and Industry
Department of Public Health
Department of Labor
Department of Labor and Industry
Department of Health
Bureau of Health Statistics
Department of Labor and Industry
Workers' Compensation
Div. of Occupational Safety and Health
Department of Public Health

(410)
(617)
(517)
(612)
(601)
(314)
(800)
(402)
(702)
(603)

333-4202
727-2735
322-1851
297-7428
960-7741
751-6274
541-3904
471-3513
687-5240
271-4651

New Jersey
New Mexico
New York
New York City
North Carolina
North Dakota
Ohio
Oklahoma
Oregon
Pennsylvania

Department of Health
Health and Environment Department
Department of Health
Department of Health
Department of Labor
Workers' Compensation Bureau
Department of Health
Department of Labor
Department of Insurance and Finance
Department of Health

(609)
(505)
(518)
(212)
(919)
(701)
(614)
(405)
(503)
(717)

984-1863
827-2850
458-6228
788-4585
733-2355
224-3893
466-4183
528-1500
378-8254
783-2548

Rhode Island
South Carolina
South Dakota
Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont
Virginia
Washington
West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

Department of Health
Department of Labor
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Department of Labor
Workers' Compensation Commission
Industrial Commission
Department of Labor and Industry
Department of Labor and Industry
Department of Labor and Industries
Department of Labor
Workers' Compensation Division
Department of Employment

(401)
(803)
(816)
(615)
(512)
(801)
(802)
(804)
(206)
(304)
(608)
(307)

277-2812
734-9613
426-2483
741-1991
448-7978
530-6823
828-2765
786-6427
956-5509
558-7890
266-7850
777-5962