TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects NAICS code3 Industry2 Total cases Total Private industry6,7 ......................... Goods producing6 394,090 143,740 Natural resources and mining6,7 ......... Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting6 ................................................... Crop production6 ............................................ Vegetable and melon farming6 ................... Fruit and tree nut farming6 .......................... Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production6 ............................................... Other crop farming6 .................................... Animal production6 ......................................... Cattle ranching and farming6 ...................... Beef cattle ranching and farming, including feedlots6 ................................ Dairy cattle and milk production6 ............ Hog and pig farming6 .................................. Poultry and egg production6 ....................... Other animal production6 ............................ Forestry and logging ....................................... Logging ....................................................... Fishing, hunting and trapping ......................... Support activities for agriculture and forestry ......................................................... Support activities for crop production ......... Support activities for crop production ..... Cotton ginning .................................... Soil preparation, planting, and cultivating ......................................... Postharvest crop activities (except cotton ginning) .................................. Farm labor contractors and crew leaders .............................................. Farm management services ............... Support activities for animal production ..... Support activities for forestry ...................... Mining7 ...................................................... Struck against object 85,500 54,970 79,310 167,180 36,150 68,200 31,200 30,060 31,820 33,410 10,850 Struck by object 1,234,680 338,080 167,730 ............................ Slips or trips without fall Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level 27,890 11,210 5,720 2,280 2,440 2,240 2,720 600 11 18,870 7,310 3,630 1,610 1,380 1,690 1,900 460 111 1112 1113 7,700 1,540 – 2,880 760 1,380 1,400 440 550 800 170 440 410 120 200 580 40 370 820 120 280 150 – – 1114 1119 112 1121 2,370 480 4,260 2,140 560 160 1,260 550 300 110 540 280 140 40 240 120 70 – 390 120 110 60 310 170 370 50 460 230 90 20 180 130 11211 11212 1122 1123 1129 113 1133 114 770 1,360 670 1,060 290 1,790 1,690 190 220 330 260 340 70 870 870 – 100 180 150 60 20 630 630 – 20 100 50 40 – 150 150 – 80 40 60 180 20 – – – 100 60 30 100 – 300 300 30 90 140 50 130 40 250 180 – 20 100 – 40 – 60 60 – 115 1151 11511 115111 4,930 4,240 4,240 290 2,280 2,010 2,010 210 1,060 870 870 – 420 370 370 – 570 550 550 120 470 390 390 – 370 270 270 – 80 70 70 – 115112 260 70 60 20 – 115114 1,180 460 230 90 115115 115116 1152 1153 1,690 360 370 320 710 230 100 170 420 80 40 150 80 130 40 – 21 9,020 3,900 2,090 670 See footnotes at end of table. Page 1 – – – 120 70 120 – 70 250 – 60 20 110 20 50 40 – – – 560 820 – – – 1,060 40 140 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment In lifting Repetitive motion Private industry6,7 ......................... 298,130 159,970 43,790 51,860 61,170 Total Goods producing6 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person 2,600 21,470 14,560 All other assaults All other events5 6,910 134,940 ............................ 80,900 42,360 18,030 17,300 12,360 1,170 1,950 560 1,390 42,590 Natural resources and mining6,7 ......... 4,450 1,960 290 1,350 1,490 90 850 60 790 2,600 Agriculture, forestry, fishing and hunting6 ................................................... 2,310 1,280 230 830 1,080 20 850 60 790 2,190 990 240 260 530 180 170 100 – – 500 80 90 480 30 130 – – – 20 – – 1,190 240 570 480 20 590 220 170 – 280 120 70 20 40 80 50 180 60 260 50 120 50 – – – – 20 – 750 590 – – – 20 – 710 570 340 40 360 140 90 130 120 190 40 100 100 – 60 60 30 80 40 30 30 30 140 450 90 – 50 – – – – – – – – – – – 140 440 90 – 30 – – – 40 90 20 140 50 80 50 60 70 60 Crop production6 ............................................ Vegetable and melon farming6 ................... Fruit and tree nut farming6 .......................... Greenhouse, nursery, and floriculture production6 ............................................... Other crop farming6 .................................... Animal production6 ......................................... Cattle ranching and farming6 ...................... Beef cattle ranching and farming, including feedlots6 ................................ Dairy cattle and milk production6 ............ Hog and pig farming6 .................................. Poultry and egg production6 ....................... Other animal production6 ............................ Forestry and logging ....................................... Logging ....................................................... Fishing, hunting and trapping ......................... Support activities for agriculture and forestry ......................................................... Support activities for crop production ......... Support activities for crop production ..... Cotton ginning .................................... Soil preparation, planting, and cultivating ......................................... Postharvest crop activities (except cotton ginning) .................................. Farm labor contractors and crew leaders .............................................. Farm management services ............... Support activities for animal production ..... Support activities for forestry ...................... 210 130 130 70 40 – 100 60 20 – Mining7 ...................................................... 2,130 680 610 570 570 80 40 – 420 400 400 70 – – – – – 30 30 70 40 30 – – – – – 40 – – – – 50 – 100 100 – – – – – – – – – – 140 120 120 – 330 310 310 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 500 430 430 – – 20 20 – – – – 70 50 130 – – – – 90 30 20 150 – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 270 – 20 50 – – – 410 30 – – – – 80 60 60 50 – – – – – – 70 See footnotes at end of table. Page 2 520 – – 410 70 70 60 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Oil and gas extraction ..................................... Oil and gas extraction ................................. Oil and gas extraction ............................. Crude petroleum and natural gas extraction .......................................... Mining (except oil and gas)8 ........................... Coal mining8 ............................................... Coal mining8 ........................................... Bituminous coal and lignite surface mining8 ............................................. Bituminous coal underground mining8 ............................................. Anthracite mining8 .............................. Metal ore mining8 ....................................... Iron ore mining8 ...................................... Gold ore and silver ore mining8 .............. Gold ore mining8 ................................. Silver ore mining8 ............................... Copper, nickel, lead, and zinc mining8 ... Lead ore and zinc ore mining8 ............ Copper ore and nickel ore mining8 ..... Other metal ore mining8 ......................... All other metal ore mining8 ................. Nonmetallic mineral mining and quarrying8 ................................................. Stone mining and quarrying8 .................. Dimension stone mining and quarrying8 ......................................... Crushed and broken limestone mining and quarrying8 .................................. Crushed and broken granite mining and quarrying8 .................................. Other crushed and broken stone mining and quarrying8 ...................... Sand, gravel, clay, and ceramic and refractory minerals mining and quarrying8 ............................................. Construction sand and gravel mining8 ............................................. Kaolin and ball clay mining8 ............... Clay and ceramic and refractory minerals mining8 ............................... Struck by object 211 2111 21111 1,050 1,050 1,050 280 280 280 150 150 150 211111 212 2121 21211 1,040 4,980 2,910 2,910 280 2,190 1,370 1,370 150 1,100 710 710 212111 620 230 212112 212113 2122 21221 21222 212221 212222 21223 212231 212234 21229 212299 2,250 30 320 50 80 70 20 130 20 110 60 50 2123 21231 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 90 90 90 70 70 70 90 90 90 – 560 350 350 90 500 300 300 70 350 130 130 80 500 300 300 – – – 70 110 50 100 70 – 1,140 – 130 20 30 30 – 50 – 40 30 20 640 – 60 – 20 – – 30 – 20 20 – 240 – 40 – – – – 20 – – – – 250 – 30 – – – – – – – – – 40 220 – 30 – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,750 920 690 370 320 180 180 100 180 90 170 80 – – 212311 210 110 80 212312 450 160 60 212313 70 30 20 212319 190 80 30 30 20 20 20 – 21232 640 260 110 70 70 80 70 – 212321 212324 530 60 210 20 110 – 50 – – – – – – 212325 60 20 – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 3 – – – Fall to lower level – 20 50 – – 20 – – – – – – – – – 190 100 – 50 – 50 – 60 – 50 40 – 40 – 60 40 40 40 – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 200 200 200 30 30 30 20 20 20 50 50 50 140 140 140 190 1,530 890 890 30 480 270 270 20 20 – – 50 210 80 80 140 40 30 30 160 40 – 30 710 – 110 20 30 20 – 40 – 40 20 20 230 – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 530 300 170 110 – – 70 40 – 150 50 – Total Oil and gas extraction ..................................... Oil and gas extraction ................................. Oil and gas extraction ............................. Crude petroleum and natural gas extraction .......................................... Mining (except oil and gas)8 ........................... Coal mining8 ............................................... Coal mining8 ........................................... Bituminous coal and lignite surface mining8 ............................................. Bituminous coal underground mining8 ............................................. Anthracite mining8 .............................. Metal ore mining8 ....................................... Iron ore mining8 ...................................... Gold ore and silver ore mining8 .............. Gold ore mining8 ................................. Silver ore mining8 ............................... Copper, nickel, lead, and zinc mining8 ... Lead ore and zinc ore mining8 ............ Copper ore and nickel ore mining8 ..... Other metal ore mining8 ......................... All other metal ore mining8 ................. Nonmetallic mineral mining and quarrying8 ................................................. Stone mining and quarrying8 .................. Dimension stone mining and quarrying8 ......................................... Crushed and broken limestone mining and quarrying8 .................................. Crushed and broken granite mining and quarrying8 .................................. Other crushed and broken stone mining and quarrying8 ...................... Sand, gravel, clay, and ceramic and refractory minerals mining and quarrying8 ............................................. Construction sand and gravel mining8 ............................................. Kaolin and ball clay mining8 ............... Clay and ceramic and refractory minerals mining8 ............................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 20 – 20 – – – – – – – – – 100 50 – 30 Fires and explosions All other events5 Total By person All other assaults 20 20 20 – – – – – – – – – 130 130 130 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 130 140 90 90 – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 – Assaults and violent acts 20 60 – – – – – – – – – – – 50 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 – – – – – 40 60 20 – 180 40 – 40 20 150 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 4 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Other nonmetallic mineral mining and quarrying8 ............................................. Potash, soda, and borate mineral mining8 ............................................. Phosphate rock mining8 ..................... Other chemical and fertilizer mineral mining8 ............................................. All other nonmetallic mineral mining8 ............................................. Support activities for mining ........................... Support activities for mining ....................... Support activities for mining ................... Drilling oil and gas wells ..................... Support activities for oil and gas operations ......................................... 21239 190 212391 212392 90 20 212393 50 20 212399 213 2131 21311 213111 30 2,990 2,990 2,990 1,480 213112 Construction ......................................... Struck by object 60 30 30 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – Fall to lower level 20 Fall on same level 20 Slips or trips without fall 30 – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 1,430 1,430 1,430 780 – 850 850 850 450 – – 460 460 460 250 – 140 140 140 70 – 230 230 230 100 – 90 90 90 60 1,510 650 400 40 220 70 130 20 157,070 55,590 30,640 12,600 6,170 21,750 12,360 4,900 – 80 80 80 60 Construction ............................................. 23 157,070 55,590 30,640 12,600 6,170 21,750 12,360 4,900 Construction of buildings ................................ Residential building construction ................ Nonresidential building construction ........... Heavy and civil engineering construction ....... Utility system construction .......................... Land subdivision ......................................... Highway, street, and bridge construction ... Other heavy and civil engineering construction .............................................. Specialty trade contractors ............................. Foundation, structure, and building exterior contractors ................................................ Poured concrete foundation and structure contractors ............................. Structural steel and precast concrete contractors ............................................ Framing contractors ............................... Masonry contractors ............................... Roofing contractors ................................ Siding contractors ................................... Other foundation, structure, and building exterior contractors ............................... Building equipment contractors .................. 236 2361 2362 237 2371 2372 2373 31,190 19,520 11,670 18,860 8,860 820 6,950 12,020 7,550 4,470 6,490 3,140 310 2,220 7,540 5,040 2,500 3,830 1,910 220 1,340 2,130 1,110 1,020 1,110 400 30 490 1,060 430 640 1,030 600 50 270 4,840 3,780 1,060 1,510 890 50 460 2,370 1,370 1,010 1,550 710 110 430 930 560 370 580 170 50 320 2379 238 2,230 107,020 810 37,080 360 19,270 180 9,360 100 4,080 100 15,400 300 8,440 50 3,390 2381 31,270 11,620 7,060 2,260 920 5,070 2,320 910 23811 5,870 2,090 1,060 580 140 590 450 180 23812 23813 23814 23816 23817 2,360 7,710 5,290 6,130 1,250 1,050 4,120 1,560 1,650 290 640 3,170 780 900 100 140 550 400 320 160 180 110 220 150 30 240 1,130 800 1,610 420 240 600 280 530 120 60 150 150 240 – 23819 2382 740 40,490 360 13,600 190 6,080 – 4,540 80 1,510 130 4,850 40 3,370 – 1,130 See footnotes at end of table. Page 5 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Other nonmetallic mineral mining and quarrying8 ............................................. Potash, soda, and borate mineral mining8 ............................................. Phosphate rock mining8 ..................... Other chemical and fertilizer mineral mining8 ............................................. All other nonmetallic mineral mining8 ............................................. Support activities for mining ........................... Support activities for mining ....................... Support activities for mining ................... Drilling oil and gas wells ..................... Support activities for oil and gas operations ......................................... In lifting 60 20 Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – 20 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – 410 410 410 230 – 170 170 170 110 – – 230 230 230 50 – 50 50 50 – – 250 250 250 120 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 140 140 140 50 180 60 – 140 180 40 – – – 90 Construction ......................................... 28,520 15,720 2,490 5,520 6,190 380 460 180 280 18,910 Construction ............................................. 28,520 15,720 2,490 5,520 6,190 380 460 180 280 18,910 Construction of buildings ................................ Residential building construction ................ Nonresidential building construction ........... Heavy and civil engineering construction ....... Utility system construction .......................... Land subdivision ......................................... Highway, street, and bridge construction ... Other heavy and civil engineering construction .............................................. Specialty trade contractors ............................. Foundation, structure, and building exterior contractors ................................................ Poured concrete foundation and structure contractors ............................. Structural steel and precast concrete contractors ............................................ Framing contractors ............................... Masonry contractors ............................... Roofing contractors ................................ Siding contractors ................................... Other foundation, structure, and building exterior contractors ............................... Building equipment contractors .................. 5,470 2,960 2,500 3,150 1,440 70 1,190 2,850 1,450 1,400 1,590 670 40 650 530 340 180 340 180 – 150 620 350 270 1,160 620 40 430 700 430 270 1,870 500 60 1,050 30 30 30 140 120 20 60 – – 40 30 110 100 – 30 – – – 3,540 2,050 1,490 2,090 1,160 120 630 450 19,910 220 11,290 – 1,620 60 3,740 250 3,630 – 270 – 260 – 120 – 140 180 13,290 5,850 3,710 450 1,110 760 20 90 60 30 3,060 1,180 660 70 340 350 – 40 40 410 860 1,440 1,050 130 210 570 980 670 70 – 120 180 40 – 70 30 210 420 – 20 20 90 40 130 – – – – – 110 7,840 80 4,160 – 710 – 1,700 40 1,470 – 30 30 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 6 – – 30 80 40 – – 150 20 – – – – – 50 – – 30 – – – 570 – – – – – – – – – 20 230 660 590 540 110 – – – – 30 5,620 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Electrical contractors .............................. Plumbing, heating, and air-conditioning contractors ............................................ Other building equipment contractors .... Building finishing contractors ...................... Drywall and insulation contractors .......... Painting and wall covering contractors ... Flooring contractors ................................ Finish carpentry contractors ................... Other building finishing contractors ........ Other specialty trade contractors ............... Site preparation contractors ................... All other special trade contractors .......... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 23821 17,860 5,490 2,030 2,080 770 2,420 1,530 400 23822 23829 2383 23831 23832 23833 23835 23839 2389 23891 23899 20,740 1,890 20,820 9,240 3,660 1,080 4,600 1,450 14,440 7,290 7,150 7,540 570 6,380 2,430 730 530 1,980 450 5,480 2,660 2,810 3,780 270 3,170 1,240 290 290 1,000 270 2,960 1,450 1,500 2,370 90 1,500 600 230 80 520 50 1,070 360 700 550 200 730 180 170 40 220 100 920 560 360 2,330 100 4,130 1,930 990 40 940 220 1,360 820 530 1,640 210 1,720 610 330 40 460 240 1,030 590 430 690 40 660 330 170 50 60 20 680 240 440 209,130 76,940 31,830 16,310 21,450 7,830 18,330 5,350 Manufacturing ....................................... Manufacturing ........................................... 31-33 209,130 76,940 31,830 16,310 21,450 7,830 18,330 5,350 Food manufacturing ....................................... Animal food manufacturing ......................... Animal food manufacturing ..................... Dog and cat food manufacturing ........ Other animal food manufacturing ....... Grain and oilseed milling ............................ Flour milling and malt manufacturing ..... Flour milling ........................................ Rice milling ......................................... Starch and vegetable fats and oils manufacturing ....................................... Wet corn milling .................................. Breakfast cereal manufacturing .............. Sugar and confectionery product manufacturing ........................................... Sugar manufacturing .............................. Sugarcane mills .................................. Cane sugar refining ............................ Beet sugar manufacturing .................. Confectionery manufacturing from purchased chocolate ............................ Nonchocolate confectionery manufacturing ....................................... Fruit and vegetable preserving and specialty food manufacturing .................... 311 3111 31111 311111 311119 3112 31121 311211 311212 23,470 890 890 250 640 780 380 200 110 7,170 320 320 90 220 190 100 80 20 2,840 220 220 20 200 70 40 30 – 1,570 20 20 – – 30 – – – 2,360 80 80 70 – 60 20 – – 1,180 100 100 30 70 40 20 20 – 3,160 110 110 – 100 80 40 – – 620 – – – – – – – – 31122 311221 31123 200 60 190 3113 31131 311311 311312 311313 30 – – – 60 30 1,080 330 120 30 180 280 80 40 – 30 80 30 20 31133 310 60 31134 310 110 3114 2,950 890 See footnotes at end of table. Page 7 – – 30 – 320 – – – 20 – – – 20 40 30 30 20 20 20 – – – 30 – – – 120 – – – – – – – – 210 60 20 – 30 – – – – – 20 – 90 – – 90 – 50 – 230 250 170 370 20 80 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Electrical contractors .............................. Plumbing, heating, and air-conditioning contractors ............................................ Other building equipment contractors .... Building finishing contractors ...................... Drywall and insulation contractors .......... Painting and wall covering contractors ... Flooring contractors ................................ Finish carpentry contractors ................... Other building finishing contractors ........ Other specialty trade contractors ............... Site preparation contractors ................... All other special trade contractors .......... 3,130 1,570 190 920 810 4,330 380 4,060 2,030 740 240 600 190 2,160 1,130 1,030 2,360 230 2,380 1,170 330 140 470 120 1,040 550 480 500 20 290 160 80 – – – 170 40 130 660 120 390 220 50 – 60 40 540 180 360 500 160 310 120 60 – 80 40 1,090 710 380 Manufacturing ....................................... 47,930 24,670 15,240 10,430 Manufacturing ........................................... 47,930 24,670 15,240 Food manufacturing ....................................... Animal food manufacturing ......................... Animal food manufacturing ..................... Dog and cat food manufacturing ........ Other animal food manufacturing ....... Grain and oilseed milling ............................ Flour milling and malt manufacturing ..... Flour milling ........................................ Rice milling ......................................... Starch and vegetable fats and oils manufacturing ....................................... Wet corn milling .................................. Breakfast cereal manufacturing .............. Sugar and confectionery product manufacturing ........................................... Sugar manufacturing .............................. Sugarcane mills .................................. Cane sugar refining ............................ Beet sugar manufacturing .................. Confectionery manufacturing from purchased chocolate ............................ Nonchocolate confectionery manufacturing ....................................... Fruit and vegetable preserving and specialty food manufacturing .................... 4,940 110 110 40 70 210 120 30 50 2,520 50 50 20 30 120 70 – 40 1,640 – – – – 50 30 20 – 40 30 70 – 40 – – 40 20 – – – – – – 2,860 – – – – – – – – – – 70 20 40 2,480 290 2,790 1,350 490 150 400 230 1,810 840 960 40 30 – – – – 30 30 – – – – – – – 700 640 320 320 21,070 10,430 4,670 700 640 320 320 21,070 1,590 30 30 – 20 40 – – – 720 100 100 20 80 30 30 – – 30 230 – – – – – – – – 160 – – – – – – – – 80 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 2,200 90 90 40 50 120 30 20 – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 60 20 20 70 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 170 60 – – 60 – – – – – 40 – – – – – 50 – – – – 340 30 210 60 20 – 40 120 20 – – – – – – – 60 40 40 60 60 20 20 620 360 150 230 70 – – 20 Page 8 80 All other assaults 4,670 – – See footnotes at end of table. Total All other events5 By person 80 30 50 50 – Fires and explosions 60 30 20 – – – – Assaults and violent acts – 90 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Frozen food manufacturing .................... Frozen fruit, juice, and vegetable manufacturing ................................... Frozen specialty food manufacturing ................................... Fruit and vegetable canning, pickling, and drying ............................................. Fruit and vegetable canning ............... Dried and dehydrated food manufacturing ................................... Dairy product manufacturing ...................... Dairy product (except frozen) manufacturing ....................................... Fluid milk manufacturing .................... Creamery butter manufacturing .......... Cheese manufacturing ....................... Dry, condensed, and evaporated dairy product manufacturing ............. Ice cream and frozen dessert manufacturing ....................................... Animal slaughtering and processing .......... Animal slaughtering and processing ...... Animal (except poultry) slaughtering .. Meat processed from carcasses ........ Rendering and meat byproduct processing ........................................ Poultry processing .............................. Seafood product preparation and packaging ................................................. Seafood product preparation and packaging ............................................. Fresh and frozen seafood processing ........................................ Bakeries and tortilla manufacturing ............ Bread and bakery product manufacturing ....................................... Retail bakeries .................................... Commercial bakeries .......................... Frozen cakes, pies, and other pastries manufacturing ..................... Cookie, cracker, and pasta manufacturing ....................................... Cookie and cracker manufacturing ..... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 31141 1,320 410 130 90 140 50 160 40 311411 710 200 70 50 50 30 100 40 311412 610 210 70 40 90 31142 311421 1,630 1,240 480 370 190 160 140 90 110 90 120 80 210 180 40 30 311423 3115 340 3,420 90 930 30 280 60 330 – 270 30 190 20 380 – 120 31151 311511 311512 311513 3,000 1,900 60 900 760 470 20 250 240 150 – 80 280 140 – 120 200 140 – 40 190 160 – 20 360 240 – 100 100 80 – 20 311514 150 20 – – – – 31152 3116 31161 311611 311612 420 6,730 6,730 2,430 1,640 170 2,280 2,280 750 560 40 1,060 1,060 410 260 50 490 490 160 130 70 640 640 140 170 – 310 310 100 60 30 830 830 260 190 – 140 140 40 50 311613 311615 340 2,330 110 860 40 350 60 140 20 320 20 130 50 340 20 20 3117 1,090 320 160 80 70 80 150 20 31171 1,090 320 160 80 70 80 150 20 311712 3118 650 4,310 220 1,280 110 410 60 240 50 580 50 160 90 720 – 170 31181 311811 311812 3,450 510 2,680 1,040 110 870 330 50 260 200 – 180 470 60 390 130 – 120 620 130 440 130 30 70 311813 260 60 30 40 30 31182 311821 730 450 200 140 70 60 80 50 30 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 9 – 20 40 30 90 50 – 60 20 – 20 20 – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 320 230 100 90 30 – – – – 110 170 110 30 50 20 – – – – 60 160 120 60 40 – – – – 60 300 180 130 80 50 30 140 130 60 50 – – – – – – – – 220 170 110 870 40 450 – 240 – 260 – – – – – – 70 780 530 – 190 400 290 – 90 210 50 – 160 210 70 – 80 50 20 40 90 1,100 1,100 450 340 50 450 450 180 130 20 750 750 320 140 50 260 – 120 260 Total Frozen food manufacturing .................... Frozen fruit, juice, and vegetable manufacturing ................................... Frozen specialty food manufacturing ................................... Fruit and vegetable canning, pickling, and drying ............................................. Fruit and vegetable canning ............... Dried and dehydrated food manufacturing ................................... Dairy product manufacturing ...................... Dairy product (except frozen) manufacturing ....................................... Fluid milk manufacturing .................... Creamery butter manufacturing .......... Cheese manufacturing ....................... Dry, condensed, and evaporated dairy product manufacturing ............. Ice cream and frozen dessert manufacturing ....................................... Animal slaughtering and processing .......... Animal slaughtering and processing ...... Animal (except poultry) slaughtering .. Meat processed from carcasses ........ Rendering and meat byproduct processing ........................................ Poultry processing .............................. Seafood product preparation and packaging ................................................. Seafood product preparation and packaging ............................................. Fresh and frozen seafood processing ........................................ Bakeries and tortilla manufacturing ............ Bread and bakery product manufacturing ....................................... Retail bakeries .................................... Commercial bakeries .......................... Frozen cakes, pies, and other pastries manufacturing ..................... Cookie, cracker, and pasta manufacturing ....................................... Cookie and cracker manufacturing ..... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – – – – – – – – – 60 490 490 110 90 – 200 200 70 50 – – 300 40 250 140 50 260 140 130 1,070 All other assaults 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – 130 130 120 – – – 30 490 490 210 160 20 60 – – – – – – – – 30 90 80 50 – – – – 70 50 80 50 – – – – 70 90 540 30 220 40 180 – – – 90 – – 60 390 850 150 630 460 150 280 140 – 110 160 40 120 – – – 260 50 200 60 30 30 – 200 140 70 40 70 40 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 10 20 80 20 20 20 20 50 330 300 230 – 70 – 30 30 20 All other events5 – – – – – 60 50 Total By person – 90 90 70 – 40 40 – – – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – 100 30 – 80 40 40 40 40 40 – 40 40 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Flour mixes and dough manufacturing from purchased flour ........................ Dry pasta manufacturing .................... Other food manufacturing ........................... Snack food manufacturing ...................... Roasted nuts and peanut butter manufacturing ................................... Other snack food manufacturing ........ Flavoring syrup and concentrate manufacturing ....................................... Seasoning and dressing manufacturing ....................................... Spice and extract manufacturing ........ All other food manufacturing .................. Perishable prepared food manufacturing ................................... All other miscellaneous food manufacturing ................................... Beverage and tobacco product manufacturing ............................................... Beverage manufacturing ............................ Soft drink and ice manufacturing ............ Soft drink manufacturing .................... Bottled water manufacturing ............... Ice manufacturing ............................... Breweries ............................................... Wineries ................................................. Tobacco manufacturing .............................. Tobacco stemming and redrying ............ Tobacco product manufacturing ............. Cigarette manufacturing ..................... Other tobacco product manufacturing ................................... Textile mills ..................................................... Fiber, yarn, and thread mills ....................... Fiber, yarn, and thread mills ................... Yarn spinning mills ............................. Yarn texturizing, throwing, and twisting mills ..................................... Thread mills ........................................ Fabric mills ................................................. Broadwoven fabric mills ......................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – – 120 40 30 – 280 40 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 311822 311823 3119 31191 190 90 2,230 580 40 – 680 150 – – 240 50 311911 311919 130 450 60 90 20 30 31193 140 31194 311942 31199 340 140 910 150 40 220 30 20 70 – 311991 510 140 50 – 311999 390 80 20 30 40 312 3121 31211 312111 312112 312113 31212 31213 3122 31221 31222 312221 4,680 4,280 3,410 2,630 550 240 170 610 400 30 370 250 1,190 1,010 790 540 130 120 50 170 180 – 170 110 430 360 300 240 50 – – 50 70 – 60 30 320 300 190 150 40 – 20 90 20 – 20 – 350 290 250 110 30 110 – – 60 – 60 50 180 170 140 120 20 – – – – – – – 430 400 310 220 60 – 30 50 30 – 30 30 100 100 90 80 – – – – – – – – 312229 313 3131 31311 313111 120 1,780 250 250 170 60 700 90 90 50 30 270 30 30 – – 140 20 20 20 – 230 20 20 – – – 200 – – – – 313112 313113 3132 31321 40 30 890 380 20 30 340 150 – – – – – 120 50 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 11 – – 20 140 80 20 20 20 30 40 30 – 310 90 – – – – – – 20 – – 80 – 100 – 40 20 40 90 60 – – – – – 30 40 20 – 20 20 130 – – 80 – 30 60 70 – – – 100 30 – – 130 60 – – 20 20 – 30 – – – – – 20 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 30 – 280 70 20 – 110 40 – – 210 40 – – 20 110 – – – – 30 – Total Flour mixes and dough manufacturing from purchased flour ........................ Dry pasta manufacturing .................... Other food manufacturing ........................... Snack food manufacturing ...................... Roasted nuts and peanut butter manufacturing ................................... Other snack food manufacturing ........ Flavoring syrup and concentrate manufacturing ....................................... Seasoning and dressing manufacturing ....................................... Spice and extract manufacturing ........ All other food manufacturing .................. Perishable prepared food manufacturing ................................... All other miscellaneous food manufacturing ................................... Beverage and tobacco product manufacturing ............................................... Beverage manufacturing ............................ Soft drink and ice manufacturing ............ Soft drink manufacturing .................... Bottled water manufacturing ............... Ice manufacturing ............................... Breweries ............................................... Wineries ................................................. Tobacco manufacturing .............................. Tobacco stemming and redrying ............ Tobacco product manufacturing ............. Cigarette manufacturing ..................... Other tobacco product manufacturing ................................... Textile mills ..................................................... Fiber, yarn, and thread mills ....................... Fiber, yarn, and thread mills ................... Yarn spinning mills ............................. Yarn texturizing, throwing, and twisting mills ..................................... Thread mills ........................................ Fabric mills ................................................. Broadwoven fabric mills ......................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 60 – 490 120 60 40 30 – 60 40 20 240 20 20 150 110 60 130 90 1,520 1,460 1,350 1,070 210 70 20 50 60 – 50 50 910 880 810 650 100 60 – 40 30 – 20 20 110 100 80 70 – – – – 20 – 20 – – 340 30 30 30 – 190 – – – – – – 170 70 – – 90 40 20 Fires and explosions Total All other assaults – – – – 80 20 – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 All other events5 20 60 190 70 – 60 30 50 90 30 – – – 40 40 30 – – – – 50 – – – – – 20 210 180 130 90 40 – 30 – 30 – 30 – 280 280 210 180 30 – – 50 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 130 – – – – – – – – – – – 40 90 20 20 40 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 12 70 – 30 – – By person – – – – – 30 Assaults and violent acts 20 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 610 550 300 250 40 – 20 210 60 – 60 40 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 200 70 70 60 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 30 20 20 – 20 20 70 30 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Narrow fabric mills and schiffli machine embroidery ........................................... Narrow fabric mills .............................. Nonwoven fabric mills ............................ Knit fabric mills ....................................... Weft knit fabric mills ........................... Other knit fabric and lace mills ........... Textile and fabric finishing and fabric coating mills .............................................. Textile and fabric finishing mills .............. Broadwoven fabric finishing mills ....... Textile and fabric finishing (except broadwoven fabric) mills ................... Fabric coating mills ................................. Textile product mills ........................................ Textile furnishings mills .............................. Carpet and rug mills ............................... Curtain and linen mills ............................ Curtain and drapery mills ................... Other household textile product mills .................................................. Other textile product mills ........................... Textile bag and canvas mills .................. Canvas and related product mills ....... All other textile product mills ................... Tire cord and tire fabric mills .............. All other miscellaneous textile product mills .................................................. Apparel manufacturing ................................... Apparel knitting mills .................................. Hosiery and sock mills ............................ Other hosiery and sock mills .............. Other apparel knitting mills ..................... Outerwear knitting mills ...................... Cut and sew apparel manufacturing ........... Men’s and boys’ cut and sew apparel contractors ........................................ Men’s and boys’ cut and sew apparel manufacturing ....................................... Men’s and boys’ cut and sew suit, coat, and overcoat manufacturing .... Men’s and boys’ cut and sew shirt (except work shirt) manufacturing .... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 20 20 30 20 20 30 31322 313221 31323 31324 313241 313249 140 140 160 210 90 120 70 70 70 50 20 20 3133 31331 313311 630 370 250 270 130 100 313312 31332 314 3141 31411 31412 314121 120 260 1,540 680 190 480 250 30 140 450 190 60 130 70 – 314129 3149 31491 314912 31499 314992 240 870 420 370 450 70 60 260 130 100 130 20 – 314999 315 3151 31511 315119 31519 315191 3152 280 1,900 340 220 200 130 60 1,380 70 600 80 30 20 50 – 460 20 240 20 20 – – – 210 20 180 – – – – – 170 30 140 50 – – 50 – 60 315211 130 – – – – 31522 540 160 50 315222 110 30 20 315223 100 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 13 30 30 – 20 – 20 – – – 100 40 30 60 130 50 20 30 20 60 50 30 – – 110 40 20 20 – 90 40 40 – 50 160 80 – 60 30 – 80 50 50 30 70 40 30 30 20 – – – – – 80 – 20 Fall to lower level – – – – – – – – – 50 – – 40 – – 30 30 30 – 50 30 20 – – – 20 130 50 20 30 – 20 70 20 – – – 70 – – – – – 60 – – 50 – – 80 – – – – – 70 – – – – – – – – – 90 60 Slips or trips without fall 30 30 20 – – – – – – 30 80 40 – Fall on same level 20 40 – 20 210 30 – – 20 – 170 40 40 – – – – – 40 30 – 70 – – – 30 – – – 20 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Narrow fabric mills and schiffli machine embroidery ........................................... Narrow fabric mills .............................. Nonwoven fabric mills ............................ Knit fabric mills ....................................... Weft knit fabric mills ........................... Other knit fabric and lace mills ........... Textile and fabric finishing and fabric coating mills .............................................. Textile and fabric finishing mills .............. Broadwoven fabric finishing mills ....... Textile and fabric finishing (except broadwoven fabric) mills ................... Fabric coating mills ................................. Textile product mills ........................................ Textile furnishings mills .............................. Carpet and rug mills ............................... Curtain and linen mills ............................ Curtain and drapery mills ................... Other household textile product mills .................................................. Other textile product mills ........................... Textile bag and canvas mills .................. Canvas and related product mills ....... All other textile product mills ................... Tire cord and tire fabric mills .............. All other miscellaneous textile product mills .................................................. Apparel manufacturing ................................... Apparel knitting mills .................................. Hosiery and sock mills ............................ Other hosiery and sock mills .............. Other apparel knitting mills ..................... Outerwear knitting mills ...................... Cut and sew apparel manufacturing ........... Men’s and boys’ cut and sew apparel contractors ........................................ Men’s and boys’ cut and sew apparel manufacturing ....................................... Men’s and boys’ cut and sew suit, coat, and overcoat manufacturing .... Men’s and boys’ cut and sew shirt (except work shirt) manufacturing .... Total In lifting – – – – 40 40 – 20 20 – Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – – – – – – – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 40 20 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 40 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 60 40 20 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 – 160 70 20 50 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 90 30 – – – – – – 40 210 20 20 20 – – 180 30 – 20 20 140 80 50 90 50 20 30 60 400 200 50 160 100 30 40 180 80 30 50 – – – 190 60 20 40 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 60 190 110 110 80 20 30 100 40 40 60 20 20 130 80 70 50 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 390 70 60 60 – – 290 30 240 30 30 30 – – 190 40 260 80 80 80 – – 140 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 20 20 – – – – – – 20 100 60 80 – – – – – 90 40 30 – – 20 20 – 50 – – – – – 30 20 20 40 30 20 – 60 20 40 30 – – 20 – – – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 14 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Men’s and boys’ cut and sew trouser, slack, and jean manufacturing .......... Men’s and boys’ cut and sew work clothing manufacturing ..................... Women’s and girls’ cut and sew apparel manufacturing ....................................... Women’s and girls’ cut and sew suit, coat, tailored jacket, and skirt manufacturing ................................... Women’s and girls’ cut and sew other outerwear manufacturing .................. Other cut and sew apparel manufacturing ....................................... All other cut and sew apparel manufacturing ................................... Apparel accessories and other apparel manufacturing ........................................... Apparel accessories and other apparel manufacturing ....................................... Leather and allied product manufacturing ...... Footwear manufacturing ............................. Footwear manufacturing ......................... Rubber and plastics footwear manufacturing ................................... Men’s footwear (except athletic) manufacturing ................................... Women’s footwear (except athletic) manufacturing ................................... Other leather and allied product manufacturing ........................................... Other leather and allied product manufacturing ....................................... Wood product manufacturing ......................... Sawmills and wood preservation ................ Sawmills and wood preservation ............ Sawmills ............................................. Wood preservation ............................. Veneer, plywood, and engineered wood product manufacturing .............................. Veneer, plywood, and engineered wood product manufacturing .......................... Hardwood veneer and plywood manufacturing ................................... Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Struck by object 315224 70 20 315225 140 31523 150 315234 20 315239 50 31529 90 – – – – – 20 – 315299 60 – – – – – 20 – 3159 180 60 – – 31599 316 3162 31621 180 630 250 250 60 230 100 100 – 316211 30 316213 150 316214 30 3169 180 80 30 31699 321 3211 32111 321113 321114 180 13,730 3,450 3,450 3,200 250 80 6,820 1,580 1,580 1,470 110 30 3,280 690 690 620 70 – 1,330 260 260 260 – 40 1,750 540 540 510 40 – 530 90 90 60 30 20 910 300 300 280 20 – 330 80 80 80 – 3212 2,580 1,280 550 380 280 80 160 80 32121 2,580 1,280 550 380 280 80 160 80 321211 330 180 80 50 40 – 30 – 20 – 70 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 15 20 – 60 20 20 20 – – 20 20 30 – – – 30 100 20 20 – – – – – – – – – – – 60 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 – – 20 – – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Men’s and boys’ cut and sew trouser, slack, and jean manufacturing .......... Men’s and boys’ cut and sew work clothing manufacturing ..................... Women’s and girls’ cut and sew apparel manufacturing ....................................... Women’s and girls’ cut and sew suit, coat, tailored jacket, and skirt manufacturing ................................... Women’s and girls’ cut and sew other outerwear manufacturing .................. Other cut and sew apparel manufacturing ....................................... All other cut and sew apparel manufacturing ................................... Apparel accessories and other apparel manufacturing ........................................... Apparel accessories and other apparel manufacturing ....................................... Leather and allied product manufacturing ...... Footwear manufacturing ............................. Footwear manufacturing ......................... Rubber and plastics footwear manufacturing ................................... Men’s footwear (except athletic) manufacturing ................................... Women’s footwear (except athletic) manufacturing ................................... Other leather and allied product manufacturing ........................................... Other leather and allied product manufacturing ....................................... Wood product manufacturing ......................... Sawmills and wood preservation ................ Sawmills and wood preservation ............ Sawmills ............................................. Wood preservation ............................. Veneer, plywood, and engineered wood product manufacturing .............................. Veneer, plywood, and engineered wood product manufacturing .......................... Hardwood veneer and plywood manufacturing ................................... Total In lifting – – Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults 20 – – – – – – All other events5 – 30 20 20 – – – – – – 60 50 40 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – – 30 120 60 60 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,210 390 390 370 20 20 – 30 – 30 130 40 40 – – 60 20 20 – 20 – – – 40 – – 50 30 30 30 30 30 30 2,750 720 720 680 40 30 1,260 340 340 320 20 30 500 160 160 140 20 – 230 70 70 60 – – 390 60 60 60 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 560 230 70 40 50 – – – – 270 560 230 70 40 50 – – – – 270 – – – – 30 70 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 16 – – – 20 30 30 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Softwood veneer and plywood manufacturing ................................... Engineered wood member (except truss) manufacturing ......................... Truss manufacturing ........................... Reconstituted wood product manufacturing ................................... Other wood product manufacturing ............ Millwork .................................................. Wood window and door manufacturing ................................... Cut stock, resawing lumber, and planing .............................................. Other millwork (including flooring) ...... Wood container and pallet manufacturing ....................................... All other wood product manufacturing .... Manufactured home (mobile home) manufacturing ................................... Prefabricated wood building manufacturing ................................... All other miscellaneous wood product manufacturing ................................... Paper manufacturing ...................................... Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills ............. Pulp mills ................................................ Paper mills .............................................. Paper (except newsprint) mills ........... Newsprint mills ................................... Paperboard mills .................................... Converted paper product manufacturing .... Paperboard container manufacturing ..... Corrugated and solid fiber box manufacturing ................................... Folding paperboard box manufacturing ................................... Fiber can, tube, drum, and similar products manufacturing .................... Nonfolding sanitary food container manufacturing ................................... Paper bag and coated and treated paper manufacturing ....................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level 20 Slips or trips without fall 321212 250 100 20 30 40 – 321213 321214 190 1,600 100 800 40 370 30 260 20 130 – 50 80 50 321219 3219 32191 210 7,700 3,390 110 3,950 1,750 40 2,030 690 20 690 370 50 930 520 – 370 90 20 450 190 – 170 40 321911 1,500 700 290 150 220 40 90 30 321912 321918 610 1,280 330 720 120 280 90 130 50 260 20 30 32192 32199 1,440 2,870 890 1,320 560 780 120 200 170 240 321991 1,030 530 360 80 321992 860 280 190 321999 322 3221 32211 32212 322121 322122 32213 3222 32221 970 6,130 1,590 90 1,140 1,010 130 360 4,540 2,450 500 2,380 580 30 420 350 60 130 1,800 920 322211 1,410 322212 – – – – – 90 20 30 250 40 220 – 120 70 130 80 30 50 20 90 90 20 230 700 180 – 120 90 30 60 520 320 70 450 140 20 110 90 20 – 310 140 150 1,120 200 – 150 140 – 50 920 420 30 220 120 – 80 70 – 40 100 50 50 590 130 – 100 100 – 20 470 280 80 200 60 – 30 20 – 20 130 100 540 210 90 220 30 170 60 710 190 40 30 110 20 50 30 322214 60 60 30 – 20 – 322215 150 90 40 – 40 – 32222 1,040 410 100 See footnotes at end of table. Page 17 80 210 – – 20 20 110 – 20 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Softwood veneer and plywood manufacturing ................................... Engineered wood member (except truss) manufacturing ......................... Truss manufacturing ........................... Reconstituted wood product manufacturing ................................... Other wood product manufacturing ............ Millwork .................................................. Wood window and door manufacturing ................................... Cut stock, resawing lumber, and planing .............................................. Other millwork (including flooring) ...... Wood container and pallet manufacturing ....................................... All other wood product manufacturing .... Manufactured home (mobile home) manufacturing ................................... Prefabricated wood building manufacturing ................................... All other miscellaneous wood product manufacturing ................................... Paper manufacturing ...................................... Pulp, paper, and paperboard mills ............. Pulp mills ................................................ Paper mills .............................................. Paper (except newsprint) mills ........... Newsprint mills ................................... Paperboard mills .................................... Converted paper product manufacturing .... Paperboard container manufacturing ..... Corrugated and solid fiber box manufacturing ................................... Folding paperboard box manufacturing ................................... Fiber can, tube, drum, and similar products manufacturing .................... Nonfolding sanitary food container manufacturing ................................... Paper bag and coated and treated paper manufacturing ....................................... 30 In lifting Repetitive motion – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 20 50 370 20 180 40 1,480 740 – Total All other assaults – – – – 30 – – – – – 190 – – – 550 340 20 – – – – – 690 360 – 280 150 – 130 30 – 280 50 – – – – – – – – 390 210 90 – 30 – – – – 100 120 220 30 120 20 30 – – 20 – – – – – – – – 100 130 270 470 70 260 90 40 – 70 160 – – – – – – – – 40 170 150 80 – 30 – – – – 70 180 120 20 – 100 – – – – 70 150 1,220 330 – 250 230 30 70 900 460 60 540 100 – 70 70 – 20 440 200 – 330 50 – 40 30 – – 280 160 70 230 100 20 60 60 – – 130 50 30 220 40 – 30 30 – – 180 150 – 20 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 700 170 – 110 110 – 60 520 270 220 70 60 50 150 20 – – – 110 210 120 90 120 250 – – All other events5 By person 20 30 – Fires and explosions 20 – – – Assaults and violent acts – 80 30 30 – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 120 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 18 40 150 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Coated and laminated packaging paper and plastics film manufacturing ................................... Coated and laminated paper manufacturing ................................... Uncoated paper and multiwall bag manufacturing ................................... Stationery product manufacturing .......... Die-cut paper and paperboard office supplies manufacturing .................... Envelope manufacturing ..................... Other converted paper product manufacturing ....................................... Sanitary paper product manufacturing ................................... All other converted paper product manufacturing ................................... Printing and related support activities ............ Printing and related support activities ........ Printing ................................................... Commercial lithographic printing ........ Commercial gravure printing .............. Commercial flexographic printing ....... Commercial screen printing ................ Quick printing ..................................... Digital printing ..................................... Books printing ..................................... Blankbook, looseleaf binders, and devices manufacturing ..................... Other commercial printing .................. Support activities for printing .................. Tradebinding and related work ........... Prepress services ............................... Petroleum and coal products manufacturing .. Petroleum and coal products manufacturing ........................................... Petroleum refineries ............................... Asphalt paving, roofing, and saturated materials manufacturing ....................... Asphalt paving mixture and block manufacturing ................................... Asphalt shingle and coating materials manufacturing ................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 322221 210 90 20 30 30 – 30 – 322222 470 170 50 20 90 – 50 – 322224 32223 240 470 80 180 20 50 30 50 80 – – 30 40 – – 322231 322232 110 300 60 100 40 40 – – 20 – – 32229 580 300 40 50 200 40 – 322291 270 110 20 20 60 30 – 322299 323 3231 32311 323110 323111 323112 323113 323114 323115 323117 310 7,060 7,060 6,610 3,560 90 760 650 240 90 230 190 3,070 3,070 2,840 1,560 50 360 340 50 30 70 20 810 810 750 520 – 50 110 – – 20 30 730 730 670 280 20 90 130 40 – – 140 1,340 1,340 1,230 670 20 170 100 – 30 30 323118 323119 32312 323121 323122 324 50 530 450 260 190 1,200 30 230 240 160 80 360 – – – 140 3241 32411 1,200 330 360 140 32412 440 160 324121 260 80 324122 180 80 See footnotes at end of table. Page 19 – 40 – – – 60 30 130 110 80 40 110 140 70 60 30 40 20 20 60 30 – 80 60 60 – – 30 20 – 20 – – 260 260 260 130 – 40 40 – – – – 550 550 510 280 20 70 40 – 20 20 – 150 150 130 70 – 20 – – – – – – – – 30 – – – 30 40 – 60 30 140 110 – 60 20 140 30 90 30 30 60 – 30 – 30 – 20 – – 40 40 – 30 – 20 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Coated and laminated packaging paper and plastics film manufacturing ................................... Coated and laminated paper manufacturing ................................... Uncoated paper and multiwall bag manufacturing ................................... Stationery product manufacturing .......... Die-cut paper and paperboard office supplies manufacturing .................... Envelope manufacturing ..................... Other converted paper product manufacturing ....................................... Sanitary paper product manufacturing ................................... All other converted paper product manufacturing ................................... Printing and related support activities ............ Printing and related support activities ........ Printing ................................................... Commercial lithographic printing ........ Commercial gravure printing .............. Commercial flexographic printing ....... Commercial screen printing ................ Quick printing ..................................... Digital printing ..................................... Books printing ..................................... Blankbook, looseleaf binders, and devices manufacturing ..................... Other commercial printing .................. Support activities for printing .................. Tradebinding and related work ........... Prepress services ............................... Petroleum and coal products manufacturing .. Petroleum and coal products manufacturing ........................................... Petroleum refineries ............................... Asphalt paving, roofing, and saturated materials manufacturing ....................... Asphalt paving mixture and block manufacturing ................................... Asphalt shingle and coating materials manufacturing ................................... 60 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion – – 20 – – – – – – 20 – – – – – 110 20 – – – – – – – – – – 20 60 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 660 660 640 350 – 20 100 – – 40 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – 30 20 – – – – – – 70 30 30 90 50 80 110 40 80 20 70 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – 20 40 – 60 30 80 40 50 60 30 20 20 1,590 1,590 1,500 840 20 170 80 30 20 80 – 950 950 880 460 – 90 60 – – 40 20 160 90 40 60 210 – 110 70 30 40 60 210 40 – 20 20 – – 30 390 390 350 220 – – 30 30 – – – 150 150 150 70 – – – – – – – 210 210 200 20 – – – 100 – – – – – – – – – 140 – – – – – 120 140 20 120 – 20 40 40 – 40 40 – 20 – – – 60 50 – 30 30 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – Total By person All other assaults – – 90 – – – – 80 – – – – – – – – 20 – – – 30 – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 20 – All other events5 – – 60 40 – – – 70 – 20 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Other petroleum and coal products manufacturing ....................................... Chemical manufacturing ................................. Basic chemical manufacturing .................... Petrochemical manufacturing ................. Industrial gas manufacturing .................. Synthetic dye and pigment manufacturing ....................................... Inorganic dye and pigment manufacturing ................................... Synthetic organic dye and pigment manufacturing ................................... Other basic inorganic chemical manufacturing ....................................... Alkalies and chlorine manufacturing ... All other basic inorganic chemical manufacturing ................................... Other basic organic chemical manufacturing ....................................... Gum and wood chemical manufacturing ................................... Ethyl alcohol manufacturing ............... All other basic organic chemical manufacturing ................................... Resin, synthetic rubber, and artificial and synthetic fibers and filaments manufacturing ........................................... Resin and synthetic rubber manufacturing ....................................... Plastics material and resin manufacturing ................................... Synthetic rubber manufacturing ......... Artificial and synthetic fibers and filaments manufacturing ....................... Cellulosic organic fiber manufacturing ................................... Noncellulosic organic fiber manufacturing ................................... Pesticide, fertilizer, and other agricultural chemical manufacturing ........................... Fertilizer manufacturing .......................... Nitrogenous fertilizer manufacturing ... Struck by object Slips or trips without fall Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – 430 40 – – – 340 80 – – 80 810 100 – – – 150 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Fall to lower level Fall on same level 32419 325 3251 32511 32512 420 7,230 1,170 50 220 60 1,820 330 – 60 40 800 130 – – – 390 100 – – 32513 310 160 80 40 325131 230 150 80 325132 80 32518 325181 340 90 50 20 – – – – – 325188 250 30 – – – – 32519 250 50 30 – – 325191 325193 20 30 20 – – – – 325199 190 30 – – 3252 1,040 390 270 40 80 80 50 40 32521 780 310 260 20 30 70 30 30 325211 325212 350 440 60 260 30 230 32522 260 80 – 325221 40 20 – 325222 220 60 – 3253 32531 325311 350 280 60 80 70 30 – – – 20 – 20 See footnotes at end of table. Page 21 – – – – – – 50 50 30 – 30 30 20 – – – 30 – 30 – – – – – 20 – – 20 – – – – – – – – 60 – 30 – 60 – 20 – – – 20 – – 20 30 30 – 20 – – – – 20 – 20 – – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Other petroleum and coal products manufacturing ....................................... Chemical manufacturing ................................. Basic chemical manufacturing .................... Petrochemical manufacturing ................. Industrial gas manufacturing .................. Synthetic dye and pigment manufacturing ....................................... Inorganic dye and pigment manufacturing ................................... Synthetic organic dye and pigment manufacturing ................................... Other basic inorganic chemical manufacturing ....................................... Alkalies and chlorine manufacturing ... All other basic inorganic chemical manufacturing ................................... Other basic organic chemical manufacturing ....................................... Gum and wood chemical manufacturing ................................... Ethyl alcohol manufacturing ............... All other basic organic chemical manufacturing ................................... Resin, synthetic rubber, and artificial and synthetic fibers and filaments manufacturing ........................................... Resin and synthetic rubber manufacturing ....................................... Plastics material and resin manufacturing ................................... Synthetic rubber manufacturing ......... Artificial and synthetic fibers and filaments manufacturing ....................... Cellulosic organic fiber manufacturing ................................... Noncellulosic organic fiber manufacturing ................................... Pesticide, fertilizer, and other agricultural chemical manufacturing ........................... Fertilizer manufacturing .......................... Nitrogenous fertilizer manufacturing ... 120 1,630 140 – – 30 – 30 In lifting Repetitive motion 30 940 80 – – – 460 50 20 – – – – – 40 – 30 20 40 20 – – – – Fires and explosions Total All other assaults – – – – – – 640 90 – – – – – – – – – – 70 – – – – – – – 50 – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – 20 110 20 – – – – – – – – – – 60 30 20 100 – – – – – 30 40 – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – 20 40 20 140 110 140 120 – – – – – 50 110 90 60 100 – – – – – 40 60 60 40 50 20 40 100 – – – – – – – – – – – – 80 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 – – – 20 110 100 20 – – All other events5 By person – 130 40 – – – 100 1,000 310 – – Assaults and violent acts – 230 – – – 20 – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – 80 40 40 – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 22 20 40 20 – 20 20 – 20 60 50 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 Pesticide and other agricultural chemical manufacturing ....................................... Pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing ........................................... Pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing ....................................... Medicinal and botanical manufacturing ................................... Pharmaceutical preparation manufacturing ................................... In-vitro diagnostic substance manufacturing ................................... Biological product (except diagnostic) manufacturing ................................... Paint, coating, and adhesive manufacturing ........................................... Paint and coating manufacturing ............ Adhesive manufacturing ......................... Soap, cleaning compound, and toilet preparation manufacturing ....................... Soap and cleaning compound manufacturing ....................................... Polish and other sanitation good manufacturing ................................... Surface active agent manufacturing ... Toilet preparation manufacturing ............ Other chemical product and preparation manufacturing ........................................... Printing ink manufacturing ...................... Explosives manufacturing ...................... All other chemical product and preparation manufacturing ................... Custom compounding of purchased resins ................................................ Photographic film, paper, plate, and chemical manufacturing ................... All other miscellaneous chemical product and preparation manufacturing ................................... Plastics and rubber products manufacturing .. Plastics product manufacturing .................. Unsupported plastics film, sheet, and bag manufacturing ................................ NAICS code3 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – – – – Total cases Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – – – 32532 70 3254 2,000 380 130 110 110 70 270 70 32541 2,000 380 130 110 110 70 270 70 325411 210 30 20 325412 1,560 290 100 325413 50 325414 180 60 3255 32551 32552 500 320 180 120 80 40 40 20 20 3256 910 230 80 50 40 32561 540 110 20 20 20 325612 325613 32562 270 90 370 40 – 120 – – 3259 32591 32592 1,260 150 30 290 40 – 110 – – 32599 1,080 250 90 40 90 325991 430 120 40 20 40 325992 290 60 20 20 325998 326 3261 360 14,040 11,080 70 5,560 4,470 30 1,950 1,550 – 1,370 1,190 40 1,870 1,400 30 320 300 40 1,430 1,190 – 450 370 32611 1,820 860 160 230 370 30 190 30 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 23 – – 60 – – 40 100 220 – 30 – – – – 80 70 – – – 60 130 – 40 70 – 40 40 20 20 – 60 – – – 30 20 50 100 – – – – – 20 60 – – – 40 150 50 – – – – 30 – – 60 – – – 60 20 – 40 40 – – – – – – 30 20 100 20 – 30 – – 30 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Pesticide and other agricultural chemical manufacturing ....................................... Pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing ........................................... Pharmaceutical and medicine manufacturing ....................................... Medicinal and botanical manufacturing ................................... Pharmaceutical preparation manufacturing ................................... In-vitro diagnostic substance manufacturing ................................... Biological product (except diagnostic) manufacturing ................................... Paint, coating, and adhesive manufacturing ........................................... Paint and coating manufacturing ............ Adhesive manufacturing ......................... Soap, cleaning compound, and toilet preparation manufacturing ....................... Soap and cleaning compound manufacturing ....................................... Polish and other sanitation good manufacturing ................................... Surface active agent manufacturing ... Toilet preparation manufacturing ............ Other chemical product and preparation manufacturing ........................................... Printing ink manufacturing ...................... Explosives manufacturing ...................... All other chemical product and preparation manufacturing ................... Custom compounding of purchased resins ................................................ Photographic film, paper, plate, and chemical manufacturing ................... All other miscellaneous chemical product and preparation manufacturing ................................... Plastics and rubber products manufacturing .. Plastics product manufacturing .................. Unsupported plastics film, sheet, and bag manufacturing ................................ Total In lifting Repetitive motion – – – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 30 – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – Total By person All other assaults – – – All other events5 – 560 310 120 210 60 40 20 – – 210 560 310 120 210 60 40 20 – – 210 70 40 – – – 430 220 – – – 170 20 20 – – – – – – – 20 40 30 – – – – – – – 150 80 60 80 30 40 – – 20 20 – – – – – – – – – 40 20 20 160 90 80 50 60 – – 90 20 40 – 50 40 370 30 – 240 – – 320 150 – 60 30 – – 70 140 – 20 – – – 70 40 110 – 20 – – – 40 20 60 40 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 20 20 – 60 30 30 – 80 – – 30 70 110 – – 100 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 110 – – 230 60 100 70 – – – – 110 100 60 30 40 30 – – – – 70 70 30 40 20 20 – – – – 30 160 3,130 2,210 140 1,410 1,040 – 950 690 40 570 470 20 180 130 – – 1,380 1,210 410 230 20 110 180 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 24 – – 40 30 – – – – – – – – – – 20 20 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Unsupported plastics bag manufacturing ................................... Unsupported plastics film and sheet (except packaging) manufacturing ... Plastics pipe, pipe fitting, and unsupported profile shape manufacturing ....................................... Unsupported plastics profile shape manufacturing ................................... Plastics pipe and pipe fitting manufacturing ................................... Polystyrene foam product manufacturing ....................................... Urethane and other foam product (except polystyrene) manufacturing ..... Plastics bottle manufacturing ................. Other plastics product manufacturing ..... Plastics plumbing fixture manufacturing ................................... Resilient floor covering manufacturing ................................... All other plastics product manufacturing ................................... Rubber product manufacturing ................... Tire manufacturing ................................. Tire manufacturing (except retreading) ........................................ Rubber and plastics hoses and belting manufacturing ....................................... Other rubber product manufacturing ...... Rubber product manufacturing for mechanical use ................................ All other rubber product manufacturing ................................... Nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing ... Clay product and refractory manufacturing ........................................... Pottery, ceramics, and plumbing fixture manufacturing ....................................... Vitreous china, fine earthenware, and other pottery product manufacturing ................................... Struck by object Struck against object 30 90 – 30 – – 150 – 90 – 30 – 60 – – 150 – – Fall on same level 370 160 326113 1,360 630 140 210 230 32612 720 240 30 100 100 326121 260 40 326122 470 200 20 32614 630 230 110 32615 32616 32619 550 600 6,370 160 180 2,620 80 40 1,040 40 70 710 30 40 710 – – 140 60 90 570 326191 420 150 70 40 20 30 40 326192 240 326199 3262 32621 5,710 2,960 1,080 2,460 1,090 390 970 400 130 670 180 70 680 470 180 110 20 – 326211 1,020 360 100 70 180 32622 32629 640 1,240 280 410 110 160 40 70 326291 730 220 100 326299 327 510 13,090 200 4,500 3271 1,570 32711 327112 – – Fall to lower level 326111 – – – Slips or trips without fall Caught in or compressed or crushed 20 80 – – 80 – – 20 – 20 – – 80 150 40 – 490 240 50 110 80 20 – 50 20 120 160 – – 60 130 40 80 – 80 20 70 2,070 30 920 90 1,070 – 900 40 1,160 20 460 450 120 130 170 40 100 20 380 140 40 20 60 30 20 – 150 30 20 30 20 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 25 – – – 40 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Unsupported plastics bag manufacturing ................................... Unsupported plastics film and sheet (except packaging) manufacturing ... Plastics pipe, pipe fitting, and unsupported profile shape manufacturing ....................................... Unsupported plastics profile shape manufacturing ................................... Plastics pipe and pipe fitting manufacturing ................................... Polystyrene foam product manufacturing ....................................... Urethane and other foam product (except polystyrene) manufacturing ..... Plastics bottle manufacturing ................. Other plastics product manufacturing ..... Plastics plumbing fixture manufacturing ................................... Resilient floor covering manufacturing ................................... All other plastics product manufacturing ................................... Rubber product manufacturing ................... Tire manufacturing ................................. Tire manufacturing (except retreading) ........................................ Rubber and plastics hoses and belting manufacturing ....................................... Other rubber product manufacturing ...... Rubber product manufacturing for mechanical use ................................ All other rubber product manufacturing ................................... Nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing ... Clay product and refractory manufacturing ........................................... Pottery, ceramics, and plumbing fixture manufacturing ....................................... Vitreous china, fine earthenware, and other pottery product manufacturing ................................... In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 100 50 – 40 – – – – – 20 300 180 – 70 – – – – – 130 140 60 90 30 – – – – 60 70 20 40 20 – – – – 50 70 40 50 – – – – – – – – – 80 150 1,350 50 80 570 30 30 500 100 40 20 80 – – 30 – – 20 – – – – – – 100 – 220 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 100 60 730 – – – – – – 50 – – – – – – 70 60 20 1,170 920 360 540 360 150 470 260 90 210 100 20 60 60 30 – – – – – – – – – – – 600 170 90 340 130 90 20 30 – – – – 90 190 370 40 170 50 120 20 – – – – – – – – 30 60 240 100 90 30 – – – – – 40 130 3,320 70 1,770 30 380 50 550 – 590 – – – – 1,200 610 380 150 20 – – – – – 150 80 40 50 – – – – – – 50 30 20 30 – – – – – – 20 See footnotes at end of table. Page 26 – – 70 20 – 20 – 20 20 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Clay building material and refractories manufacturing ....................................... Brick and structural clay tile manufacturing ................................... Clay refractory manufacturing ............ Glass and glass product manufacturing ..... Glass and glass product manufacturing ....................................... Flat glass manufacturing .................... Other pressed and blown glass and glassware manufacturing ................. Glass container manufacturing ........... Cement and concrete product manufacturing ........................................... Ready-mix concrete manufacturing ........ Concrete pipe, brick, and block manufacturing ....................................... Concrete block and brick manufacturing ................................... Concrete pipe manufacturing ............. Other concrete product manufacturing ... Lime and gypsum product manufacturing .. Gypsum product manufacturing ............. Other nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing ........................................... Abrasive product manufacturing ............. All other nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing ....................................... Cut stone and stone product manufacturing ................................... Mineral wool manufacturing ............... All other miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing ......... Primary metal manufacturing ......................... Iron and steel mills and ferroalloy manufacturing ........................................... Iron and steel mills and ferroalloy manufacturing ....................................... Iron and steel mills ............................. Steel product manufacturing from purchased steel ........................................ Iron and steel pipe and tube manufacturing from purchased steel .... Struck by object 32712 1,180 310 80 327121 327124 3272 180 300 1,970 60 100 730 – – 380 32721 327211 1,970 330 730 150 380 130 327212 327213 260 360 70 110 30 20 3273 32732 7,460 4,050 2,520 930 32733 1,280 327331 327332 32739 3274 32742 Slips or trips without fall Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 110 110 – 80 – 70 170 30 – 120 – – – – 100 – – 170 20 120 – – 40 20 40 1,190 420 460 200 680 290 990 290 1,990 90 80 520 170 840 30 30 3279 32791 2,000 220 32799 60 60 – 60 100 20 60 20 20 30 640 230 750 570 740 480 330 230 60 220 30 110 40 170 110 440 – – 40 30 180 – – 200 20 190 – – 20 110 – – 70 40 150 – – 770 130 360 30 160 – 130 – 1,780 640 330 110 130 327991 327993 1,070 280 430 80 230 30 40 90 30 327999 331 350 10,620 110 4,000 50 1,630 60 750 – 1,020 – 350 – 690 – 240 3311 1,500 550 220 130 170 80 120 80 33111 331111 1,500 1,430 550 530 220 210 130 120 170 170 80 80 120 120 80 80 3312 1,410 550 240 90 170 50 130 50 33121 680 280 100 70 80 20 60 40 Page 27 – – Fall on same level 30 See footnotes at end of table. – Fall to lower level – 40 – 40 – – 220 – – 20 30 – 70 – – 40 – 220 150 40 40 – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 530 340 100 80 110 600 30 70 390 – – 110 600 90 390 40 110 – 50 80 30 30 20 20 20 40 1,470 760 610 430 60 20 310 40 Total Clay building material and refractories manufacturing ....................................... Brick and structural clay tile manufacturing ................................... Clay refractory manufacturing ............ Glass and glass product manufacturing ..... Glass and glass product manufacturing ....................................... Flat glass manufacturing .................... Other pressed and blown glass and glassware manufacturing ................. Glass container manufacturing ........... Cement and concrete product manufacturing ........................................... Ready-mix concrete manufacturing ........ Concrete pipe, brick, and block manufacturing ....................................... Concrete block and brick manufacturing ................................... Concrete pipe manufacturing ............. Other concrete product manufacturing ... Lime and gypsum product manufacturing .. Gypsum product manufacturing ............. Other nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing ........................................... Abrasive product manufacturing ............. All other nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing ....................................... Cut stone and stone product manufacturing ................................... Mineral wool manufacturing ............... All other miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral product manufacturing ......... Primary metal manufacturing ......................... Iron and steel mills and ferroalloy manufacturing ........................................... Iron and steel mills and ferroalloy manufacturing ....................................... Iron and steel mills ............................. Steel product manufacturing from purchased steel ........................................ Iron and steel pipe and tube manufacturing from purchased steel .... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 270 30 400 – – – 20 140 – – Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – 100 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 190 50 – – – – – – – – 190 30 20 – – – – – – – – 50 20 290 130 480 390 – – – – – – – 790 530 – 40 30 – – – – 50 – – 40 – 100 – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 20 210 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 80 – – – – – – – 920 30 – – 50 20 Assaults and violent acts – – 80 50 80 – – – 70 – – 390 20 590 370 430 70 250 60 60 2,550 60 1,180 – 710 80 900 – 190 300 80 50 140 20 30 – – – 120 300 280 80 70 50 50 140 140 20 30 20 – – – – – – 120 110 370 130 50 70 – – – – 140 140 50 20 30 – – – – 70 40 – – 40 Page 28 – 130 – See footnotes at end of table. 30 20 630 40 – 160 – – 30 – 20 – 60 50 30 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Rolling and drawing of purchased steel ...................................................... Rolled steel shape manufacturing ...... Steel wire drawing .............................. Alumina and aluminum production and processing ................................................ Alumina and aluminum production and processing ............................................ Primary aluminum production ............. Secondary smelting and alloying of aluminum .......................................... Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil manufacturing ................................... Aluminum extruded product manufacturing ................................... Other aluminum rolling and drawing ... Nonferrous metal (except aluminum) production and processing ....................... Nonferrous metal (except aluminum) smelting and refining ............................ Primary smelting and refining of copper .............................................. Primary smelting and refining of nonferrous metal (except copper and aluminum) ......................................... Copper rolling, drawing, extruding, and alloying ................................................. Copper rolling, drawing, and extruding ........................................... Copper wire (except mechanical) drawing ............................................. Nonferrous metal (except copper and aluminum) rolling, drawing, extruding, and alloying .......................................... Nonferrous metal (except copper and aluminum) rolling, drawing, and extruding ........................................... Foundries ................................................... Ferrous metal foundries ......................... Iron foundries ..................................... Steel foundries (except investment) ... Nonferrous metal foundries .................... Aluminum die-casting foundries ......... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 33122 331221 331222 730 470 260 260 170 90 140 100 30 20 20 90 40 50 3313 1,340 410 210 110 33131 331312 1,340 190 410 50 210 20 110 20 331314 100 20 331315 160 40 331316 331319 790 100 3314 1,370 33141 70 – – – – 331411 20 – – – – 331419 40 – – – – 33142 1,000 340 170 331421 520 170 70 331422 460 170 100 33149 310 90 40 331491 3315 33151 331511 331513 33152 331521 130 5,000 2,680 1,950 390 2,320 660 20 2,060 1,370 1,000 240 690 180 – 740 530 400 100 220 90 – Fall to lower level Fall on same level 20 20 – 50 60 50 – 20 50 Slips or trips without fall – – – 50 20 30 50 30 – – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – 260 40 120 20 – – – – 430 210 See footnotes at end of table. Page 29 – 80 30 – 50 40 – 30 – – 360 190 130 40 170 20 130 30 50 20 – 20 90 20 – – 140 20 – – – – – – 110 – 60 – 60 – 30 – 40 – 40 20 20 – – 500 320 250 40 180 60 – 140 60 50 – 80 20 – 260 130 90 20 130 60 – 60 40 40 – 20 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Rolling and drawing of purchased steel ...................................................... Rolled steel shape manufacturing ...... Steel wire drawing .............................. Alumina and aluminum production and processing ................................................ Alumina and aluminum production and processing ............................................ Primary aluminum production ............. Secondary smelting and alloying of aluminum .......................................... Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil manufacturing ................................... Aluminum extruded product manufacturing ................................... Other aluminum rolling and drawing ... Nonferrous metal (except aluminum) production and processing ....................... Nonferrous metal (except aluminum) smelting and refining ............................ Primary smelting and refining of copper .............................................. Primary smelting and refining of nonferrous metal (except copper and aluminum) ......................................... Copper rolling, drawing, extruding, and alloying ................................................. Copper rolling, drawing, and extruding ........................................... Copper wire (except mechanical) drawing ............................................. Nonferrous metal (except copper and aluminum) rolling, drawing, extruding, and alloying .......................................... Nonferrous metal (except copper and aluminum) rolling, drawing, and extruding ........................................... Foundries ................................................... Ferrous metal foundries ......................... Iron foundries ..................................... Steel foundries (except investment) ... Nonferrous metal foundries .................... Aluminum die-casting foundries ......... In lifting 230 160 70 80 50 30 420 Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 20 40 20 20 260 100 100 420 30 260 – 100 – 100 30 – 30 30 – 20 – 40 20 – 300 20 210 – – 410 140 20 20 – – 90 30 – 130 – – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – All other events5 Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – 80 40 40 30 40 – – – 130 30 40 40 – – – – – – 130 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 70 20 – – – – 80 90 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 310 110 120 30 – – – – – 60 140 60 70 30 – – – – – 30 160 40 40 – – – – – 20 90 20 – – – – – 20 60 1,050 470 320 60 580 110 – 570 230 130 20 350 70 – 110 50 40 – 60 40 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 440 170 140 20 270 70 – – 380 190 160 – 180 100 See footnotes at end of table. Page 30 – 50 – 500 200 110 30 300 60 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Nonferrous (except aluminum) die-casting foundries ........................ Aluminum foundries (except die-casting) ....................................... Fabricated metal product manufacturing ........ Forging and stamping ................................. Forging and stamping ............................. Iron and steel forging .......................... Nonferrous forging .............................. Custom roll forming ............................ Metal stamping ................................... Powder metallurgy part manufacturing ................................... Cutlery and handtool manufacturing .......... Cutlery and handtool manufacturing ...... Cutlery and flatware (except precious) manufacturing ................................... Hand and edge tool manufacturing .... Saw blade and handsaw manufacturing ................................... Architectural and structural metals manufacturing ........................................... Plate work and fabricated structural product manufacturing .......................... Prefabricated metal building and component manufacturing ................ Fabricated structural metal manufacturing ................................... Plate work manufacturing ................... Ornamental and architectural metal products manufacturing ........................ Metal window and door manufacturing ................................... Sheet metal work manufacturing ........ Ornamental and architectural metal work manufacturing .......................... Boiler, tank, and shipping container manufacturing ........................................... Metal tank (heavy gauge) manufacturing ....................................... Metal can, box, and other metal container (light gauge) manufacturing .. Metal can manufacturing .................... Struck by object Struck against object – 20 Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – – – – 331522 120 30 331524 332 3321 33211 332111 332112 332114 332116 1,140 29,200 2,190 2,190 580 90 70 1,130 350 12,940 1,160 1,160 320 50 40 600 110 5,660 420 420 130 – 20 200 50 2,430 260 260 60 – – 130 90 3,400 360 360 80 20 – 230 332117 3322 33221 260 900 900 130 360 360 50 210 210 50 60 60 30 80 80 – – – 30 140 140 – – – 332211 332212 90 570 – 230 – 160 – 50 – – 20 80 – – 332213 150 50 30 – 3323 9,460 4,540 2,150 650 1,190 410 510 120 33231 4,490 2,190 1,100 180 570 200 200 70 332311 570 260 130 30 90 332312 332313 2,740 1,180 1,440 500 760 210 130 – 380 100 33232 4,960 2,350 1,050 470 332321 332322 1,540 2,260 620 1,180 250 500 332323 1,170 550 3324 1,680 33242 33243 332431 – 20 – – 740 50 50 – – – 40 – 20 1,830 170 170 30 – – 100 – – 30 – 150 30 110 50 – 620 210 320 50 90 330 230 270 60 90 90 110 20 40 300 50 120 60 110 780 320 200 180 20 130 660 360 180 80 70 – 30 – 690 200 350 70 110 20 120 30 70 20 – – 90 30 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 31 – – 620 40 40 30 – – – 60 – 30 20 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Nonferrous (except aluminum) die-casting foundries ........................ Aluminum foundries (except die-casting) ....................................... Fabricated metal product manufacturing ........ Forging and stamping ................................. Forging and stamping ............................. Iron and steel forging .......................... Nonferrous forging .............................. Custom roll forming ............................ Metal stamping ................................... Powder metallurgy part manufacturing ................................... Cutlery and handtool manufacturing .......... Cutlery and handtool manufacturing ...... Cutlery and flatware (except precious) manufacturing ................................... Hand and edge tool manufacturing .... Saw blade and handsaw manufacturing ................................... Architectural and structural metals manufacturing ........................................... Plate work and fabricated structural product manufacturing .......................... Prefabricated metal building and component manufacturing ................ Fabricated structural metal manufacturing ................................... Plate work manufacturing ................... Ornamental and architectural metal products manufacturing ........................ Metal window and door manufacturing ................................... Sheet metal work manufacturing ........ Ornamental and architectural metal work manufacturing .......................... Boiler, tank, and shipping container manufacturing ........................................... Metal tank (heavy gauge) manufacturing ....................................... Metal can, box, and other metal container (light gauge) manufacturing .. Metal can manufacturing .................... Total In lifting – – Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 20 20 210 1,620 80 80 30 – – 40 – – 160 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 50 – – – – – – 40 – – – 30 100 100 20 90 90 40 90 30 50 40 20 20 1,920 900 400 560 120 730 270 190 330 50 – – – – – – 440 – – – – – – 40 160 160 – All other assaults – 40 1,600 120 120 20 – – 70 110 Total By person – 240 3,410 240 240 50 – – 120 50 Fires and explosions – 340 6,640 410 410 110 – 20 210 – Assaults and violent acts 80 – – – – – – – – 150 2,550 150 150 40 – – 50 – – – – – – – – – 30 70 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 100 – – – 750 100 – – – 440 – – – 40 – – – – – – 350 40 30 60 180 80 120 60 140 110 1,190 620 210 230 70 – – – – 310 510 430 340 130 80 110 30 140 30 30 – – – – – – – – 80 130 260 150 – – – – 100 360 210 – – – – 110 120 110 – – – – – – 50 130 60 50 20 – – – – – – – – – – – 20 20 60 100 60 50 See footnotes at end of table. Page 32 – – 90 – 130 – 40 380 240 – 40 – – – – – – – – – – – All other events5 20 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Hardware manufacturing ............................ Hardware manufacturing ........................ Spring and wire product manufacturing ...... Spring and wire product manufacturing .. Spring (heavy gauge) manufacturing ................................... Other fabricated wire product manufacturing ................................... Machine shops; turned product; and screw, nut, and bolt manufacturing ...................... Machine shops ....................................... Turned product and screw, nut, and bolt manufacturing ....................................... Precision turned product manufacturing ................................... Bolt, nut, screw, rivet, and washer manufacturing ................................... Coating, engraving, heat treating, and allied activities .......................................... Coating, engraving, heat treating, and allied activities ...................................... Metal coating, engraving (except jewelry and silverware), and allied services to manufacturers ................ Electroplating, plating, polishing, anodizing, and coloring .................... Other fabricated metal product manufacturing ........................................... Metal valve manufacturing ..................... Industrial valve manufacturing ............ Fluid power valve and hose fitting manufacturing ................................... All other fabricated metal product manufacturing ....................................... Ball and roller bearing manufacturing ................................... Small arms ammunition manufacturing ................................... Ammunition (except small arms) manufacturing ................................... Small arms manufacturing .................. Fabricated pipe and pipe fitting manufacturing ................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 50 50 50 50 30 30 170 170 Fall to lower level Fall on same level 3325 33251 3326 33261 460 460 1,380 1,380 120 120 490 490 40 40 190 190 332611 90 50 30 332618 1,050 330 100 30 140 3327 33271 6,180 4,790 2,910 2,300 1,060 740 840 750 690 530 80 40 350 280 230 160 33272 1,380 610 320 90 160 40 70 60 332721 740 330 160 50 110 40 40 332722 650 280 160 40 50 30 30 20 3328 2,880 1,120 660 110 200 50 130 80 33281 2,880 1,120 660 110 200 50 130 80 332812 1,170 390 260 40 30 332813 1,190 520 270 80 110 3329 33291 332911 4,080 1,400 260 1,460 490 100 620 230 60 220 70 – 490 150 30 332912 410 190 90 20 60 33299 2,680 970 390 150 330 332991 380 150 60 30 60 332992 190 70 50 332993 332994 90 120 332996 380 – – 20 100 20 Page 33 – – – – 50 See footnotes at end of table. – 20 – 20 20 50 50 60 60 Slips or trips without fall – – – – – – 30 – – – – 60 80 70 30 – – – – – – 290 80 – – – 20 – 40 80 30 210 – 30 60 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 – 50 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Hardware manufacturing ............................ Hardware manufacturing ........................ Spring and wire product manufacturing ...... Spring and wire product manufacturing .. Spring (heavy gauge) manufacturing ................................... Other fabricated wire product manufacturing ................................... Machine shops; turned product; and screw, nut, and bolt manufacturing ...................... Machine shops ....................................... Turned product and screw, nut, and bolt manufacturing ....................................... Precision turned product manufacturing ................................... Bolt, nut, screw, rivet, and washer manufacturing ................................... Coating, engraving, heat treating, and allied activities .......................................... Coating, engraving, heat treating, and allied activities ...................................... Metal coating, engraving (except jewelry and silverware), and allied services to manufacturers ................ Electroplating, plating, polishing, anodizing, and coloring .................... Other fabricated metal product manufacturing ........................................... Metal valve manufacturing ..................... Industrial valve manufacturing ............ Fluid power valve and hose fitting manufacturing ................................... All other fabricated metal product manufacturing ....................................... Ball and roller bearing manufacturing ................................... Small arms ammunition manufacturing ................................... Ammunition (except small arms) manufacturing ................................... Small arms manufacturing .................. Fabricated pipe and pipe fitting manufacturing ................................... 140 140 310 310 – In lifting Repetitive motion 40 40 150 150 30 30 130 130 – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – 40 40 60 60 – – – 30 30 – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other events5 30 30 260 260 – 280 120 110 40 30 – – – – 210 1,580 1,280 930 760 160 50 220 190 140 100 – – – – – – – – 490 370 300 180 110 30 40 – – – – 120 140 90 40 20 40 – – – – 70 160 90 60 – – – – 50 760 340 120 310 40 – – – – 250 760 340 120 310 40 – – – – 250 430 200 50 110 – – – – – 70 240 120 70 140 – – – – – 100 1,000 400 80 500 170 30 450 180 20 190 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 430 120 30 70 40 50 40 – – – – – 600 330 280 120 – – – 310 120 80 40 – – – – – – 20 60 – – – – – – – 40 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 – – – 40 30 70 20 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 34 – – – 60 30 60 30 30 – 90 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Enameled iron and metal sanitary ware manufacturing .......................... All other miscellaneous fabricated metal product manufacturing ............ Machinery manufacturing ............................... Agriculture, construction, and mining machinery manufacturing ......................... Agricultural implement manufacturing .... Farm machinery and equipment manufacturing ................................... Lawn and garden tractor and home lawn and garden equipment manufacturing ................................... Construction machinery manufacturing .. Mining and oil and gas field machinery manufacturing ....................................... Mining machinery and equipment manufacturing ................................... Oil and gas field machinery and equipment manufacturing ................. Industrial machinery manufacturing ........... Plastics and rubber industry machinery manufacturing ....................................... Other industrial machinery manufacturing ....................................... Paper industry machinery manufacturing ................................... Textile machinery manufacturing ....... Printing machinery and equipment manufacturing ................................... Semiconductor machinery manufacturing ................................... All other industrial machinery manufacturing ................................... Commercial and service industry machinery manufacturing ......................... Commercial and service industry machinery manufacturing ..................... Automatic vending machine manufacturing ................................... Office machinery manufacturing ......... Optical instrument and lens manufacturing ................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – – – Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – – – 332998 130 20 332999 333 1,310 16,360 550 7,150 240 3,250 90 1,390 170 1,670 20 480 90 1,090 40 360 3331 33311 3,420 1,260 1,490 530 780 250 230 100 320 90 110 40 210 90 80 30 333111 1,040 440 200 80 70 40 70 20 333112 33312 220 1,460 90 670 50 360 20 110 20 150 – 60 20 80 33313 700 290 180 20 80 – 333131 280 140 80 40 – 333132 3332 420 1,640 150 730 90 390 – 120 40 140 – 33322 210 120 90 30 33329 1,240 520 240 90 333291 333292 130 90 50 20 333293 250 100 333295 70 30 333298 450 180 110 20 20 3333 870 340 170 80 70 40 40 20 33331 870 340 170 80 70 40 40 20 333311 333313 120 60 40 20 333314 100 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 35 40 – 50 – – – – – – 20 – – – 50 30 40 110 20 20 – 110 – – 40 – – – – – 20 40 80 120 – 20 20 – – – – – – – – – 60 – 40 – – – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 50 30 20 260 3,680 150 2,030 90 1,000 770 270 390 140 220 Total Enameled iron and metal sanitary ware manufacturing .......................... All other miscellaneous fabricated metal product manufacturing ............ Machinery manufacturing ............................... Agriculture, construction, and mining machinery manufacturing ......................... Agricultural implement manufacturing .... Farm machinery and equipment manufacturing ................................... Lawn and garden tractor and home lawn and garden equipment manufacturing ................................... Construction machinery manufacturing .. Mining and oil and gas field machinery manufacturing ....................................... Mining machinery and equipment manufacturing ................................... Oil and gas field machinery and equipment manufacturing ................. Industrial machinery manufacturing ........... Plastics and rubber industry machinery manufacturing ....................................... Other industrial machinery manufacturing ....................................... Paper industry machinery manufacturing ................................... Textile machinery manufacturing ....... Printing machinery and equipment manufacturing ................................... Semiconductor machinery manufacturing ................................... All other industrial machinery manufacturing ................................... Commercial and service industry machinery manufacturing ......................... Commercial and service industry machinery manufacturing ..................... Automatic vending machine manufacturing ................................... Office machinery manufacturing ......... Optical instrument and lens manufacturing ................................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Fires and explosions All other events5 Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – 170 1,580 – – 100 780 – 180 – 200 90 170 30 40 30 – – – – – – – – 330 150 120 60 20 20 – – – – 140 50 350 20 160 30 60 – 110 – – – – – – – – – – – 100 160 80 50 30 – – – – – 80 90 40 20 – – – – – 60 390 40 210 – – – – – – – – 70 200 – – – – 20 – – – – 170 30 260 20 20 – 40 30 160 60 20 – – – – – – 30 – – 70 – 30 20 – – Assaults and violent acts 20 – 60 20 – 40 20 20 – – – – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 100 70 30 160 70 50 30 – – – – – 160 160 70 50 30 – – – – – 160 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – 20 See footnotes at end of table. Page 36 60 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Photographic and photocopying equipment manufacturing ................. Other commercial and service industry machinery manufacturing ... Ventilation, heating, air-conditioning, and commercial refrigeration equipment manufacturing ........................................... Ventilation, heating, air-conditioning, and commercial refrigeration equipment manufacturing ..................... Air purification equipment manufacturing ................................... Industrial and commercial fan and blower manufacturing ....................... Heating equipment (except warm air furnaces) manufacturing ................... Air-conditioning and warm air heating equipment and commercial and industrial refrigeration equipment manufacturing ................................... Metalworking machinery manufacturing ..... Metalworking machinery manufacturing ....................................... Industrial mold manufacturing ............ Machine tool (metal cutting types) manufacturing ................................... Machine tool (metal forming types) manufacturing ................................... Special die and tool, die set, jig, and fixture manufacturing ........................ Cutting tool and machine tool accessory manufacturing ................. Engine, turbine, and power transmission equipment manufacturing ......................... Engine, turbine, and power transmission equipment manufacturing ..................... Turbine and turbine generator set units manufacturing .......................... Speed changer, industrial high-speed drive, and gear manufacturing .......... Mechanical power transmission equipment manufacturing ................. Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – – – Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – – – – – 333315 80 20 333319 430 190 90 40 30 30 3334 2,180 740 310 150 180 40 180 60 33341 2,180 740 310 150 180 40 180 60 333411 320 100 60 – 30 – 333412 200 90 30 – 20 – – – 333414 350 120 40 – 40 – – – 333415 3335 1,310 3,030 420 1,760 180 680 120 390 90 340 33351 333511 3,030 830 1,760 490 680 210 390 150 340 70 333512 260 110 30 20 333513 260 90 40 20 333514 1,120 800 320 150 130 – 333515 310 190 30 40 110 – 3336 1,220 470 180 110 140 50 110 40 33361 1,220 470 180 110 140 50 110 40 333611 130 40 20 333612 210 80 20 30 30 333613 330 150 80 20 50 See footnotes at end of table. Page 37 – – 50 30 60 120 210 60 – 210 80 – – 20 – – 20 – – 20 – – 20 – – – – 20 – 60 – 70 – 40 60 – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Photographic and photocopying equipment manufacturing ................. Other commercial and service industry machinery manufacturing ... Ventilation, heating, air-conditioning, and commercial refrigeration equipment manufacturing ........................................... Ventilation, heating, air-conditioning, and commercial refrigeration equipment manufacturing ..................... Air purification equipment manufacturing ................................... Industrial and commercial fan and blower manufacturing ....................... Heating equipment (except warm air furnaces) manufacturing ................... Air-conditioning and warm air heating equipment and commercial and industrial refrigeration equipment manufacturing ................................... Metalworking machinery manufacturing ..... Metalworking machinery manufacturing ....................................... Industrial mold manufacturing ............ Machine tool (metal cutting types) manufacturing ................................... Machine tool (metal forming types) manufacturing ................................... Special die and tool, die set, jig, and fixture manufacturing ........................ Cutting tool and machine tool accessory manufacturing ................. Engine, turbine, and power transmission equipment manufacturing ......................... Engine, turbine, and power transmission equipment manufacturing ..................... Turbine and turbine generator set units manufacturing .......................... Speed changer, industrial high-speed drive, and gear manufacturing .......... Mechanical power transmission equipment manufacturing ................. Total In lifting Repetitive motion – – – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – 50 100 50 20 610 370 200 150 40 – – – – 170 610 370 200 150 40 – – – – 170 80 60 – – – – – 30 – – – – – 30 – – – – 30 40 – – 20 20 – 100 50 20 70 – 390 410 250 210 150 120 60 190 – – – – – – – – – 80 210 410 70 210 30 120 – 190 70 – – – – – – – – – – 210 100 50 20 – 30 – – – – – 40 90 20 – 20 – – – – – 20 120 60 40 50 – – – – – 40 30 40 20 – – – – – 20 280 160 70 40 20 – – – – 140 280 160 70 40 20 – – – – 140 20 20 – – – – – – – 30 60 20 – – – – – – – 20 80 60 – – – – – – – 60 See footnotes at end of table. Page 38 20 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Other engine equipment manufacturing ................................... Other general purpose machinery manufacturing ........................................... Pump and compressor manufacturing ... Pump and pumping equipment manufacturing ................................... Air and gas compressor manufacturing ................................... Measuring and dispensing pump manufacturing ................................... Material handling equipment manufacturing ....................................... Conveyor and conveying equipment manufacturing ................................... Overhead traveling crane, hoist, and monorail system manufacturing ....... Industrial truck, tractor, trailer, and stacker machinery manufacturing .... All other general purpose machinery manufacturing ....................................... Power-driven handtool manufacturing ................................... Welding and soldering equipment manufacturing ................................... Packaging machinery manufacturing ................................... Industrial process furnace and oven manufacturing ................................... Fluid power cylinder and actuator manufacturing ................................... Fluid power pump and motor manufacturing ................................... All other miscellaneous general purpose machinery manufacturing ... Computer and electronic product manufacturing ............................................... Computer and peripheral equipment manufacturing ........................................... Computer and peripheral equipment manufacturing ....................................... Electronic computer manufacturing .... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 333618 550 190 70 50 50 20 70 3339 33391 4,010 600 1,620 270 730 130 320 40 480 70 110 30 220 40 – 333911 400 200 90 30 50 20 – 333912 170 70 40 333913 30 33392 1,410 610 310 120 160 333922 540 200 100 40 50 – – – 333923 310 160 100 40 20 – – – 333924 430 210 70 40 90 – 33399 2,010 750 290 160 250 333991 110 30 333992 210 60 20 333993 180 60 20 333994 140 70 30 333995 320 170 70 333996 340 100 50 333999 670 250 90 334 6,110 1,450 3341 440 90 33411 334111 440 200 90 50 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 39 – – – – – – – – 20 90 – – – – 30 60 20 60 20 50 – 120 30 – – – – 30 – – – – 30 – – – – – – – – – 40 60 – 30 – 30 50 100 – 40 630 430 310 30 40 20 – 60 – 30 40 20 20 – – 60 30 – – – 30 30 – – 250 860 20 – 100 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 120 60 50 30 – 1,070 120 620 90 320 50 140 20 – – – – – – – – 380 60 80 60 40 – – – – – – 40 40 30 – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – 130 – – – – – 60 – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – 40 – – – 190 Total Other engine equipment manufacturing ................................... Other general purpose machinery manufacturing ........................................... Pump and compressor manufacturing ... Pump and pumping equipment manufacturing ................................... Air and gas compressor manufacturing ................................... Measuring and dispensing pump manufacturing ................................... Material handling equipment manufacturing ....................................... Conveyor and conveying equipment manufacturing ................................... Overhead traveling crane, hoist, and monorail system manufacturing ....... Industrial truck, tractor, trailer, and stacker machinery manufacturing .... All other general purpose machinery manufacturing ....................................... Power-driven handtool manufacturing ................................... Welding and soldering equipment manufacturing ................................... Packaging machinery manufacturing ................................... Industrial process furnace and oven manufacturing ................................... Fluid power cylinder and actuator manufacturing ................................... Fluid power pump and motor manufacturing ................................... All other miscellaneous general purpose machinery manufacturing ... Computer and electronic product manufacturing ............................................... Computer and peripheral equipment manufacturing ........................................... Computer and peripheral equipment manufacturing ....................................... Electronic computer manufacturing .... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – 390 230 70 50 170 130 20 40 90 50 90 50 40 550 300 200 50 20 70 30 50 30 – – – – 70 – 40 20 30 – 30 All other events5 Total By person All other assaults – – – 40 – – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – 20 – 60 40 30 – – – – – – 30 120 60 40 – – – – – – 30 180 100 90 20 – – – – – 60 1,320 650 970 270 90 – 120 70 70 20 20 – – – – 40 120 30 70 20 70 30 20 – – – – – – – – 40 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 40 20 – – 30 – 30 760 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 Computer storage device manufacturing ................................... Other computer peripheral equipment manufacturing ................................... Communications equipment manufacturing ........................................... Radio and television broadcasting and wireless communications equipment manufacturing ....................................... Other communications equipment manufacturing ....................................... Audio and video equipment manufacturing ........................................... Semiconductor and other electronic component manufacturing ........................ Semiconductor and other electronic component manufacturing .................... Bare printed circuit board manufacturing ................................... Semiconductor and related device manufacturing ................................... Electronic capacitor manufacturing .... Electronic coil, transformer, and other inductor manufacturing ..................... Electronic connector manufacturing ... Printed circuit assembly (electronic assembly) manufacturing ................. Other electronic component manufacturing ................................... Navigational, measuring, electromedical, and control instruments manufacturing .... Navigational, measuring, electromedical, and control instruments manufacturing ....................................... Electromedical and electrotherapeutic apparatus manufacturing .................. Search, detection, navigation, guidance, aeronautical, and nautical system and instrument manufacturing ................................... Automatic environmental control manufacturing for residential, commercial, and appliance use ........ NAICS code3 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – – – – – – – – – – – Total cases 334112 80 334119 150 40 3342 660 150 70 40 40 33422 300 100 40 30 30 33429 100 20 20 3343 260 100 30 20 40 3344 2,210 490 230 160 70 140 330 30 33441 2,210 490 230 160 70 140 330 30 334412 440 90 40 20 20 30 50 – 334413 334414 650 150 100 40 80 120 50 – 334416 334417 170 110 334418 240 80 30 334419 370 130 3345 2,350 33451 – 20 – – – 40 – – 20 – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 – 90 20 – 580 250 150 130 70 270 50 2,350 580 250 150 130 70 270 50 334510 260 50 20 334511 540 90 50 334512 260 50 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 41 – 30 130 – – 40 – 20 – – 20 – – 20 – – – 30 – – 30 – – – 20 50 20 – 30 – 70 – 30 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Computer storage device manufacturing ................................... Other computer peripheral equipment manufacturing ................................... Communications equipment manufacturing ........................................... Radio and television broadcasting and wireless communications equipment manufacturing ....................................... Other communications equipment manufacturing ....................................... Audio and video equipment manufacturing ........................................... Semiconductor and other electronic component manufacturing ........................ Semiconductor and other electronic component manufacturing .................... Bare printed circuit board manufacturing ................................... Semiconductor and related device manufacturing ................................... Electronic capacitor manufacturing .... Electronic coil, transformer, and other inductor manufacturing ..................... Electronic connector manufacturing ... Printed circuit assembly (electronic assembly) manufacturing ................. Other electronic component manufacturing ................................... Navigational, measuring, electromedical, and control instruments manufacturing .... Navigational, measuring, electromedical, and control instruments manufacturing ....................................... Electromedical and electrotherapeutic apparatus manufacturing .................. Search, detection, navigation, guidance, aeronautical, and nautical system and instrument manufacturing ................................... Automatic environmental control manufacturing for residential, commercial, and appliance use ........ In lifting Repetitive motion 30 20 60 30 30 130 50 70 60 20 20 40 – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 110 30 30 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 – 70 50 20 420 230 370 120 – – – – – 270 420 230 370 120 – – – – – 270 70 40 50 60 – – – – – 40 60 120 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 80 30 60 – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 20 – – – – – – – – – – – 60 120 – – 50 20 – 30 – 60 40 50 60 40 60 20 560 240 420 80 30 – – – – 270 560 240 420 80 30 – – – – 270 50 20 40 30 – – – – – 50 120 70 120 20 – – – – – 80 – – – – – 80 – 70 See footnotes at end of table. Page 42 – – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Instruments and related products manufacturing for measuring, displaying, and controlling industrial process variables ............................. Totalizing fluid meter and counting device manufacturing ....................... Instrument manufacturing for measuring and testing electricity and electrical signals ............................... Analytical laboratory instrument manufacturing ................................... Irradiation apparatus manufacturing ... Other measuring and controlling device manufacturing ....................... Manufacturing and reproducing magnetic and optical media ..................................... Manufacturing and reproducing magnetic and optical media .................. Prerecorded compact disc (except software), tape, and record reproducing ...................................... Electrical equipment, appliance, and component manufacturing ............................ Electric lighting equipment manufacturing .. Electric lamp bulb and part manufacturing ....................................... Lighting fixture manufacturing ................ Residential electric lighting fixture manufacturing ................................... Commercial, industrial, and institutional electric lighting fixture manufacturing ................................... Other lighting equipment manufacturing ................................... Household appliance manufacturing .......... Small electrical appliance manufacturing ....................................... Electric housewares and household fan manufacturing ............................. Major appliance manufacturing .............. Household refrigerator and home freezer manufacturing ...................... 334513 470 250 334514 90 20 334515 180 30 334516 334517 220 50 334519 280 3346 20 Struck by object Fall to lower level – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Struck against object 130 – 20 Slips or trips without fall Caught in or compressed or crushed 90 40 – 70 – – 190 40 – 20 – – 40 – 33461 190 40 – 20 – – 40 – 334612 170 40 – – – 40 – 335 3351 4,700 730 1,360 250 410 40 33511 33512 70 660 30 220 20 20 335121 180 90 – – 335122 390 100 – – 335129 3352 90 730 30 210 – 33521 170 50 – 335211 33522 110 560 40 170 – 335222 130 40 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 43 40 – 300 40 – 440 100 – 40 – 50 – 90 – – 40 480 90 – 200 110 90 – 110 – 40 – – 40 – 20 – – 30 110 – – – – 20 – 70 – – 50 – 60 20 20 70 – 80 20 160 30 90 – 40 30 – – – – 20 Fall on same level 60 – – 20 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Instruments and related products manufacturing for measuring, displaying, and controlling industrial process variables ............................. Totalizing fluid meter and counting device manufacturing ....................... Instrument manufacturing for measuring and testing electricity and electrical signals ............................... Analytical laboratory instrument manufacturing ................................... Irradiation apparatus manufacturing ... Other measuring and controlling device manufacturing ....................... Manufacturing and reproducing magnetic and optical media ..................................... Manufacturing and reproducing magnetic and optical media .................. Prerecorded compact disc (except software), tape, and record reproducing ...................................... Electrical equipment, appliance, and component manufacturing ............................ Electric lighting equipment manufacturing .. Electric lamp bulb and part manufacturing ....................................... Lighting fixture manufacturing ................ Residential electric lighting fixture manufacturing ................................... Commercial, industrial, and institutional electric lighting fixture manufacturing ................................... Other lighting equipment manufacturing ................................... Household appliance manufacturing .......... Small electrical appliance manufacturing ....................................... Electric housewares and household fan manufacturing ............................. Major appliance manufacturing .............. Household refrigerator and home freezer manufacturing ...................... 20 Fires and explosions In lifting 50 40 – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – 40 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 – Assaults and violent acts Repetitive motion 80 20 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 40 – – – Total By person All other assaults All other events5 40 – 30 30 130 20 30 – – – – – – 30 20 20 – – – – – – 30 30 20 20 – – – – – – 30 20 – – – – – – 30 190 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – 20 150 – – – – – – – – – – – 40 – – – – – – 30 20 100 – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 30 30 – – – – – – 30 1,190 100 – – 630 60 590 80 – 90 50 30 30 40 20 160 – – 100 20 – – 140 – 20 – 80 20 60 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 44 20 60 20 20 440 70 70 60 – 60 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Other major household appliance manufacturing ................................... Electrical equipment manufacturing ........... Electrical equipment manufacturing ....... Power, distribution, and specialty transformer manufacturing ............... Motor and generator manufacturing ... Switchgear and switchboard apparatus manufacturing .................. Relay and industrial control manufacturing ................................... Other electrical equipment and component manufacturing ........................................... Battery manufacturing ............................ Storage battery manufacturing ........... Primary battery manufacturing ........... Fiber optic cable manufacturing ......... Wiring device manufacturing .................. Current-carrying wiring device manufacturing ................................... Noncurrent-carrying wiring device manufacturing ................................... All other electrical equipment and component manufacturing .................... All other miscellaneous electrical equipment and component manufacturing ................................... Transportation equipment manufacturing ....... Motor vehicle manufacturing ...................... Automobile and light duty motor vehicle manufacturing ....................................... Automobile manufacturing .................. Light truck and utility vehicle manufacturing ................................... Heavy duty truck manufacturing ............. Motor vehicle body and trailer manufacturing ........................................... Motor vehicle body and trailer manufacturing ....................................... Motor vehicle body manufacturing ..... Truck trailer manufacturing ................. Travel trailer and camper manufacturing ................................... Struck by object Struck against object 335228 3353 33531 80 1,680 1,680 30 460 460 – 180 180 – 335311 335312 480 590 140 190 70 70 – 335313 340 90 30 – 335314 270 30 3359 33591 335911 335912 335921 33593 1,550 310 130 180 60 570 335931 Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level – 150 150 – 70 70 40 40 60 – – 60 60 50 Fall on same level – 140 140 20 Slips or trips without fall – 50 50 30 60 – 30 40 – – – – 450 70 20 50 – 230 140 20 – – – 80 100 20 – 20 – 60 130 20 – 20 – 70 360 130 60 30 335932 220 100 30 30 33599 380 80 335999 336 3361 320 29,800 5,380 70 9,100 1,170 – 3,950 500 – 1,860 300 – 2,150 280 – 1,290 170 70 2,550 310 – 820 120 33611 336111 4,070 2,320 760 430 260 150 230 130 200 120 110 60 230 130 100 50 336112 33612 1,750 1,310 330 400 110 230 100 70 80 70 50 50 90 90 50 30 3362 3,880 1,660 730 280 430 210 330 50 33621 336211 336212 3,880 1,440 1,180 1,660 650 560 730 320 230 280 100 90 430 160 180 210 80 50 330 120 110 50 20 – 336214 1,020 360 130 80 70 60 100 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 45 – – 30 – – 40 – 170 20 – 20 – 60 – – – – – 40 – 30 – 30 – 40 – – 70 – – – – – 20 30 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion – 530 530 – 250 250 – 180 180 120 190 50 80 30 70 90 40 60 130 90 400 80 20 60 – 160 Total Other major household appliance manufacturing ................................... Electrical equipment manufacturing ........... Electrical equipment manufacturing ....... Power, distribution, and specialty transformer manufacturing ............... Motor and generator manufacturing ... Switchgear and switchboard apparatus manufacturing .................. Relay and industrial control manufacturing ................................... Other electrical equipment and component manufacturing ........................................... Battery manufacturing ............................ Storage battery manufacturing ........... Primary battery manufacturing ........... Fiber optic cable manufacturing ......... Wiring device manufacturing .................. Current-carrying wiring device manufacturing ................................... Noncurrent-carrying wiring device manufacturing ................................... All other electrical equipment and component manufacturing .................... All other miscellaneous electrical equipment and component manufacturing ................................... Transportation equipment manufacturing ....... Motor vehicle manufacturing ...................... Automobile and light duty motor vehicle manufacturing ....................................... Automobile manufacturing .................. Light truck and utility vehicle manufacturing ................................... Heavy duty truck manufacturing ............. Motor vehicle body and trailer manufacturing ........................................... Motor vehicle body and trailer manufacturing ....................................... Motor vehicle body manufacturing ..... Truck trailer manufacturing ................. Travel trailer and camper manufacturing ................................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults 70 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 180 180 20 20 – – – – – – – – – – 90 60 – – – – – 20 – – – – – 20 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 130 40 20 20 – 30 20 – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 220 50 – 40 – 90 180 40 20 20 – 50 90 20 20 110 60 30 50 30 20 60 30 80 30 30 – 40 6,700 1,410 20 3,270 550 80 3,350 1,000 30 1,330 110 – 450 120 – – – 1,030 570 420 190 870 500 70 30 90 60 – – 470 380 230 130 370 140 40 40 20 40 780 450 260 210 780 310 190 450 170 120 260 50 50 210 60 120 220 130 140 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 46 All other events5 – – – 40 – – – – – – 4,130 960 – – – – – – 810 490 – – – – – – – – 320 150 40 – – – – 340 40 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 340 130 90 – – – – – 100 30 – 40 30 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Motor vehicle parts manufacturing ............. Motor vehicle gasoline engine and engine parts manufacturing .................. Carburetor, piston, piston ring, and valve manufacturing ......................... Gasoline engine and engine parts manufacturing ................................... Motor vehicle electrical and electronic equipment manufacturing ..................... Other motor vehicle electrical and electronic equipment manufacturing ................................... Motor vehicle steering and suspension components (except spring) manufacturing ....................................... Motor vehicle brake system manufacturing ....................................... Motor vehicle transmission and power train parts manufacturing ...................... Motor vehicle seating and interior trim manufacturing ....................................... Motor vehicle metal stamping ................. Motor vehicle air-conditioning manufacturing ................................... Aerospace product and parts manufacturing ........................................... Aerospace product and parts manufacturing ....................................... Aircraft manufacturing ........................ Other aircraft parts and auxiliary equipment manufacturing ................. Guided missile and space vehicle manufacturing ................................... Guided missile and space vehicle propulsion unit and propulsion unit parts manufacturing .......................... Railroad rolling stock manufacturing .......... Ship and boat building ................................ Ship and boat building ............................ Ship building and repairing ................. Boat building ....................................... Other transportation equipment manufacturing ........................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 3363 10,430 3,380 1,410 580 1,020 33631 850 260 50 70 80 336311 210 40 336312 650 210 40 50 33632 1,390 250 100 336322 940 220 33633 820 33634 Fall to lower level Slips or trips without fall 810 360 – 70 20 – 20 60 – 50 20 40 80 – 150 60 90 30 70 – 80 20 270 50 50 110 50 30 710 430 180 70 150 33635 990 300 110 60 40 33636 33637 750 2,160 350 760 100 530 60 70 190 130 – 336391 250 90 40 30 20 – 3364 4,460 1,370 630 260 230 180 520 110 33641 336411 4,460 2,020 1,370 350 630 80 260 80 230 50 180 90 520 230 110 80 336413 1,090 530 280 80 140 20 110 – 336414 160 20 – – – – 30 – 336415 3365 3366 33661 336611 336612 40 330 4,620 4,620 2,970 1,650 – 160 1,140 1,140 790 340 – – – 370 370 290 80 – – 30 540 540 380 160 3369 700 220 100 60 See footnotes at end of table. Page 47 – 20 – 40 130 130 60 60 30 320 Fall on same level 40 – 20 – 50 70 30 30 – 260 – 160 – – 20 380 380 270 120 – – – 20 520 520 370 150 30 – – 150 150 100 60 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 2,530 1,360 1,120 560 220 100 170 30 50 20 50 160 80 120 20 390 210 230 80 240 140 160 70 210 60 80 40 120 80 40 40 270 120 70 80 160 540 100 350 120 110 20 80 – 50 30 50 20 – 890 430 440 90 890 430 430 220 440 230 190 110 120 40 20 – – – – 430 430 250 180 – 50 820 820 580 240 30 430 430 180 260 – – 330 330 190 140 220 50 70 30 Total Motor vehicle parts manufacturing ............. Motor vehicle gasoline engine and engine parts manufacturing .................. Carburetor, piston, piston ring, and valve manufacturing ......................... Gasoline engine and engine parts manufacturing ................................... Motor vehicle electrical and electronic equipment manufacturing ..................... Other motor vehicle electrical and electronic equipment manufacturing ................................... Motor vehicle steering and suspension components (except spring) manufacturing ....................................... Motor vehicle brake system manufacturing ....................................... Motor vehicle transmission and power train parts manufacturing ...................... Motor vehicle seating and interior trim manufacturing ....................................... Motor vehicle metal stamping ................. Motor vehicle air-conditioning manufacturing ................................... Aerospace product and parts manufacturing ........................................... Aerospace product and parts manufacturing ....................................... Aircraft manufacturing ........................ Other aircraft parts and auxiliary equipment manufacturing ................. Guided missile and space vehicle manufacturing ................................... Guided missile and space vehicle propulsion unit and propulsion unit parts manufacturing .......................... Railroad rolling stock manufacturing .......... Ship and boat building ................................ Ship and boat building ............................ Ship building and repairing ................. Boat building ....................................... Other transportation equipment manufacturing ........................................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – See footnotes at end of table. Page 48 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 130 20 All other events5 Total By person All other assaults – – – 1,190 – – – – – 70 – – – – – 20 – – – – – 50 20 – – – – 190 20 – – – – 100 – – – – – 90 – – – – – 40 30 – – – – 100 30 – – – – – – – – 90 180 – – – – 60 – – – – 790 90 30 60 20 – – – – – – – – 790 560 20 20 – – – – 70 – – – – – 30 – – – – – – 60 60 40 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 – – – – – 20 20 20 20 20 20 – – 30 750 750 420 330 70 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Other transportation equipment manufacturing ....................................... Motorcycle, bicycle, and parts manufacturing ................................... Military armored vehicle, tank, and tank component manufacturing ........ All other transportation equipment manufacturing ................................... Furniture and related product manufacturing ............................................... Household and institutional furniture and kitchen cabinet manufacturing .................. Wood kitchen cabinet and countertop manufacturing ....................................... Household and institutional furniture manufacturing ....................................... Upholstered household furniture manufacturing ................................... Nonupholstered wood household furniture manufacturing .................... Metal household furniture manufacturing ................................... Institutional furniture manufacturing ... Office furniture (including fixtures) manufacturing ........................................... Office furniture (including fixtures) manufacturing ....................................... Custom architectural woodwork and millwork manufacturing ..................... Office furniture (except wood) manufacturing ................................... Showcase, partition, shelving, and locker manufacturing ........................ Other furniture related product manufacturing ........................................... Mattress manufacturing .......................... Blind and shade manufacturing .............. Miscellaneous manufacturing ......................... Medical equipment and supplies manufacturing ........................................... Medical equipment and supplies manufacturing ....................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 33699 700 220 100 60 30 – 30 – 336991 350 80 20 30 20 – 30 – 336992 70 30 20 – – – – – 336999 280 110 70 – – – – – 337 9,460 4,060 1,710 1,220 850 160 600 230 3371 6,760 2,970 1,270 890 600 120 360 130 33711 3,370 1,680 660 540 350 50 120 20 33712 3,380 1,290 610 350 260 60 240 110 337121 1,310 310 160 70 90 120 20 337122 1,030 450 250 110 60 90 40 337124 337127 200 490 100 190 70 100 3372 2,140 880 33721 2,140 337212 – – – 50 – – – 40 50 280 300 230 880 280 300 230 430 290 70 150 50 337214 250 60 20 20 337215 1,200 460 180 110 130 3379 33791 33792 339 560 440 120 6,420 210 140 60 2,020 160 110 50 870 20 20 – 320 20 – – 570 20 – – 190 3391 2,020 580 210 90 140 33911 2,020 580 210 90 140 See footnotes at end of table. Page 49 – – 30 30 30 180 50 30 180 50 – – – – 50 – – 110 30 50 50 50 50 – 460 – 130 50 190 40 50 190 40 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 220 50 70 140 20 50 Total Other transportation equipment manufacturing ....................................... Motorcycle, bicycle, and parts manufacturing ................................... Military armored vehicle, tank, and tank component manufacturing ........ All other transportation equipment manufacturing ................................... Furniture and related product manufacturing ............................................... Household and institutional furniture and kitchen cabinet manufacturing .................. Wood kitchen cabinet and countertop manufacturing ....................................... Household and institutional furniture manufacturing ....................................... Upholstered household furniture manufacturing ................................... Nonupholstered wood household furniture manufacturing .................... Metal household furniture manufacturing ................................... Institutional furniture manufacturing ... Office furniture (including fixtures) manufacturing ........................................... Office furniture (including fixtures) manufacturing ....................................... Custom architectural woodwork and millwork manufacturing ..................... Office furniture (except wood) manufacturing ................................... Showcase, partition, shelving, and locker manufacturing ........................ Other furniture related product manufacturing ........................................... Mattress manufacturing .......................... Blind and shade manufacturing .............. Miscellaneous manufacturing ......................... Medical equipment and supplies manufacturing ........................................... Medical equipment and supplies manufacturing ....................................... 20 – – 60 – – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 30 50 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions All other events5 Total By person All other assaults – – – – 70 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 40 – – – – 30 2,680 1,440 610 170 130 – – – – 800 1,920 910 430 110 90 – – – – 600 960 500 120 80 40 – – – – 280 960 400 310 40 60 – – – – 320 440 150 180 – 50 – – – – 150 260 140 80 – – – – – – 70 30 20 – 70 20 – – – – – – – – – – 40 50 620 430 160 40 – – – – – 170 620 430 160 40 – – – – – 170 90 80 20 – – – – – 60 20 30 – – – – – – 20 360 260 100 – – – – – – 100 140 120 20 1,590 100 80 20 1,050 20 – – 960 20 – – 300 20 – – 120 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 20 470 300 340 120 30 – – – – 180 470 300 340 120 30 – – – – 180 30 130 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 50 30 – 30 – 600 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Laboratory apparatus and furniture manufacturing ................................... Surgical and medical instrument manufacturing ................................... Surgical appliance and supplies manufacturing ................................... Dental equipment and supplies manufacturing ................................... Ophthalmic goods manufacturing ....... Dental laboratories ............................. Other miscellaneous manufacturing ........... Jewelry and silverware manufacturing ... Jewelry (except costume) manufacturing ................................... Sporting and athletic goods manufacturing ....................................... Doll, toy, and game manufacturing ......... Game, toy, and children’s vehicle manufacturing ................................... Office supplies (except paper) manufacturing ....................................... Pen and mechanical pencil manufacturing ................................... Carbon paper and inked ribbon manufacturing ................................... Sign manufacturing ................................ All other miscellaneous manufacturing ... Gasket, packing, and sealing device manufacturing ................................... Burial casket manufacturing ............... All other miscellaneous manufacturing ................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – – – – – 339111 100 40 30 339112 610 150 60 30 40 20 80 – 339113 760 210 80 40 70 20 40 – 339114 339115 339116 3399 33991 110 270 160 4,400 230 30 40 120 1,450 110 – – – 430 70 – – – 140 – 20 40 – 660 30 – – – 230 – – 270 40 – – – – 339911 130 80 20 – – – – 33992 33993 880 110 310 30 120 – – – – 50 20 – 339932 100 30 – – – – 20 – 33994 300 80 – 20 – 339941 60 339944 33995 33999 50 1,200 1,680 20 460 440 339991 339995 360 70 150 – 339999 580 210 120 20 60 840,580 194,350 99,540 54,300 24,910 47,490 133,770 25,300 380,720 99,050 51,660 26,010 14,220 23,970 47,860 11,090 Service providing ............................. Trade, transportation, and utilities9 .... – – 20 70 30 90 20 – – – 260 200 – 60 70 30 – 50 30 – – – – 90 140 40 – 20 60 – – – – – 20 – – 90 20 90 – 60 80 20 50 40 – – 30 – – Wholesale trade ........................................ 42 80,170 21,450 10,370 5,420 4,030 4,770 8,580 2,580 Merchant wholesalers, durable goods ............ Motor vehicle and motor vehicle parts and supplies merchant wholesalers ................ 423 37,920 12,350 6,020 3,130 2,270 2,500 3,720 920 4231 6,820 2,000 930 630 280 310 840 180 See footnotes at end of table. Page 51 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Laboratory apparatus and furniture manufacturing ................................... Surgical and medical instrument manufacturing ................................... Surgical appliance and supplies manufacturing ................................... Dental equipment and supplies manufacturing ................................... Ophthalmic goods manufacturing ....... Dental laboratories ............................. Other miscellaneous manufacturing ........... Jewelry and silverware manufacturing ... Jewelry (except costume) manufacturing ................................... Sporting and athletic goods manufacturing ....................................... Doll, toy, and game manufacturing ......... Game, toy, and children’s vehicle manufacturing ................................... Office supplies (except paper) manufacturing ....................................... Pen and mechanical pencil manufacturing ................................... Carbon paper and inked ribbon manufacturing ................................... Sign manufacturing ................................ All other miscellaneous manufacturing ... Gasket, packing, and sealing device manufacturing ................................... Burial casket manufacturing ............... All other miscellaneous manufacturing ................................... 20 In lifting Repetitive motion – – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults – – – – – All other events5 – 160 100 90 20 – – – – – 60 250 170 120 50 – – – – – 60 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 30 – – – – – – – 420 20 – – – – – – – 30 – 20 30 90 – 1,120 20 – 750 20 – 620 20 – – – 180 – – – – 130 – 140 – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 20 – – – – – – – – 20 40 – – – – – – 20 20 – – – – – – – – – 390 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 160 160 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 250 20 20 100 – 90 – 20 290 430 – 210 290 60 – 190 30 – 40 80 – 40 80 30 30 – – 50 20 20 40 120 20 40 Service providing ............................. 217,240 117,610 25,760 34,560 48,810 1,440 19,520 14,000 5,520 92,350 59,770 10,290 9,740 25,490 880 3,240 2,120 1,120 44,140 190 8,780 Trade, transportation, and utilities9 .... 104,980 Wholesale trade ........................................ 22,930 12,630 2,290 1,890 6,390 120 400 210 Merchant wholesalers, durable goods ............ Motor vehicle and motor vehicle parts and supplies merchant wholesalers ................ 9,780 5,570 970 960 2,770 80 40 30 1,730 1,000 200 150 450 See footnotes at end of table. Page 52 – – – 90 – 3,830 – 970 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Furniture and home furnishing merchant wholesalers .............................................. Lumber and other construction materials merchant wholesalers .............................. Professional and commercial equipment and supplies merchant wholesalers ......... Metal and mineral (except petroleum) merchant wholesalers .............................. Electrical goods merchant wholesalers ...... Hardware, and plumbing and heating equipment and supplies merchant wholesalers .............................................. Machinery, equipment, and supplies merchant wholesalers .............................. Miscellaneous durable goods merchant wholesalers .............................................. Merchant wholesalers, nondurable goods ...... Paper and paper product merchant wholesalers .............................................. Drugs and druggists’ sundries merchant wholesalers .............................................. Apparel, piece goods, and notions merchant wholesalers .............................. Grocery and related product merchant wholesalers .............................................. Farm product raw material merchant wholesalers .............................................. Chemical and allied products merchant wholesalers .............................................. Petroleum and petroleum products merchant wholesalers .............................. Beer, wine, and distilled alcoholic beverage merchant wholesalers .............. Miscellaneous nondurable goods merchant wholesalers .............................................. Wholesale electronic markets and agents and brokers ......................................................... Wholesale electronic markets and agents and brokers .............................................. Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 4232 1,500 600 370 180 30 20 190 40 4233 5,300 1,960 1,020 510 300 580 490 100 4234 3,670 540 250 110 140 300 430 70 4235 4236 2,700 2,430 1,270 540 580 380 250 20 310 80 150 190 340 250 60 210 4237 3,280 920 490 240 120 140 350 50 4238 8,830 3,230 1,470 950 690 620 610 110 4239 424 3,380 36,550 1,300 7,590 530 3,540 240 2,100 300 1,380 200 2,060 230 4,200 110 1,570 4241 1,590 390 140 150 90 50 140 40 4242 1,380 300 130 140 90 180 20 4243 1,340 460 290 110 60 40 180 40 4244 18,260 3,660 1,550 1,030 850 1,000 2,210 660 4245 1,120 250 130 40 60 50 460 4246 1,470 290 70 40 50 130 4247 1,920 330 160 90 60 240 4248 5,160 1,060 600 280 120 340 330 300 4249 4,320 870 470 240 120 390 340 170 425 5,690 1,510 810 190 380 210 660 90 4251 5,690 1,510 810 190 380 210 660 90 Retail trade ................................................ 44-45 175,880 51,720 28,480 13,680 6,600 9,890 26,920 4,550 Motor vehicle and parts dealers ..................... 441 25,790 8,470 4,870 2,000 760 1,280 3,540 650 See footnotes at end of table. Page 53 – – – – 280 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 470 240 60 1,220 720 120 880 470 470 670 Total Furniture and home furnishing merchant wholesalers .............................................. Lumber and other construction materials merchant wholesalers .............................. Professional and commercial equipment and supplies merchant wholesalers ......... Metal and mineral (except petroleum) merchant wholesalers .............................. Electrical goods merchant wholesalers ...... Hardware, and plumbing and heating equipment and supplies merchant wholesalers .............................................. Machinery, equipment, and supplies merchant wholesalers .............................. Miscellaneous durable goods merchant wholesalers .............................................. Merchant wholesalers, nondurable goods ...... Paper and paper product merchant wholesalers .............................................. Drugs and druggists’ sundries merchant wholesalers .............................................. Apparel, piece goods, and notions merchant wholesalers .............................. Grocery and related product merchant wholesalers .............................................. Farm product raw material merchant wholesalers .............................................. Chemical and allied products merchant wholesalers .............................................. Petroleum and petroleum products merchant wholesalers .............................. Beer, wine, and distilled alcoholic beverage merchant wholesalers .............. Miscellaneous nondurable goods merchant wholesalers .............................................. Wholesale electronic markets and agents and brokers ......................................................... Wholesale electronic markets and agents and brokers .............................................. Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 60 – – – – 50 120 320 – – – – 380 110 120 640 – – – – 600 250 460 60 100 100 90 50 180 – – – – – – – – 190 190 850 440 130 50 440 – – – – 360 2,720 1,800 140 140 440 50 – – – 770 760 11,970 190 6,340 50 930 190 660 200 2,980 – 30 – 290 – 130 – 160 460 240 70 – 150 – – – – 260 310 270 80 – 320 – – – – 80 420 310 90 20 – – – – 70 6,450 3,530 320 170 – 2,340 130 70 – 470 200 – 40 40 – – – – 130 580 280 – 210 190 – – – – 270 2,060 830 100 20 290 – – – – 660 1,100 610 240 140 530 – 100 1,180 720 380 280 640 – 70 1,180 720 380 280 640 – Retail trade ................................................ 45,820 29,050 5,340 4,860 5,480 Motor vehicle and parts dealers ..................... 4,670 2,980 620 890 1,980 See footnotes at end of table. Page 54 – Assaults and violent acts – – 1,410 – – 40 – 90 20 – 90 – 320 4,280 50 30 440 50 20 680 70 50 20 680 500 2,020 1,460 570 18,760 420 180 130 50 3,100 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Automobile dealers ..................................... New car dealers ..................................... Used car dealers .................................... Other motor vehicle dealers ....................... Recreational vehicle dealers .................. Motorcycle, boat, and other motor vehicle dealers ..................................... Automotive parts, accessories, and tire stores ........................................................ Automotive parts and accessories stores .................................................... Tire dealers ............................................ Furniture and home furnishings stores ........... Furniture stores .......................................... Home furnishings stores ............................. Floor covering stores .............................. Other home furnishings stores ............... Electronics and appliance stores .................... Electronics and appliance stores ................ Appliance, television, and other electronics stores ................................. Computer and software stores ............... Camera and photographic supplies stores .................................................... Building material and garden equipment and supplies dealers ........................................... Building material and supplies dealers ....... Home centers ......................................... Paint and wallpaper stores ..................... Hardware stores ..................................... Other building material dealers .............. Lawn and garden equipment and supplies stores ........................................................ Outdoor power equipment stores ........... Nursery and garden centers ................... Food and beverage stores ............................. Grocery stores ............................................ Supermarkets and other grocery (except convenience) stores ............................. Specialty food stores .................................. Meat markets .......................................... Fruit and vegetable markets ................... Other specialty food stores ..................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 4411 44111 44112 4412 44121 16,740 15,900 840 1,840 600 5,560 5,140 420 660 80 2,870 2,690 180 510 50 1,550 1,530 20 60 – 420 410 – 90 – 630 620 – 420 150 2,770 2,660 110 80 30 44122 1,240 590 460 40 80 270 40 4413 7,220 2,250 1,480 400 250 230 690 150 44131 44132 442 4421 4422 44221 44229 443 4431 3,650 3,570 8,580 4,160 4,420 1,710 2,710 2,910 2,910 810 1,440 2,990 1,350 1,640 440 1,200 850 850 550 940 1,780 580 1,190 330 870 620 620 120 280 920 660 260 70 190 160 160 120 130 190 70 120 30 90 40 40 90 140 580 310 260 40 230 170 170 390 300 850 520 330 100 230 570 570 30 120 130 80 50 – 40 60 60 44311 44312 2,260 550 710 100 530 70 140 20 20 110 60 430 80 40 20 44313 100 444 4441 44411 44412 44413 44419 24,600 22,860 14,050 410 1,660 6,740 7,690 6,950 4,200 – 530 2,140 4,500 4,150 2,400 – 350 1,380 4442 44421 44422 445 4451 1,740 130 1,610 40,760 36,640 730 60 680 12,790 11,950 350 – 320 5,740 5,350 44511 4452 44521 44523 44529 35,430 2,750 650 370 1,730 11,530 600 280 80 240 5,330 230 100 40 100 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 55 – – – – – 50 430 390 30 70 50 – – 1,440 1,360 840 – 80 440 1,430 1,180 810 – 70 240 2,030 1,910 770 – 370 550 2,280 2,110 1,180 – 250 680 680 660 460 – – 180 80 40 3,730 3,540 250 – 250 2,340 2,130 130 – 130 1,370 980 170 – 160 6,240 5,600 – – – 980 890 3,530 140 50 – 80 1,810 190 120 20 50 970 350 40 30 280 5,540 310 70 70 170 880 80 30 20 30 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 2,960 2,850 110 210 60 1,750 1,730 20 160 50 400 340 60 – – 160 110 1,500 1,070 210 260 790 350 610 880 2,590 1,420 1,170 500 670 810 810 380 690 1,590 890 700 260 440 490 490 60 160 230 40 180 160 20 40 40 210 50 150 20 130 110 20 40 40 770 – 210 90 120 70 60 130 130 270 80 – – – – – – – 610 190 340 140 20 20 30 90 40 Total Automobile dealers ..................................... New car dealers ..................................... Used car dealers .................................... Other motor vehicle dealers ....................... Recreational vehicle dealers .................. Motorcycle, boat, and other motor vehicle dealers ..................................... Automotive parts, accessories, and tire stores ........................................................ Automotive parts and accessories stores .................................................... Tire dealers ............................................ Furniture and home furnishings stores ........... Furniture stores .......................................... Home furnishings stores ............................. Floor covering stores .............................. Other home furnishings stores ............... Electronics and appliance stores .................... Electronics and appliance stores ................ Appliance, television, and other electronics stores ................................. Computer and software stores ............... Camera and photographic supplies stores .................................................... Building material and garden equipment and supplies dealers ........................................... Building material and supplies dealers ....... Home centers ......................................... Paint and wallpaper stores ..................... Hardware stores ..................................... Other building material dealers .............. Lawn and garden equipment and supplies stores ........................................................ Outdoor power equipment stores ........... Nursery and garden centers ................... Food and beverage stores ............................. Grocery stores ............................................ Supermarkets and other grocery (except convenience) stores ............................. Specialty food stores .................................. Meat markets .......................................... Fruit and vegetable markets ................... Other specialty food stores ..................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – 560 530 30 60 – – 50 1,130 1,090 30 60 – – – 70 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 70 70 90 50 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7,720 7,450 5,090 – 270 1,990 4,630 4,430 2,920 – 210 1,220 330 320 190 – – 110 430 330 250 – – 80 950 830 320 – 30 480 – – – – – – 280 – 250 10,820 9,780 190 – 170 7,310 6,790 – – – 1,940 1,660 100 – 100 930 890 110 – 110 690 390 – – – – – 9,670 630 – 50 560 6,780 310 – 40 270 1,640 250 130 – 110 890 40 – – 20 390 140 30 50 60 – – – – – 70 – 50 40 – – – – – – – – – – Page 56 90 90 All other assaults – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Total By person – 90 20 70 – 80 20 60 – 70 60 60 30 30 – – – 30 30 30 – – – 30 All other events5 2,150 2,110 40 250 200 50 710 360 350 760 310 450 280 180 260 260 220 40 – 30 2,430 2,260 1,560 – 180 520 30 – – – – – 30 380 370 – – – 370 360 – – 170 – 130 4,630 4,140 240 – – – – 230 – – – – – – – – – 3,680 350 – 60 270 – – 30 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Health and personal care stores .................... Health and personal care stores ................ Pharmacies and drug stores .................. Cosmetics, beauty supplies, and perfume stores ..................................... Optical goods stores ............................... Other health and personal care stores ... Gasoline stations ............................................ Gasoline stations ........................................ Gasoline stations with convenience stores .................................................... Other gasoline stations ........................... Clothing and clothing accessories stores ....... Clothing stores ........................................... Men’s clothing stores .............................. Women’s clothing stores ........................ Family clothing stores ............................. Clothing accessories stores ................... Other clothing stores .............................. Shoe stores ................................................ Jewelry, luggage, and leather goods stores ........................................................ Jewelry stores ........................................ Sporting goods, hobby, book, and music stores ............................................................ Sporting goods, hobby, and musical instrument stores ...................................... Sporting goods stores ............................ Hobby, toy, and game stores ................. Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores .................................................... Musical instrument and supplies stores .................................................... Book, periodical, and music stores ............. Book stores and news dealers ............... Prerecorded tape, compact disc, and record stores ........................................ General merchandise stores .......................... Department stores ...................................... Other general merchandise stores ............. Warehouse clubs and superstores ......... All other general merchandise stores ..... Miscellaneous store retailers .......................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 110 110 80 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 446 4461 44611 5,400 5,400 4,100 780 780 590 350 350 240 270 270 220 44612 44613 44619 447 4471 280 60 960 8,490 8,490 100 20 80 1,510 1,510 70 – – 560 560 20 – – 820 820 – – – 44711 44719 448 4481 44811 44812 44814 44815 44819 4482 7,310 1,190 5,950 4,760 130 880 3,020 40 170 1,030 1,330 180 1,850 1,660 60 250 1,020 – 60 150 480 80 1,130 1,060 40 190 610 – 40 40 – 4483 44831 160 140 40 30 451 3,340 1,140 840 180 70 230 650 80 4511 45111 45112 2,690 1,120 1,170 1,030 450 520 760 310 420 160 80 60 70 50 20 200 80 110 420 130 140 70 20 50 45113 270 45114 4512 45121 130 650 550 30 110 90 20 80 60 45122 452 4521 4529 45291 45299 453 100 37,390 20,110 17,280 12,720 – 7,810 20 10,710 5,410 5,300 3,760 1,540 2,200 20 6,470 3,280 3,200 2,190 1,000 1,180 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 57 30 – – 320 320 300 1,700 1,700 1,310 120 120 100 80 80 – – – 510 510 30 30 330 2,050 2,050 – – – 300 300 790 30 530 420 20 40 270 – 20 110 60 140 130 – – 110 – – – 500 – 610 380 – 90 210 – – 230 1,520 530 1,220 980 – 320 580 – 20 150 290 – 230 230 – 50 170 – – – – – – – – – – – 20 20 – 2,660 1,600 1,060 790 270 750 – – – – – – – 1,210 470 730 670 60 170 100 90 – – 130 – 20 20 – 230 200 – – – – 1,850 1,360 480 430 – 490 30 5,820 3,160 2,670 2,140 530 1,400 – 1,090 600 500 390 110 100 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Health and personal care stores .................... Health and personal care stores ................ Pharmacies and drug stores .................. Cosmetics, beauty supplies, and perfume stores ..................................... Optical goods stores ............................... Other health and personal care stores ... Gasoline stations ............................................ Gasoline stations ........................................ Gasoline stations with convenience stores .................................................... Other gasoline stations ........................... Clothing and clothing accessories stores ....... Clothing stores ........................................... Men’s clothing stores .............................. Women’s clothing stores ........................ Family clothing stores ............................. Clothing accessories stores ................... Other clothing stores .............................. Shoe stores ................................................ Jewelry, luggage, and leather goods stores ........................................................ Jewelry stores ........................................ Sporting goods, hobby, book, and music stores ............................................................ Sporting goods, hobby, and musical instrument stores ...................................... Sporting goods stores ............................ Hobby, toy, and game stores ................. Sewing, needlework, and piece goods stores .................................................... Musical instrument and supplies stores .................................................... Book, periodical, and music stores ............. Book stores and news dealers ............... Prerecorded tape, compact disc, and record stores ........................................ General merchandise stores .......................... Department stores ...................................... Other general merchandise stores ............. Warehouse clubs and superstores ......... All other general merchandise stores ..... Miscellaneous store retailers .......................... 1,150 1,150 980 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 820 820 710 210 210 130 330 330 100 120 120 100 – – – 60 60 30 40 40 30 – – – 20 – – – 260 260 – – – – – – 300 300 – – – 290 290 – – – – – All other assaults All other events5 610 610 450 50 – 120 2,030 2,030 70 1,400 1,400 60 130 130 – – – 640 640 1,920 110 910 860 20 120 560 – 20 50 1,300 100 590 560 20 70 330 – – – 90 30 150 80 – – 60 – – 70 570 70 100 90 – – 80 – – – 240 – 80 70 – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – 250 50 160 50 – – 40 – – 110 250 40 60 50 – – 40 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 540 160 630 390 20 50 250 – 50 240 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 Total By person – – – – 730 520 90 560 230 170 370 130 120 70 50 90 60 60 60 60 – 90 710 710 40 110 – – – – 270 20 – – – 100 100 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 210 60 150 90 – – – – – – – – 70 170 130 40 150 110 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 11,110 5,370 5,740 4,010 1,730 1,820 30 7,070 3,460 3,610 2,660 950 970 – 990 580 410 400 – 100 – 320 180 130 130 – 310 – – – – – – – – 570 440 130 130 – 180 – 430 330 90 90 – 30 – 150 110 40 40 – 160 20 20 – 1,070 370 710 390 320 280 See footnotes at end of table. Page 58 60 40 20 3,850 2,630 1,220 950 270 930 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects NAICS code3 Industry2 Total cases Total Florists ........................................................ Office supplies, stationery, and gift stores .. Office supplies and stationery stores ..... Gift, novelty, and souvenir stores ........... Used merchandise stores ........................... Other miscellaneous store retailers ............ Pet and pet supplies stores .................... Manufactured (mobile) home dealers ..... All other miscellaneous store retailers .... Nonstore retailers ........................................... Electronic shopping and mail-order houses ...................................................... Vending machine operators ....................... Direct selling establishments ...................... Fuel dealers ............................................ Other direct selling establishments ........ Struck by object Struck against object 4531 4532 45321 45322 4533 4539 45391 45393 45399 454 470 3,040 1,920 1,120 1,410 2,890 1,040 350 1,470 4,860 80 730 450 280 700 680 280 70 330 750 30 430 240 190 350 370 90 50 240 440 50 230 150 70 320 160 60 20 80 220 4541 4542 4543 45431 45439 1,300 740 2,820 1,910 910 270 120 360 150 210 120 70 250 90 160 110 30 80 50 – .......... 48-49 117,440 24,540 12,160 6,550 Air transportation ............................................ Scheduled air transportation ...................... Nonscheduled air transportation ................ Rail transportation9 ......................................... Water transportation ....................................... Deep sea, coastal, and great lakes water transportation ........................................... Inland water transportation ......................... Truck transportation ....................................... General freight trucking .............................. General freight trucking, local ................. General freight trucking, long-distance ... Specialized freight trucking ........................ Used household and office goods moving .................................................. Specialized freight (except used goods) trucking, local ....................................... Specialized freight (except used goods) trucking, long-distance ......................... Transit and ground passenger transportation ............................................... Urban transit systems ................................. Taxi and limousine service ......................... Taxi service ............................................ 481 4811 4812 482 483 21,730 21,010 720 3,900 1,100 4,170 4,040 130 730 310 1,930 1,850 80 320 150 4831 4832 484 4841 48411 48412 4842 610 490 42,340 30,510 5,000 25,510 11,840 170 140 8,840 6,520 1,160 5,360 2,320 48421 2,620 48422 Transportation and warehousing9 Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 50 240 120 130 – 180 80 70 40 470 130 400 200 210 250 610 160 20 440 600 50 50 370 320 50 240 60 300 260 30 3,410 8,720 11,520 3,590 1,430 1,390 40 230 100 420 410 – 60 20 610 550 60 730 60 2,070 1,950 120 20 130 610 580 20 70 60 70 80 4,480 3,350 540 2,820 1,130 60 40 2,180 1,400 250 1,150 770 – – 1,310 1,130 180 950 180 20 40 4,610 3,330 420 2,910 1,290 90 40 4,560 3,460 670 2,790 1,100 40 20 1,440 1,080 250 830 350 630 350 200 60 280 210 90 5,490 1,140 590 270 90 500 510 160 48423 3,720 550 200 300 40 510 380 110 485 4851 4853 48531 6,770 1,500 1,220 710 870 260 130 60 320 80 60 20 380 100 60 30 70 430 80 30 – 1,000 100 120 50 210 60 20 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 59 – Fall to lower level 50 40 – – 100 90 – – 70 30 – 30 – – – – – – 40 30 – – 40 – – 20 120 30 30 60 40 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment In lifting Repetitive motion 90 820 610 210 230 690 250 80 350 1,470 80 350 250 100 130 420 130 80 210 690 50 140 90 40 30 60 40 – – 260 – 360 290 820 500 320 210 180 300 110 190 200 20 40 40 – .......... 34,740 17,450 Air transportation ............................................ Scheduled air transportation ...................... Nonscheduled air transportation ................ Rail transportation9 ......................................... Water transportation ....................................... Deep sea, coastal, and great lakes water transportation ........................................... Inland water transportation ......................... Truck transportation ....................................... General freight trucking .............................. General freight trucking, local ................. General freight trucking, long-distance ... Specialized freight trucking ........................ Used household and office goods moving .................................................. Specialized freight (except used goods) trucking, local ....................................... Specialized freight (except used goods) trucking, long-distance ......................... Transit and ground passenger transportation ............................................... Urban transit systems ................................. Taxi and limousine service ......................... Taxi service ............................................ 9,220 9,040 180 540 270 Total Florists ........................................................ Office supplies, stationery, and gift stores .. Office supplies and stationery stores ..... Gift, novelty, and souvenir stores ........... Used merchandise stores ........................... Other miscellaneous store retailers ............ Pet and pet supplies stores .................... Manufactured (mobile) home dealers ..... All other miscellaneous store retailers .... Nonstore retailers ........................................... Electronic shopping and mail-order houses ...................................................... Vending machine operators ....................... Direct selling establishments ...................... Fuel dealers ............................................ Other direct selling establishments ........ Transportation and warehousing9 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 – 200 190 – – 80 – – 50 330 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 160 150 – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 150 150 – – 30 30 410 180 230 140 340 40 60 210 570 20 60 160 160 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 130 60 390 280 110 2,350 2,570 13,170 5,130 5,060 70 – 120 610 600 – 40 20 720 710 – 190 30 1,250 1,180 70 460 50 – – – – – 140 130 10,950 8,280 1,330 6,960 2,670 60 60 4,380 3,480 750 2,730 900 – – 480 350 50 300 120 – – 650 540 130 410 120 30 20 5,970 3,670 670 3,010 2,290 – – 930 540 30 60 1,010 100 730 270 80 1,160 210 310 140 530 80 180 90 130 50 20 20 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 60 50 30 – – 50 – 20 – 240 40 280 110 170 20 20 – 230 20 20 – 660 400 90 60 30 40 60 60 250 15,370 30 2,370 2,280 90 1,070 160 – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – 150 100 – 90 40 260 – 40 – 1,160 – – – 870 – – 1,990 400 460 360 – – – – 160 80 20 20 50 30 – 30 130 60 20 20 40 30 40 – 80 80 4,650 3,130 310 2,820 1,520 40 – 90 – – 950 – – 480 – – – – 680 200 90 30 80 40 – 70 60 – 120 50 20 20 60 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Limousine service ................................... School and employee bus transportation ... Charter bus industry ................................... Other transit and ground passenger transportation ........................................... Pipeline transportation .................................... Pipeline transportation of natural gas ......... Scenic and sightseeing transportation ........... Scenic and sightseeing transportation, water ......................................................... Support activities for transportation ................ Support activities for air transportation ....... Support activities for rail transportation ...... Support activities for water transportation .. Support activities for road transportation .... Motor vehicle towing ............................... Other support activities for transportation .. Couriers and messengers .............................. Couriers ...................................................... Local messengers and local delivery ......... Warehousing and storage .............................. Warehousing and storage .......................... General warehousing and storage ......... Refrigerated warehousing and storage ...... Other warehousing and storage ............. Struck by object Struck against object 48532 4854 4855 510 1,810 370 80 230 70 30 60 30 4859 486 4862 487 1,170 230 200 410 100 30 30 160 30 20 20 50 4872 488 4881 4882 4883 4884 48841 4889 492 4921 4922 493 4931 49311 49312 49319 180 11,800 2,470 600 3,760 1,410 540 340 17,040 16,160 880 12,120 12,120 9,910 12,120 820 120 3,220 680 260 1,030 240 – 170 3,070 2,890 180 3,130 3,130 2,550 3,130 120 – 1,760 410 150 560 150 – 130 1,680 1,570 110 1,430 1,430 1,270 1,430 40 – 530 120 50 230 40 – 20 760 700 50 940 940 800 940 30 Utilities ...................................................... 22 7,230 1,340 650 Utilities ............................................................ Electric power generation, transmission and distribution ......................................... Electric power generation ....................... Electric power transmission, control, and distribution ............................................ Natural gas distribution ............................... Water, sewage and other systems ............. Water supply and irrigation systems ...... Sewage treatment facilities .................... 221 7,230 1,340 2211 22111 4,670 2,080 22112 2212 2213 22131 22132 Information ............................................ Information ................................................ 51 Caught in or compressed or crushed 60 – – – – Slips or trips without fall 80 410 90 60 30 150 – – 40 – 450 110 – 150 40 – 20 460 450 – 540 540 340 540 20 – 1,030 300 140 200 80 60 – 870 850 – 350 350 280 350 20 – 1,220 290 70 460 250 180 30 1,450 1,380 70 1,020 1,020 790 1,020 160 – 270 80 – 110 – – – 650 590 50 240 240 210 240 30 350 180 590 850 370 650 350 180 590 850 370 760 310 340 120 160 90 140 60 390 150 600 330 270 100 2,590 1,640 920 510 290 450 260 330 110 130 210 110 200 90 70 70 90 100 – 50 80 30 240 110 100 50 30 260 180 80 20 50 170 100 – – – 20,690 3,880 1,440 1,590 590 2,030 3,760 720 20,690 3,880 1,440 1,590 590 2,030 3,760 720 Page 61 – Fall on same level 20 160 20 See footnotes at end of table. 40 110 30 Fall to lower level – – 20 20 – – – – – – – 50 20 40 40 20 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Limousine service ................................... School and employee bus transportation ... Charter bus industry ................................... Other transit and ground passenger transportation ........................................... Pipeline transportation .................................... Pipeline transportation of natural gas ......... Scenic and sightseeing transportation ........... Scenic and sightseeing transportation, water ......................................................... Support activities for transportation ................ Support activities for air transportation ....... Support activities for rail transportation ...... Support activities for water transportation .. Support activities for road transportation .... Motor vehicle towing ............................... Other support activities for transportation .. Couriers and messengers .............................. Couriers ...................................................... Local messengers and local delivery ......... Warehousing and storage .............................. Warehousing and storage .......................... General warehousing and storage ......... Refrigerated warehousing and storage ...... Other warehousing and storage ............. In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 160 170 50 90 60 40 – 250 60 60 40 130 – – – – – – – – – 2,160 530 70 390 160 – 80 5,800 5,620 180 4,520 4,520 3,830 4,520 250 – 1,180 300 – 170 70 – 70 3,390 3,290 110 2,700 2,700 2,380 2,700 100 Utilities ...................................................... 1,490 Utilities ............................................................ Electric power generation, transmission and distribution ......................................... Electric power generation ....................... Electric power transmission, control, and distribution ............................................ Natural gas distribution ............................... Water, sewage and other systems ............. Water supply and irrigation systems ...... Sewage treatment facilities .................... Fires and explosions 20 100 550 50 – – – 400 20 20 70 – 20 20 20 – 100 30 – – – – – 370 350 – 590 590 470 590 80 – 450 140 – 210 – – 20 180 180 – 150 150 130 150 – 630 300 1,490 630 980 380 20 30 – – Assaults and violent acts Total By person – – 20 – 20 – 20 20 20 – – – – 1,290 110 20 460 360 – 30 1,110 900 210 950 950 670 950 60 – 120 – – – 70 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 170 170 – 20 20 20 20 – 420 450 30 160 300 420 450 30 160 450 170 230 120 330 160 250 150 20 – 70 30 – – 600 320 190 160 30 280 130 50 40 – 110 50 30 20 – 160 40 60 50 – 100 140 60 40 20 – – – – – 40 70 20 – Information ............................................ 3,430 1,690 1,430 930 1,400 – 220 Information ................................................ 3,430 1,690 1,430 930 1,400 – 220 See footnotes at end of table. Page 62 – – – – – – 50 20 – – All other assaults All other events5 – – – 60 200 20 – – – – 130 20 20 30 – – – – – – – – 120 120 – – – – – – – 1,880 290 – 840 120 – – 3,370 3,230 140 1,140 1,140 950 1,140 100 50 110 1,220 50 110 1,220 70 30 780 340 40 30 20 450 380 60 40 20 70 150 2,870 70 150 2,870 40 – – – – – – 50 50 – 20 20 20 20 – 40 – – – – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Publishing industries (except Internet) ........... Newspaper, periodical, book, and directory publishers ................................................. Newspaper publishers ............................ Periodical publishers .............................. Book publishers ...................................... Directory and mailing list publishers ....... Other publishers ..................................... Software publishers .................................... Motion picture and video exhibition ........ Postproduction services and other motion picture and video industries ...... Broadcasting (except Internet) ....................... Radio and television broadcasting ............. Radio broadcasting ................................ Television broadcasting .......................... Cable and other subscription programming ............................................ Telecommunications ...................................... Wired telecommunications carriers ............ Telecommunications resellers .................... Cable and other program distribution ......... Internet service providers, web search portals, and data processing services .......... Data processing, hosting, and related services .................................................... Other information services ............................. Other information services ......................... News syndicates .................................... Libraries and archives ............................ Other information services ..................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 511 5,740 1,300 400 410 440 430 1,080 160 5111 51111 51112 51113 51114 51119 5112 51213 5,420 4,120 390 320 400 190 320 560 1,290 970 90 80 80 80 – 120 390 280 30 40 30 20 – 50 400 290 30 20 – 50 – 70 440 360 20 20 40 – – – 310 250 – 40 – – 120 40 940 670 50 50 150 – 130 210 160 130 – – – – – – 51219 515 5151 51511 51512 90 1,750 950 270 680 30 280 200 70 140 – 160 110 60 40 – 100 80 – 70 – – – – – – 240 170 70 90 – 270 130 30 100 – 5152 517 5171 5173 5175 800 10,160 5,530 1,210 2,810 80 1,750 880 100 730 50 580 390 40 130 30 940 330 40 560 – 100 90 – – 70 1,200 830 20 310 130 1,680 810 180 520 70 390 220 40 110 518 1,120 180 90 20 30 20 360 40 5182 519 5191 51911 51912 51919 820 120 120 20 70 30 170 20 20 – – – 20 110 40 40 – 40 – 38,250 8,190 4,540 2,100 590 3,290 6,690 1,190 80 860 3,690 380 – 500 310 230 – 50 – 1,770 1,100 750 160 200 – 180 150 60 – 80 Financial activities ............................... 90 – – – – – 20 – – – – – Finance and insurance ............................ 52 14,090 1,690 820 710 Monetary authorities - central bank ................ Credit intermediation and related activities .... Depository credit intermediation ................. Commercial banking ............................... Savings institutions ................................. Credit unions .......................................... 521 522 5221 52211 52212 52213 100 7,240 5,030 3,080 1,080 850 30 950 730 310 200 220 – 440 360 130 80 150 – 430 320 170 130 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 63 20 – – – – – – – – – – – 60 40 – – 30 80 – – – 40 – – – – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 1,180 650 320 110 510 – 60 50 – 590 1,170 910 110 40 80 20 – 40 650 460 70 40 60 – – 30 300 180 – 60 20 30 30 – 110 40 50 – – – – – 510 430 30 – 40 – – – – – – – – – – – 50 40 40 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 580 500 30 – – 30 – 130 – 250 120 – 110 – 140 80 – 80 – 20 – 150 30 – 30 – 180 160 70 80 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 220 100 – 100 130 1,560 1,060 70 360 70 660 380 50 190 50 720 290 280 40 120 590 260 210 80 20 610 350 80 160 – – – – – – – – – – – – 200 100 180 30 40 – – – – 60 190 – – – – – 100 – – – – – 170 20 20 – – 20 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 60 20 20 Financial activities ............................... 6,620 3,810 2,900 2,570 2,130 Finance and insurance ............................ 1,500 900 2,360 1,150 490 Monetary authorities - central bank ................ Credit intermediation and related activities .... Depository credit intermediation ................. Commercial banking ............................... Savings institutions ................................. Credit unions .......................................... 20 850 630 410 120 100 20 560 410 290 90 30 20 1,000 750 560 80 110 – 800 560 140 420 – – 160 90 40 – – Total Publishing industries (except Internet) ........... Newspaper, periodical, book, and directory publishers ................................................. Newspaper publishers ............................ Periodical publishers .............................. Book publishers ...................................... Directory and mailing list publishers ....... Other publishers ..................................... Software publishers .................................... Motion picture and video exhibition ........ Postproduction services and other motion picture and video industries ...... Broadcasting (except Internet) ....................... Radio and television broadcasting ............. Radio broadcasting ................................ Television broadcasting .......................... Cable and other subscription programming ............................................ Telecommunications ...................................... Wired telecommunications carriers ............ Telecommunications resellers .................... Cable and other program distribution ......... Internet service providers, web search portals, and data processing services .......... Data processing, hosting, and related services .................................................... Other information services ............................. Other information services ......................... News syndicates .................................... Libraries and archives ............................ Other information services ..................... 90 30 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 64 20 – – – – – – – – – – 270 Total 70 20 – 20 By person All other assaults 60 20 – 20 All other events5 110 1,590 800 220 480 – – – 400 270 120 4,000 – 200 180 20 1,770 – – – – – – – 160 100 100 – – – 160 100 100 – – – – – – – – – 860 610 470 – 80 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Nondepository credit intermediation ........... Credit card issuing .................................. Sales financing ....................................... Other nondepository credit intermediation ....................................... Other activities related to credit intermediation ....................................... Securities, commodity contracts, and other financial investments and related activities .. Securities and commodity contracts intermediation and brokerage ................... Investment banking and securities dealing .................................................. Securities brokerage .............................. Other financial investment activities ........... Portfolio management ............................ Investment advice .................................. All other financial investment activities ... Insurance carriers and related activities ......... Insurance carriers ....................................... Direct life, health, and medical insurance carriers ................................................. Direct insurance (except life, health, and medical) carriers ................................... Reinsurance carriers .............................. Agencies, brokerages, and other insurance related activities ........................................ Insurance agencies and brokerages ...... Other insurance related activities ........... Funds, trusts, and other financial vehicles ..... Insurance and employee benefit funds ...... Pension funds ......................................... Other insurance funds ............................ Other investment pools and funds .............. Open-end investment funds ................... Struck by object 5222 52221 52222 1,530 270 140 170 30 – 52229 1,130 130 52239 210 523 950 130 70 5231 580 50 20 52311 52312 5239 52392 52393 52399 524 5241 220 270 310 120 90 60 5,640 3,650 52411 – Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 60 20 100 – – – – – 120 30 – 400 80 20 – – – 40 90 – 90 300 – – 20 70 – 40 – 40 320 20 – 20 190 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 290 220 30 160 130 30 30 40 1,540 1,080 – – – – – – Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – – – 20 60 30 30 30 20 530 400 – – 300 260 – – – – – – 220 130 1,740 150 70 70 – 110 520 52412 52413 1,890 20 250 – 190 – 60 – – 110 – 560 – 5242 52421 52429 525 5251 52511 52519 5259 52591 1,990 1,380 610 170 70 30 40 100 30 130 100 30 40 20 20 – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 70 40 20 20 450 210 240 40 30 – 20 20 – Real estate and rental and leasing ......... 53 24,150 6,500 3,720 1,390 510 2,440 3,010 800 Real estate ..................................................... Lessors of real estate ................................. Lessors of residential buildings and dwellings ............................................... 531 5311 15,810 7,890 4,180 1,970 2,350 1,130 920 630 190 80 1,620 710 2,210 1,330 580 200 53111 5,590 1,280 650 540 30 620 870 130 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 65 – 40 90 80 – – – – – – – – – – 20 – 20 – 20 – 180 120 80 40 – 50 40 – – – – – – – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment In lifting Repetitive motion 150 30 30 90 30 20 160 30 30 210 – 20 80 40 110 180 50 50 50 120 70 120 40 50 20 120 40 – 500 280 40 – – – 250 170 100 – – – – – 1,200 810 30 – – – – – 300 130 160 90 390 80 420 – – 390 280 110 – – – – – – 170 120 50 – – – – – – Total Fires and explosions 220 150 70 20 – – – – – Real estate and rental and leasing ......... 5,120 2,910 540 1,430 1,640 260 200 Real estate ..................................................... Lessors of real estate ................................. Lessors of residential buildings and dwellings ............................................... 3,380 1,930 1,870 1,060 390 110 1,270 530 370 100 140 – 130 50 – 1,470 710 110 430 50 30 – 20 – 60 40 20 110 – – – – 80 60 – – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 66 – – 50 – – – – Total By person Nondepository credit intermediation ........... Credit card issuing .................................. Sales financing ....................................... Other nondepository credit intermediation ....................................... Other activities related to credit intermediation ....................................... Securities, commodity contracts, and other financial investments and related activities .. Securities and commodity contracts intermediation and brokerage ................... Investment banking and securities dealing .................................................. Securities brokerage .............................. Other financial investment activities ........... Portfolio management ............................ Investment advice .................................. All other financial investment activities ... Insurance carriers and related activities ......... Insurance carriers ....................................... Direct life, health, and medical insurance carriers ................................................. Direct insurance (except life, health, and medical) carriers ................................... Reinsurance carriers .............................. Agencies, brokerages, and other insurance related activities ........................................ Insurance agencies and brokerages ...... Other insurance related activities ........... Funds, trusts, and other financial vehicles ..... Insurance and employee benefit funds ...... Pension funds ......................................... Other insurance funds ............................ Other investment pools and funds .............. Open-end investment funds ................... – 60 Assaults and violent acts 50 30 – – All other events5 50 30 – – – 200 – 20 20 – 160 – 20 All other assaults – – – – 60 – – – – 80 60 – – – – 50 – – – – 270 200 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 60 100 – – 70 100 – – – – 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 – 40 – – – – – – – 40 30 30 20 – – – – 30 – 20 – 800 360 – 160 – – – 200 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 440 390 50 20 – – – – – 30 20 90 110 2,230 40 90 30 1,530 970 – 610 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Lessors of nonresidential buildings (except miniwarehouses) ..................... Lessors of miniwarehouses and self-storage units .................................. Lessors of other real estate property ...... Offices of real estate agents and brokers ... Activities related to real estate ................... Real estate property managers .............. Other activities related to real estate ...... Rental and leasing services ........................... Automotive equipment rental and leasing .. Passenger car rental and leasing ........... Truck, utility trailer, and rv (recreational vehicle) rental and leasing .................... Consumer goods rental .............................. Formal wear and costume rental ............ Video tape and disc rental ...................... Other consumer goods rental ................. General rental centers ................................ Commercial and industrial machinery and equipment rental and leasing ................... Construction, transportation, mining, and forestry machinery and equipment rental and leasing ................................. Other commercial and industrial machinery and equipment rental and leasing .................................................. Lessors of nonfinancial intangible assets (except copyrighted works) .......................... Professional, scientific, and technical services ........................................................ Legal services ............................................ Accounting, tax preparation, bookkeeping, and payroll services .................................. Accounting, tax preparation, bookkeeping, and payroll services ....... Struck against object 60 40 53112 1,490 510 400 53113 53119 5312 5313 53131 53139 532 5321 53211 360 450 – 5,680 5,410 200 8,230 4,000 2,250 40 130 880 1,330 1,220 120 2,310 1,050 430 40 50 670 550 550 – 1,370 720 270 53212 5322 53222 53223 53229 5323 1,750 1,910 80 220 1,120 1,120 620 440 – 50 320 360 450 210 – 20 190 220 60 170 – 30 80 80 5324 1,190 450 220 30 53241 810 290 150 53249 270 120 30 533 110 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 70 380 60 – – 160 750 690 – 800 280 70 60 – 180 710 670 – 790 440 360 – – 150 230 230 – 220 130 120 90 200 – 30 170 60 – 30 60 210 300 – 30 20 150 150 70 80 – – 110 50 60 – – 40 20 20 – – – 30 260 260 – 460 170 110 90 90 – 320 80 40 40 30 – – 20 – 20 91,840 22,010 10,110 6,190 3,000 6,010 14,390 2,410 54 24,810 5,550 2,710 1,110 910 1,930 3,940 580 541 5411 24,810 1,760 5,550 180 2,710 120 1,110 40 910 20 1,930 240 3,940 390 580 50 5412 1,510 140 30 80 30 160 220 90 54121 1,510 140 30 80 30 160 220 90 Page 67 – 50 – – – – See footnotes at end of table. – – – – – Professional and business services .. Professional, scientific, and technical services ................................................... Struck by object Caught in or compressed or crushed – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Lessors of nonresidential buildings (except miniwarehouses) ..................... Lessors of miniwarehouses and self-storage units .................................. Lessors of other real estate property ...... Offices of real estate agents and brokers ... Activities related to real estate ................... Real estate property managers .............. Other activities related to real estate ...... Rental and leasing services ........................... Automotive equipment rental and leasing .. Passenger car rental and leasing ........... Truck, utility trailer, and rv (recreational vehicle) rental and leasing .................... Consumer goods rental .............................. Formal wear and costume rental ............ Video tape and disc rental ...................... Other consumer goods rental ................. General rental centers ................................ Commercial and industrial machinery and equipment rental and leasing ................... Construction, transportation, mining, and forestry machinery and equipment rental and leasing ................................. Other commercial and industrial machinery and equipment rental and leasing .................................................. Lessors of nonfinancial intangible assets (except copyrighted works) .......................... In lifting 230 170 170 60 150 1,300 1,270 – 1,700 670 220 130 50 110 700 690 – 1,010 350 150 450 430 – – 310 380 200 230 – – 210 310 220 120 110 30 70 Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – 40 40 30 410 340 340 – 130 70 30 Total – 20 All other events5 By person All other assaults – – 160 – – – – – – – – 40 170 110 450 420 – 700 340 200 – – – – – – – – 130 170 – 30 90 50 – – – 50 190 – – 130 50 – – – – – – – – 180 – – – – 140 – – 130 – – – – 140 60 – – 20 – – – – – 30 30 – – – – – – – Professional and business services .. 17,070 10,210 3,470 3,610 7,880 Professional, scientific, and technical services ................................................... 3,500 2,030 1,410 910 2,180 3,500 340 2,030 160 1,410 160 910 50 240 160 60 240 160 60 – 40 30 80 – – 30 – – – – 20 20 See footnotes at end of table. Page 68 – Fires and explosions – – – – – – 120 – – Professional, scientific, and technical services ........................................................ Legal services ............................................ Accounting, tax preparation, bookkeeping, and payroll services .................................. Accounting, tax preparation, bookkeeping, and payroll services ....... – – – 270 270 – 150 40 40 30 Assaults and violent acts 30 50 220 220 – 1,260 830 780 – 80 80 – 20 20 – 70 20 – – – – 30 – 20 – 20 50 – 50 20 30 50 50 20 20 3,290 810 2,470 11,670 – 1,630 50 1,580 3,180 2,180 140 – – 1,630 – 50 1,580 – 3,180 200 50 390 – – – – 140 50 390 – – – – 140 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Offices of certified public accountants ...................................... Tax preparation services .................... Other accounting services .................. Architectural, engineering, and related services .................................................... Architectural services ............................. Landscape architectural services ........... Engineering services .............................. Surveying and mapping (except geophysical) services ........................... Computer systems design and related services .................................................... Computer systems design and related services ................................................ Custom computer programming services ............................................ Computer systems design services .... Computer facilities management services ............................................ Other computer related services ........ Environmental consulting services ......... Advertising and related services ................ Other professional, scientific, and technical services .................................................... Marketing research and public opinion polling ................................................... Photographic services ............................ Veterinary services ................................. All other professional, scientific, and technical services ................................. Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – – – – – – – 80 541211 541213 541219 170 30 610 – – 120 5413 54131 54132 54133 6,420 440 220 3,190 1,470 180 60 760 700 – 30 310 54137 620 270 250 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – – 130 – – 20 – – 120 520 140 – 320 150 – – 50 1,000 – – 420 430 – 50 280 180 – – 120 – – – – – 20 5415 – 260 160 50 60 40 740 60 54151 – 260 160 50 60 40 740 60 541511 541512 840 1,050 – 110 541513 541519 54162 5418 610 210 590 5419 3,240 54191 54192 54194 120 170 – – – – – – – – – – – 190 – – – 440 – – – 190 – 570 – – 80 740 – – – – – – – – – – – – 60 40 140 – 310 1,130 90 – – 430 190 100 – 30 130 – – – 70 – – 70 50 – – – – 80 50 600 – – 60 90 Management of companies and enterprises .............................................. 55 9,710 2,520 980 690 380 400 1,540 110 Administrative and support and waste management and remediation services ................................................... 56 57,320 13,940 6,410 4,380 1,710 3,680 8,910 1,720 Administrative and support services ............... Facilities support services .......................... Employment services ................................. Employment placement agencies .......... 561 5612 5613 56131 47,990 1,140 – 310 11,490 180 1,940 140 5,220 130 990 – 3,600 30 330 – 1,440 – 290 – 3,070 150 260 – 8,090 150 750 70 1,530 100 210 – Page 69 – 70 54199 See footnotes at end of table. – 490 130 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Offices of certified public accountants ...................................... Tax preparation services .................... Other accounting services .................. Architectural, engineering, and related services .................................................... Architectural services ............................. Landscape architectural services ........... Engineering services .............................. Surveying and mapping (except geophysical) services ........................... Computer systems design and related services .................................................... Computer systems design and related services ................................................ Custom computer programming services ............................................ Computer systems design services .... Computer facilities management services ............................................ Other computer related services ........ Environmental consulting services ......... Advertising and related services ................ Other professional, scientific, and technical services .................................................... Marketing research and public opinion polling ................................................... Photographic services ............................ Veterinary services ................................. All other professional, scientific, and technical services ................................. 30 – 100 1,290 170 – 720 170 In lifting 30 – Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – 60 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 90 40 750 – – 480 140 – – 100 330 – 30 120 370 – – 290 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 60 All other events5 – – 60 60 1,140 – – 380 – 310 240 390 110 240 – – – – 570 310 240 390 110 240 – – – – 570 – 110 – 100 220 100 – – – 220 – – – – – – – – – 340 150 – – 630 110 – – 340 – – – 90 60 – – 100 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 70 100 – 240 230 90 80 – – – 1,480 – 1,480 340 – – – – – – – – – – – 1,450 – – – – – 1,450 – – 330 – – – – 40 170 – – 30 – – 70 – – – – – 30 50 Management of companies and enterprises .............................................. 2,000 1,160 680 90 610 Administrative and support and waste management and remediation services ................................................... 11,570 7,030 1,380 2,610 5,100 Administrative and support services ............... Facilities support services .......................... Employment services ................................. Employment placement agencies .......... 9,600 150 1,430 – 5,930 80 890 – 1,210 – 150 – 2,310 60 280 – 4,170 70 420 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 70 – – 40 – – – – – – – 110 90 20 1,660 1,550 670 880 6,820 1,220 120 – – 600 120 – – 620 – – – 5,290 170 750 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Temporary help services ........................ Business support services .......................... Telephone call centers ........................... Business service centers ........................ Collection agencies ................................ Other business support services ............ Travel agencies ...................................... Tour operators ........................................ Investigation and security services ............. Services to buildings and dwellings ............ Janitorial services ................................... Landscaping services ............................. Other services to buildings and dwellings ............................................... Waste management and remediation services ........................................................ Waste collection ......................................... Waste treatment and disposal .................... Remediation and other waste management services .................................................... Remediation services ............................. All other waste management services .... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 160 120 40 – 50 – – – 740 2,110 930 1,120 240 110 – – – – – – – 590 110 390 Fall to lower level – 2,400 880 270 450 790 360 80 8,150 23,920 11,550 8,790 1,420 460 160 – 120 – – 20 1,540 6,380 2,280 3,510 730 210 100 – 70 – – – 730 2,920 1,190 1,360 56179 1,550 410 340 562 5621 5622 9,330 4,570 3,160 2,450 1,180 850 1,190 590 370 780 370 350 260 130 110 620 310 230 820 410 340 200 60 100 5629 56291 56299 1,590 670 480 420 260 90 230 150 80 70 40 30 20 80 60 70 20 30 40 20 186,400 24,590 12,370 7,190 3,230 6,650 36,830 5,400 Education and health services ............ – – – – 600 410 210 – 120 70 230 30 2,000 4,150 2,460 800 Slips or trips without fall 56132 5614 56142 56143 56144 56149 56151 56152 5616 5617 56172 56173 – 170 190 100 – 70 – – – 900 1,170 750 320 Fall on same level 450 – 200 50 40 – – – – – 340 740 280 – – – Educational services ................................ 61 10,500 1,960 920 690 230 920 2,500 280 Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges ........................................... Colleges, universities, and professional schools ..................................................... Business schools and computer and management training ................................ Business and secretarial schools ........... Professional and management development training ............................ Technical and trade schools ....................... Other schools and instruction ..................... Sports and recreation instruction ............ All other schools and instruction ............. 611 6111 6112 10,500 3,670 130 1,960 670 30 920 300 – 690 280 – 230 80 – 920 190 – 2,500 940 – 280 100 – 6113 5,560 1,000 470 310 130 600 1,200 170 6114 61141 160 70 61143 6115 6116 61162 61169 80 390 440 200 240 Health care and social assistance .......... 62 175,900 – 30 – – – – 90 100 – 60 22,630 See footnotes at end of table. Page 71 – – – – – 40 80 – 60 11,450 50 – – – 6,500 – – – – – 3,000 50 – – 40 – – – 5,730 – – – – – 150 150 60 90 – – – – – 34,330 5,120 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Temporary help services ........................ Business support services .......................... Telephone call centers ........................... Business service centers ........................ Collection agencies ................................ Other business support services ............ Travel agencies ...................................... Tour operators ........................................ Investigation and security services ............. Services to buildings and dwellings ............ Janitorial services ................................... Landscaping services ............................. Other services to buildings and dwellings ............................................... Waste management and remediation services ........................................................ Waste collection ......................................... Waste treatment and disposal .................... Remediation and other waste management services .................................................... Remediation services ............................. All other waste management services .... 1,100 120 30 – – 80 – – 820 4,530 2,820 1,240 – In lifting Repetitive motion 670 70 20 – – – – – 460 2,850 1,920 620 110 170 140 – – – 80 – 50 550 490 – – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – 220 60 40 – – – – – 200 1,430 930 360 – 270 610 – – 60 450 – – 1,000 1,630 640 690 – 1,960 900 630 1,110 440 350 170 40 20 300 90 70 440 120 130 310 60 110 110 – – 140 60 60 Education and health services ............ 66,660 31,560 3,760 7,720 7,400 Educational services ................................ 2,130 1,100 260 460 430 Educational services ...................................... Elementary and secondary schools ........... Junior colleges ........................................... Colleges, universities, and professional schools ..................................................... Business schools and computer and management training ................................ Business and secretarial schools ........... Professional and management development training ............................ Technical and trade schools ....................... Other schools and instruction ..................... Sports and recreation instruction ............ All other schools and instruction ............. 2,130 710 30 1,100 380 – 260 – – 460 180 – 1,270 640 220 230 Health care and social assistance .......... – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 64,530 30,460 – 30 60 60 3,500 See footnotes at end of table. Page 72 20 – – – 7,270 930 590 260 80 – 70 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 100 – – – – – – 450 540 – 470 – – – – – – 400 – – – 50 530 – 470 – – – – 20 – 20 – – – 130 330 300 20 – – – 80 70 50 20 – – – – – – All other events5 620 230 130 – 30 – – – 840 2,800 900 1,300 310 – 260 250 – – – – – – – 1,530 720 620 200 110 70 10,410 9,850 560 16,850 – 450 340 110 1,110 430 130 – – – – 450 380 – 340 280 – 110 90 – 1,110 360 – 190 – 70 60 20 600 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 110 – 70 6,980 120 9,960 9,510 450 15,740 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Ambulatory health care services .................... Offices of physicians .................................. Offices of dentists ....................................... Offices of other health practitioners ............ Outpatient care centers .............................. Medical and diagnostic laboratories ........... Home health care services ......................... Other ambulatory health care services ....... Hospitals ......................................................... Nursing and residential care facilities ............. Social assistance ............................................ 621 6211 6212 6213 6214 6215 6216 6219 622 623 624 Struck against object Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 25,390 5,420 1,010 900 4,380 840 9,660 3,180 62,930 66,620 20,960 2,510 520 250 100 420 120 690 410 9,090 7,870 3,150 1,170 240 – 100 250 40 250 280 4,810 4,320 1,160 1,000 230 190 – 110 60 310 100 2,530 1,880 1,090 220 20 – – – 20 100 – 1,270 950 560 1,160 210 – – 260 40 600 30 1,670 1,770 1,140 5,610 1,760 220 550 730 260 1,700 390 10,390 12,950 5,380 700 190 – – 50 30 300 120 1,970 1,840 610 93,900 28,010 14,580 9,490 2,260 4,090 20,430 3,580 71 18,230 5,180 2,530 1,620 700 1,210 3,080 580 711 7111 4,150 800 1,130 250 610 90 320 120 110 20 210 90 440 140 140 30 7113 490 90 40 20 40 70 70 Leisure and hospitality ........................ Arts, entertainment, and recreation ........ Struck by object Caught in or compressed or crushed Performing arts, spectator sports, and related industries ...................................................... Performing arts companies ........................ Promoters of performing arts, sports, and similar events ........................................... Agents and managers for artists, athletes, entertainers, and other public figures ....... Independent artists, writers, and performers ................................................ Museums, historical sites, and similar institutions .................................................... Amusement, gambling, and recreation industries ...................................................... Amusement parks and arcades .................. Gambling industries .................................... Other amusement and recreation industries .................................................. 7114 90 80 7115 230 100 70 712 990 220 713 7131 7132 13,090 2,230 1,530 7139 Accommodation and food services ........ Accommodation .............................................. Traveler accommodation ............................ Hotels (except casino hotels) and motels ................................................... Casino hotels .......................................... – – – – – – – 20 – – – – 100 80 – 3,820 420 260 1,820 250 140 1,220 140 80 9,330 3,140 1,440 72 75,670 22,830 721 7211 23,540 22,560 72111 72112 19,600 2,930 70 170 40 580 30 20 940 100 40 2,470 390 520 400 80 70 1,000 530 800 1,560 250 12,050 7,870 1,550 2,870 17,350 3,000 5,660 5,280 3,180 2,850 1,580 1,550 610 610 1,070 1,050 4,890 4,710 900 870 4,490 800 2,520 330 1,190 360 530 80 940 110 4,020 660 740 130 See footnotes at end of table. Page 73 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total In lifting Repetitive motion Ambulatory health care services .................... Offices of physicians .................................. Offices of dentists ....................................... Offices of other health practitioners ............ Outpatient care centers .............................. Medical and diagnostic laboratories ........... Home health care services ......................... Other ambulatory health care services ....... Hospitals ......................................................... Nursing and residential care facilities ............. Social assistance ............................................ 7,330 1,090 – 110 1,040 50 3,360 1,650 24,850 28,150 4,200 3,850 540 – – 430 30 1,680 1,100 10,730 13,640 2,240 750 340 200 – 60 40 70 – 1,640 620 480 1,500 340 – – 590 40 450 50 2,980 2,250 530 2,530 200 – – 390 150 1,230 380 860 1,710 1,870 – – – – – – – – – 100 – 850 120 – – 380 – 290 40 2,780 4,710 1,610 720 90 – – 360 – 200 40 2,660 4,610 1,520 140 30 – – 20 – 90 – 120 90 90 2,440 650 – 50 450 80 970 110 6,690 4,640 1,960 Leisure and hospitality ........................ 13,020 7,320 2,580 8,740 3,000 – 1,140 720 420 9,310 Arts, entertainment, and recreation ........ 2,770 1,370 690 840 950 – 260 90 170 2,660 670 70 160 40 150 30 160 20 80 20 – – – – 30 – – 1,150 160 30 20 – – – – – 140 Performing arts, spectator sports, and related industries ...................................................... Performing arts companies ........................ Promoters of performing arts, sports, and similar events ........................................... Agents and managers for artists, athletes, entertainers, and other public figures ....... Independent artists, writers, and performers ................................................ Museums, historical sites, and similar institutions .................................................... Amusement, gambling, and recreation industries ...................................................... Amusement parks and arcades .................. Gambling industries .................................... Other amusement and recreation industries .................................................. – – – 30 Total 40 By person All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 30 – 140 70 – 1,960 560 290 1,130 280 180 1,120 Accommodation and food services ........ Accommodation .............................................. Traveler accommodation ............................ Hotels (except casino hotels) and motels ................................................... Casino hotels .......................................... 80 30 – 50 540 40 70 600 110 60 840 80 20 – – – 170 30 20 670 430 430 750 – 10,250 5,960 1,890 7,900 2,040 5,220 5,170 2,180 2,140 750 750 1,500 1,230 4,600 570 1,840 300 720 30 1,030 200 See footnotes at end of table. Page 74 – 40 170 70 20 20 100 – – 1,340 430 180 120 30 90 720 – 880 640 240 6,660 440 410 – – 170 170 130 130 40 40 2,950 2,930 350 50 – – 140 30 110 20 40 2,570 360 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Rv (recreational vehicle) parks and recreational camps ................................... Rooming and boarding houses .................. Food services and drinking places ................. Full-service restaurants .............................. Limited-service eating places ..................... Special food services ................................. Drinking places (alcoholic beverages) ........ 7212 7213 722 7221 7222 7223 7224 Repair and maintenance ................................ Automotive repair and maintenance ........... Electronic and precision equipment repair and maintenance ...................................... Commercial and industrial machinery and equipment (except automotive and electronic) repair and maintenance .......... Personal and household goods repair and maintenance ............................................. Personal and laundry services ....................... Personal care services ............................... Death care services .................................... Drycleaning and laundry services .............. Other personal services ............................. Struck against object Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 600 380 52,130 20,860 23,730 6,950 590 220 – 17,170 8,560 6,890 1,670 – 190 – 8,870 4,500 3,570 750 – – – 6,290 2,840 2,630 820 – – – 940 300 570 70 – – – 1,810 610 880 310 – 70 – 12,460 4,240 5,950 2,260 – – – 2,100 640 1,070 400 – 28,790 8,620 4,840 1,740 1,020 1,440 3,810 920 81 28,790 8,620 4,840 1,740 1,020 1,440 3,810 920 811 8111 14,300 9,740 5,260 3,590 3,120 2,050 800 580 650 510 740 530 1,100 770 570 360 8112 730 290 250 30 8113 2,630 940 540 130 120 150 210 190 8114 812 8121 8122 8123 8129 1,200 7,890 1,770 880 3,720 1,520 440 1,960 730 120 850 260 270 940 420 60 340 110 70 510 80 20 310 100 – 280 90 – 160 30 50 290 50 40 180 20 70 1,420 480 170 480 280 – 150 – 20 70 40 Other services ...................................... Other services, except public administration ......................................... Struck by object Caught in or compressed or crushed See footnotes at end of table. Page 75 – – 50 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions All other events5 By person All other assaults – – 710 290 410 – – – – 510 130 370 – – – – 200 – – – – – – 3,700 1,620 1,700 370 – Total Rv (recreational vehicle) parks and recreational camps ................................... Rooming and boarding houses .................. Food services and drinking places ................. Full-service restaurants .............................. Limited-service eating places ..................... Special food services ................................. Drinking places (alcoholic beverages) ........ – – 5,030 2,230 1,780 1,000 – – – 3,780 1,720 1,410 620 – – – 1,140 430 670 – – 270 – 6,400 2,110 3,150 640 510 – – 1,610 130 1,230 240 – Other services ...................................... 5,470 3,250 1,340 1,250 1,510 80 840 160 680 3,520 Other services, except public administration ......................................... 5,470 3,250 1,340 1,250 1,510 80 840 160 680 3,520 2,540 1,540 1,630 1,060 710 520 550 400 770 630 80 50 30 30 170 50 470 310 120 140 110 370 1,560 110 290 940 230 210 910 60 170 510 180 60 410 150 30 210 20 – 430 60 50 290 30 – 430 – 90 170 140 Repair and maintenance ................................ Automotive repair and maintenance ........... Electronic and precision equipment repair and maintenance ...................................... Commercial and industrial machinery and equipment (except automotive and electronic) repair and maintenance .......... Personal and household goods repair and maintenance ............................................. Personal and laundry services ....................... Personal care services ............................... Death care services .................................... Drycleaning and laundry services .............. Other personal services ............................. – See footnotes at end of table. Page 76 – 30 – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – 1,960 1,330 – – – 160 – – – 280 – 460 – 20 30 410 – – 370 – – 20 350 180 790 160 70 490 80 90 – – – 60 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 NAICS code3 Total cases Total Religious, grantmaking, civic, professional, and similar organizations .............................. 813 6,600 1,390 See footnotes at end of table. Page 77 Struck by object 790 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 420 90 Fall to lower level 410 Fall on same level 1,300 Slips or trips without fall 200 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2005 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Religious, grantmaking, civic, professional, and similar organizations .............................. 1,370 In lifting Repetitive motion 710 210 1 Days-away-from-work cases include those that result in days away from work with or without job transfer or restriction. 2 Totals include data for industries not shown separately. 3 North American Industry Classification System — United States, 2002 4 Data shown in columns correspond to the following Event codes: Contact with objects, Total = 00-09; Struck by object = 020-029; Struck against object = 010-019; Caught in or compressed or crushed = 030-049; Fall to lower level = 110-119; Fall on same level = 130-139; Slips or trips without fall = 215; Overexertion, Total = 220-229; In lifting = 221; Repetitive motion = 230-239; Exposure to harmful substance or environment = 30-39; Transportation accidents = 40-49; Fires and explosions = 50-52; Assaults and violent acts, Total = 60-63; By person = 61; All other assaults = 60, 62, and 63; All other events = all remaining codes, including 9999 (Nonclassifiable). These codes are based on the 1992 Occupational Injury and Illness Classification System developed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. 5 Includes nonclassifiable responses. 6 Excludes farms with fewer than 11 employees. 7 Data for Mining (Sector 21 in the North American Industry Classification System-- United States, 2002) include establishments not governed by the Mine Safety and Health Administration rules and reporting, such as those in Oil and Gas Extraction and related support activities. Data for mining operators in coal, metal, Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 280 310 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – Total 350 By person All other assaults 50 300 All other events5 770 and nonmetal mining are provided to BLS by the Mine Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor. Independent mining contractors are excluded from the coal, metal, and nonmetal mining industries. These data do not reflect the changes the Occupational Safety and Health Administration made to its recordkeeping requirements effective January 1, 2002; therefore, estimates for these industries are not comparable to estimates in other industries. 8 Data for mining operators in this industry are provided to BLS by the Mine Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor. Independent mining contractors are excluded. These data do not reflect the changes the Occupational Safety and Health Administration made to its recordkeeping requirements effective January 1, 2002; therefore, estimates for these industries are not comparable to estimates in other industries. 9 Data for employers in rail transportation are provided to BLS by the Federal Railroad Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation. NOTE: Dashes indicate data that are not available. Because of rounding and data exclusion of nonclassifiable responses, data may not sum to the totals. SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses in cooperation with participating State agencies Page 78
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