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, 2002 Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects SIC code3 Industry2 Total cases Total Private industry6 ................................... Agriculture, forestry, and fishing6 Struck by object 1,436,194 380,517 191,607 .............. Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 99,916 63,057 Fall to lower level Fall on same level 86,946 176,019 Slips or trips without fall 48,140 31,520 9,530 5,185 1,968 1,754 2,433 2,866 750 Agricultural production6 ................................ 01-02 11,985 3,936 1,866 910 901 1,033 1,106 373 Agricultural production— crops6 ................. Field crops, except cash grains6 ............ Vegetables and melons6 ........................ Fruits and tree nuts6 ............................... Horticultural specialties6 ......................... Agricultural production— livestock 6 ........... Livestock, except dairy and poultry6 ....... Dairy farms6 ............................................ Poultry and eggs6 ................................... Animal specialties6 ................................. Agricultural services ................................... Crop services ......................................... Veterinary services ................................. Animal services, except veterinary ......... Farm labor and management services ... Landscape and horticultural services ..... Forestry ...................................................... Forestry services .................................... 01 013 016 017 018 02 021 024 025 027 07 072 074 075 076 078 08 085 7,746 726 1,293 2,302 2,923 4,240 1,449 1,533 880 268 19,100 2,556 2,451 773 2,175 10,965 343 168 2,593 258 584 812 684 1,342 527 437 286 51 5,498 659 228 167 836 3,482 53 34 1,156 142 174 433 367 710 282 278 123 16 3,246 328 – 48 578 2,227 35 30 567 – 104 183 126 343 143 85 84 – 1,047 107 157 95 96 592 – – 681 80 251 170 170 220 70 56 75 17 843 189 – – – 489 10 – 659 84 – 240 167 374 164 138 60 – 1,372 193 – – 297 783 28 22 694 – 139 198 315 412 73 200 113 – 1,661 255 269 89 196 852 82 39 272 – – – 150 101 – 57 – – 372 – – – – 250 – 5 179 – – – – – – – – – – 172 – 150 5 – – – Mining7 .......................................................... Metal mining8 .............................................. Iron ores8 ................................................ Copper ores8 .......................................... Lead and zinc ores8 ................................ Gold and silver ores8 .............................. Ferroalloy ores, except vanadium8 ......... Miscellaneous metal ores8 ..................... Coal mining8 ............................................... Bituminous coal and lignite mining8 ........ Anthracite mining8 .................................. Oil and gas extraction ................................. Crude petroleum and natural gas ........... Oil and gas field services ....................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels8 ........... Dimension stone8 ................................... Crushed and broken stone8 .................... Sand and gravel8 .................................... Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals8 .............................................. Chemical and fertilizer minerals8 ............ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals8 ..... 10 101 102 103 104 106 109 12 122 123 13 131 138 14 141 142 144 11,355 429 109 55 43 88 27 107 3,766 3,725 41 5,088 518 4,528 2,072 186 936 561 4,795 134 18 21 9 33 9 44 1,667 1,653 14 2,236 127 2,097 758 80 340 208 2,794 58 – 7 – 15 5 26 918 914 – 1,464 109 1,355 354 59 150 97 831 44 8 8 5 10 – 11 428 422 6 154 – 152 205 5 111 59 1,074 31 5 6 – 8 – 7 295 291 – 557 – 531 191 15 77 51 883 33 – 7 – 8 – 7 255 249 6 369 – 358 226 14 116 65 1,004 45 12 7 – 10 – 10 326 324 – 427 – 382 206 21 93 62 145 147 149 140 161 88 53 46 31 20 19 9 13 9 8 18 18 12 10 13 8 14 10 6 Construction ................................................. General building contractors ...................... Residential building construction ............ Nonresidential building construction ....... Heavy construction, except building ........... Highway and street construction ............ Heavy construction, except highway ...... Special trade contractors ............................ 15 152 154 16 161 162 17 163,641 30,244 17,062 12,833 19,896 6,482 13,414 113,502 57,368 12,334 7,114 5,063 7,703 2,221 5,482 37,331 32,281 7,625 4,700 2,857 4,519 1,161 3,358 20,136 12,336 1,904 979 907 1,075 363 712 9,357 7,222 1,548 803 731 1,499 472 1,027 4,176 22,421 4,816 2,737 2,043 1,747 527 1,220 15,857 12,308 2,339 1,296 1,010 1,794 669 1,125 8,174 See footnotes at end of table. Page 1 – – – 4,736 665 374 288 440 136 303 3,632 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, 2002 — 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 ................................... 381,048 208,260 58,576 60,044 62,956 Total Agriculture, forestry, and fishing6 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person 2,695 23,903 18,104 56 1,944 57 All other assaults 5,799 155,349 .............. 5,023 2,745 689 1,908 1,805 Agricultural production6 ................................ 1,852 950 334 577 594 – 533 Agricultural production— crops6 ................. Field crops, except cash grains6 ............ Vegetables and melons6 ........................ Fruits and tree nuts6 ............................... Horticultural specialties6 ......................... Agricultural production— livestock 6 ........... Livestock, except dairy and poultry6 ....... Dairy farms6 ............................................ Poultry and eggs6 ................................... Animal specialties6 ................................. Agricultural services ................................... Crop services ......................................... Veterinary services ................................. Animal services, except veterinary ......... Farm labor and management services ... Landscape and horticultural services ..... Forestry ...................................................... Forestry services .................................... 1,198 170 150 346 516 654 213 184 160 73 3,044 448 363 117 182 1,935 117 16 661 131 102 175 253 289 106 – 103 – 1,738 343 161 73 59 1,103 54 14 250 – – – 226 85 – – 26 – 342 113 – 89 – 67 11 11 390 – 134 58 125 187 80 – 81 – 1,323 300 161 – 60 760 8 8 421 – – 179 168 173 72 – 77 20 1,200 120 – – 233 754 9 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 43 – – – – 490 146 316 – – 1,396 – 1,153 158 – 77 – – Mining7 .......................................................... Metal mining8 .............................................. Iron ores8 ................................................ Copper ores8 .......................................... Lead and zinc ores8 ................................ Gold and silver ores8 .............................. Ferroalloy ores, except vanadium8 ......... Miscellaneous metal ores8 ..................... Coal mining8 ............................................... Bituminous coal and lignite mining8 ........ Anthracite mining8 .................................. Oil and gas extraction ................................. Crude petroleum and natural gas ........... Oil and gas field services ....................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels8 ........... Dimension stone8 ................................... Crushed and broken stone8 .................... Sand and gravel8 .................................... Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals8 .............................................. Chemical and fertilizer minerals8 ............ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals8 ..... 3,061 184 68 16 22 32 8 38 1,271 1,257 14 922 119 800 684 59 310 173 1,130 54 24 – 8 10 – 6 469 464 5 387 97 287 220 30 95 51 43 446 21 – – – 5 – 6 101 99 – 219 – 192 105 6 45 32 251 – – – – – – – 25 25 – 217 – 159 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 48 58 36 18 17 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Construction ................................................. General building contractors ...................... Residential building construction ............ Nonresidential building construction ....... Heavy construction, except building ........... Highway and street construction ............ Heavy construction, except highway ...... Special trade contractors ............................ 33,799 5,156 2,729 2,372 4,039 1,252 2,787 24,605 17,903 2,884 1,345 1,509 2,059 624 1,435 12,961 429 – – – – 15 – 398 595 73 – – 56 – 45 466 206 59 – – – – – 119 388 – – – – – – 347 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 – – – – – – 2,866 481 307 174 313 92 221 2,071 See footnotes at end of table. Page 2 6 15 – 4,306 418 176 239 598 246 352 3,289 6,681 813 375 437 1,489 806 684 4,378 12 9 55 21 All other events5 1,887 4,515 – 499 1,639 – – – – – 43 – – – – 456 128 301 – – 1,374 – 1,153 142 – 71 – – 1,225 65 178 386 569 414 112 157 56 66 2,856 412 140 – 274 1,998 18 16 21 617 11 – – – – – – 115 112 – 418 – 327 73 6 27 20 34 18 – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 6 18,134 3,139 1,906 1,175 1,695 506 1,189 13,300 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Plumbing, heating, air-conditioning ........ Painting and paper hanging ................... Electrical work ........................................ Masonry, stonework, and plastering ....... Carpentry and floor work ........................ Roofing, siding, and sheet metal work ... Concrete work ........................................ Water well drilling ................................... Miscellaneous special trade contractors ............................................ Struck against object Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 27,278 4,159 17,539 18,036 10,941 7,786 8,933 612 9,322 790 6,065 5,545 4,045 1,943 2,919 285 3,971 456 3,030 3,155 2,838 1,020 1,814 – 2,931 188 1,668 1,529 703 503 560 – 1,029 – 563 428 272 255 355 – 2,678 1,086 2,732 2,958 1,630 1,661 632 – 1,572 648 1,186 1,770 511 614 664 – 963 175 433 610 253 183 389 – 179 18,219 6,418 3,710 1,243 1,123 2,320 1,209 593 280,005 95,463 41,129 20,838 26,202 9,950 23,922 7,732 24 241 242 2421 179,347 21,494 2,159 4,933 4,091 63,771 10,142 1,020 2,631 2,195 29,294 5,639 866 1,215 974 13,575 1,852 – 590 531 15,093 2,227 – 774 640 5,962 930 108 159 142 13,001 1,530 155 329 295 4,573 367 64 75 64 2426 758 405 210 60 131 29 9 243 2431 2434 2435 2436 2439 244 2448 245 2451 2452 249 2491 2493 2499 25 251 2511 2514 2515 252 2521 2522 253 254 2541 2542 259 8,577 3,231 2,205 584 312 2,245 1,815 1,417 2,635 1,573 1,063 1,374 413 305 656 9,906 4,901 1,702 221 1,067 1,117 490 627 1,301 1,951 970 981 636 3,966 1,416 1,036 233 155 1,127 1,021 852 948 584 364 555 214 72 269 3,454 1,673 674 57 303 334 165 169 323 885 473 412 239 2,102 734 567 96 45 659 569 476 605 367 238 283 122 – 135 1,539 817 296 23 164 97 58 38 110 403 256 147 113 779 271 160 40 – 276 161 109 173 128 46 94 – 13 66 817 358 121 – 49 103 34 69 79 213 73 140 65 914 358 286 58 65 147 202 178 144 71 73 143 – – 60 787 386 196 21 72 60 33 – 69 227 123 105 45 267 87 57 21 12 91 61 59 286 166 119 49 – 19 – 169 108 37 – 49 14 10 – 10 24 – 15 13 473 179 104 63 – 95 126 90 281 166 116 166 – 64 72 625 412 135 16 56 63 48 15 56 48 34 14 47 111 52 19 – 13 – 37 – 65 26 39 15 – – – 200 88 52 17 17 38 – – 25 45 – 17 – 2591 2599 32 321 224 412 14,361 239 78 161 4,673 73 43 70 1,916 18 25 40 1,103 38 7 39 1,118 12 6 – 904 – 18 29 1,174 – – – 417 8 322 1,261 364 129 103 98 52 133 54 Manufacturing ............................................... Durable goods .............................................. Lumber and wood products ........................ Logging ................................................... Sawmills and planing mills ..................... Sawmills and planing mills, general ... Hardwood dimension and flooring mills .................................................. Millwork, plywood and structural members .............................................. Millwork .............................................. Wood kitchen cabinets ....................... Hardwood veneer and plywood .......... Softwood veneer and plywood ........... Structural wood members, n.e.c. ....... Wood containers .................................... Wood pallets and skids ...................... Wood buildings and mobile homes ........ Mobile homes ..................................... Prefabricated wood buildings ............. Miscellaneous wood products ................ Wood preserving ................................ Reconstituted wood products ............. Wood products, n.e.c. ....................... Furniture and fixtures ................................. Household furniture ................................ Wood household furniture .................. Metal household furniture ................... Mattresses and bedsprings ................ Office furniture ........................................ Wood office furniture .......................... Office furniture, except wood .............. Public building and related furniture ....... Partitions and fixtures ............................. Wood partitions and fixtures ............... Partitions and fixtures, except wood ... Miscellaneous furniture and fixtures ....... Drapery hardware and blinds and shades .............................................. Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. .............. Stone, clay, and glass products ................. Flat glass ................................................ Glass and glassware, pressed or blown .................................................... Struck by object Caught in or compressed or crushed See footnotes at end of table. Page 3 – 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, 2002 — 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 Total Plumbing, heating, air-conditioning ........ Painting and paper hanging ................... Electrical work ........................................ Masonry, stonework, and plastering ....... Carpentry and floor work ........................ Roofing, siding, and sheet metal work ... Concrete work ........................................ Water well drilling ................................... Miscellaneous special trade contractors ............................................ 5,882 819 3,303 4,034 2,833 1,768 2,184 – 3,187 286 1,192 2,465 1,964 865 1,163 – 495 – 124 233 214 169 382 – 870 136 566 223 – 574 384 – 1,230 85 644 422 116 116 466 – – – 236 – – – 95 – 3,715 1,809 402 507 1,287 – Manufacturing ............................................... 68,789 35,562 23,593 14,032 5,816 598 741 Durable goods .............................................. Lumber and wood products ........................ Logging ................................................... Sawmills and planing mills ..................... Sawmills and planing mills, general ... Hardwood dimension and flooring mills .................................................. Millwork, plywood and structural members .............................................. Millwork .............................................. Wood kitchen cabinets ....................... Hardwood veneer and plywood .......... Softwood veneer and plywood ........... Structural wood members, n.e.c. ....... Wood containers .................................... Wood pallets and skids ...................... Wood buildings and mobile homes ........ Mobile homes ..................................... Prefabricated wood buildings ............. Miscellaneous wood products ................ Wood preserving ................................ Reconstituted wood products ............. Wood products, n.e.c. ....................... Furniture and fixtures ................................. Household furniture ................................ Wood household furniture .................. Metal household furniture ................... Mattresses and bedsprings ................ Office furniture ........................................ Wood office furniture .......................... Office furniture, except wood .............. Public building and related furniture ....... Partitions and fixtures ............................. Wood partitions and fixtures ............... Partitions and fixtures, except wood ... Miscellaneous furniture and fixtures ....... Drapery hardware and blinds and shades .............................................. Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. .............. Stone, clay, and glass products ................. Flat glass ................................................ Glass and glassware, pressed or blown .................................................... 44,493 4,739 108 1,010 807 22,965 2,358 – 392 305 15,808 859 – 118 89 8,684 563 236 134 124 3,191 342 88 47 41 406 53 – – – 187 85 19 10 – 2,314 956 598 113 48 599 384 266 621 389 232 303 – 69 163 2,987 1,470 369 67 437 393 186 207 424 531 282 249 169 1,238 482 312 61 – 376 198 128 357 184 174 155 – – 78 1,711 859 239 37 218 233 84 149 195 313 151 162 112 507 181 193 34 – 73 38 – 74 26 47 88 – 14 68 1,121 549 245 16 103 138 33 105 257 106 55 51 71 108 54 28 17 – – – – 29 10 19 46 – – – 303 41 8 16 9 34 – – 66 119 17 102 43 103 31 14 – 13 44 37 – 52 37 15 15 – – – 140 81 42 – 16 16 – 16 6 28 – 22 9 52 118 3,713 63 31 81 1,867 32 36 34 523 15 16 26 504 – – – 720 11 312 100 129 37 29 See footnotes at end of table. Page 4 – 110 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 197 – All other assaults All other events5 99 4,127 346 2,192 2,222 1,303 745 775 – 185 1,537 410 331 29,369 424 93 – 16 – 223 39 – – – 201 55 – – – 19,034 1,876 297 388 297 – – – 84 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 683 264 140 93 – 182 99 65 278 169 109 130 – 46 60 901 478 141 22 76 87 40 47 132 162 62 100 42 – – 18 28 12 – 13 By person – – – – – – – 25 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 15 27 1,678 38 – – – – 149 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 30 18 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Glass containers ................................. Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ........ Products of purchased glass .................. Structural clay products .......................... Brick and structural clay tile ................ Pottery and related products .................. Vitreous china table and kitchenware ...................................... Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ................................................ Concrete block and brick .................... Concrete products, n.e.c. .................. Ready-mixed concrete ....................... Gypsum products ............................... Cut stone and stone products ................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ................................................ Mineral wool ....................................... Primary metal industries ............................. Blast furnace and basic steel products ... Blast furnaces and steel mills ............. Steel wire and related products .......... Cold finishing of steel shapes ............. Steel pipe and tubes ........................... Iron and steel foundries .......................... Gray and ductile iron foundries .......... Malleable iron foundries ..................... Steel investment foundries ................. Steel foundries, n.e.c. ........................ Primary nonferrous metals ..................... Primary copper ................................... Primary aluminum .............................. Primary nonferrous metals, n.e.c. ..... Secondary nonferrous metals ................ Nonferrous rolling and drawing .............. Copper rolling and drawing ................ Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil .......... Aluminum extruded products .............. Nonferrous rolling and drawing, n.e.c. ................................................ Nonferrous wiredrawing and insulating .......................................... Nonferrous foundries (castings) ............. Aluminum die— castings .................... Nonferrous die— casting except aluminum .......................................... Aluminum foundries ............................ Fabricated metal products .......................... Metal cans and shipping containers ....... Cutlery, handtools, and hardware .......... Hand and edge tools, n.e.c. .............. Hardware, n.e.c. ................................ Plumbing and heating, except electric .... Metal sanitary ware ............................ Plumbing fixture fittings and trim ........ Heating equipment, except electric .... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 51 52 124 39 – 41 58 40 42 122 87 35 3221 3229 323 325 3251 326 368 893 927 798 470 639 148 216 416 233 159 156 33 96 228 47 41 60 3262 147 24 10 327 3271 3272 3273 3275 328 8,526 532 3,059 4,454 103 622 2,693 182 1,377 973 36 214 959 – 528 341 11 197 731 – 419 248 12 – 634 – 242 209 11 – 329 3296 33 331 3312 3315 3316 3317 332 3321 3322 3324 3325 333 3331 3334 3339 334 335 3351 3353 3354 1,232 562 14,832 4,394 2,299 591 609 821 3,145 2,101 49 418 576 466 50 285 132 223 3,085 684 244 715 474 220 5,624 1,910 1,024 233 283 342 1,103 724 9 146 224 141 16 93 32 – 1,062 252 73 305 228 85 2,467 868 519 110 139 94 526 376 – 36 113 54 8 24 – – 405 99 26 94 – – 1,122 475 226 67 76 106 169 120 – 24 21 33 – 30 – – 215 52 16 66 176 116 1,501 404 152 50 – 120 233 115 – 55 62 53 5 39 9 – 355 86 19 108 3356 433 108 44 3357 336 3363 1,004 2,944 1,228 318 1,199 459 142 501 180 3364 3365 34 341 342 3423 3429 343 3431 3432 3433 243 926 31,796 391 1,913 720 890 900 231 271 397 100 438 12,920 148 591 227 229 292 65 77 150 12 195 6,608 – 300 63 125 96 25 – 49 See footnotes at end of table. Page 5 – – 53 208 88 – 70 2,383 – 138 85 35 60 31 20 – 13 – Fall to lower level 31 21 9 28 52 82 16 91 54 41 14 40 19 54 43 14 7 12 583 – 203 335 8 – 739 – 151 515 10 – 243 – 45 192 – – 140 – 537 173 148 – – – 105 85 – 17 – 15 – 9 – – 99 26 15 18 88 45 1,037 379 159 57 109 54 182 128 – 11 40 35 6 18 11 – 217 52 13 53 19 – 467 206 134 34 19 19 77 71 – 5 – 9 – 6 – – 117 18 12 30 – 24 – – 100 389 155 – 147 2,895 – 103 59 40 41 8 20 13 Slips or trips without fall Fall on same level – 35 54 28 – 17 905 – 23 17 – 29 12 18 – 90 150 88 – 48 2,000 – 102 39 36 48 17 12 18 – – 54 37 – 14 822 – 33 14 – 29 29 – – 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Glass containers ................................. Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ........ Products of purchased glass .................. Structural clay products .......................... Brick and structural clay tile ................ Pottery and related products .................. Vitreous china table and kitchenware ...................................... Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ................................................ Concrete block and brick .................... Concrete products, n.e.c. .................. Ready-mixed concrete ....................... Gypsum products ............................... Cut stone and stone products ................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ................................................ Mineral wool ....................................... Primary metal industries ............................. Blast furnace and basic steel products ... Blast furnaces and steel mills ............. Steel wire and related products .......... Cold finishing of steel shapes ............. Steel pipe and tubes ........................... Iron and steel foundries .......................... Gray and ductile iron foundries .......... Malleable iron foundries ..................... Steel investment foundries ................. Steel foundries, n.e.c. ........................ Primary nonferrous metals ..................... Primary copper ................................... Primary aluminum .............................. Primary nonferrous metals, n.e.c. ..... Secondary nonferrous metals ................ Nonferrous rolling and drawing .............. Copper rolling and drawing ................ Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil .......... Aluminum extruded products .............. Nonferrous rolling and drawing, n.e.c. ................................................ Nonferrous wiredrawing and insulating .......................................... Nonferrous foundries (castings) ............. Aluminum die— castings .................... Nonferrous die— casting except aluminum .......................................... Aluminum foundries ............................ Fabricated metal products .......................... Metal cans and shipping containers ....... Cutlery, handtools, and hardware .......... Hand and edge tools, n.e.c. .............. Hardware, n.e.c. ................................ Plumbing and heating, except electric .... Metal sanitary ware ............................ Plumbing fixture fittings and trim ........ Heating equipment, except electric .... 69 243 286 215 93 243 In lifting – Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – 124 74 82 69 42 – – 67 43 17 2,032 – 762 940 28 291 1,011 – 431 550 7 100 271 177 3,626 808 442 119 124 107 884 632 25 119 107 117 20 84 13 – 942 190 47 195 187 145 1,555 313 140 36 – 69 501 359 13 82 47 36 5 25 – – 338 48 20 95 181 67 328 667 198 109 278 79 84 182 99 42 414 224 26 14 11 – 60 190 7,450 102 466 131 270 272 76 58 138 17 111 3,879 – 228 81 100 107 30 – 54 35 31 2,204 – 263 90 153 64 6 36 – – 120 1,755 – 121 90 22 43 10 – – – – 651 – 39 – 14 31 10 – 19 – – – – – – – – – – 105 – 51 – – – 319 – 151 112 – – 78 52 781 121 – 25 – 55 213 126 – 56 28 20 – – 15 – 224 65 – 49 – – 1,242 301 92 – – 151 278 155 7 20 96 70 – 39 31 – 105 28 16 12 See footnotes at end of table. Page 6 By person Total – – – – – – – – Fires and explosions 79 150 161 71 126 – 16 21 53 29 Assaults and violent acts All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – 29 120 36 45 14 108 – – – – 19 649 – 68 506 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,133 – 236 828 16 – – – 177 54 20 – – – 20 12 – – 8 11 – 8 – – 53 18 7 – – – 113 65 65 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 120 – 1,219 378 204 71 – 79 273 165 – 42 63 38 – 24 14 – 263 36 54 49 – – – – – 66 – – – – – – – – – 58 187 72 – – – – – – 26 15 17 17 23 13 10 – – – – – – – – – – 6 49 – – – – – – – – 93 – – – – – – – – 17 17 10 – – – – – – – – – – 6 60 – – – – – – – – – 33 – – – – – – – – 64 2,947 – 272 91 151 88 5 59 – 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Fabricated structural metal products ...... Fabricated structural metal ................. Metal doors, sash, and trim ................ Fabricated plate work (boiler shops) .. Sheet metalwork ................................. Architectural metal work ..................... Prefabricated metal buildings ............. Miscellaneous metal work .................. Screw machine products, bolts, etc. ....... Screw machine products .................... Bolts, nuts, rivets, and washers .......... Metal forgings and stampings ................ Iron and steel forgings ........................ Nonferrous forgings ............................ Automotive stampings ........................ Metal stampings, n.e.c. ..................... Metal services, n.e.c. ............................. Plating and polishing .......................... Metal coating and allied services ....... Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c. ......... Small arms ammunition ...................... Ammunition, except for small arms, n.e.c. ................................................ Small arms ......................................... Miscellaneous fabricated metal products ................................................ Industrial valves .................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .. Valves and pipe fittings, n.e.c. ........... Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ............................................ Fabricated pipe and fittings ................ Fabricated metal products, n.e.c. ...... Industrial machinery and equipment .......... Turbines and turbine generator sets .. Farm and garden machinery .................. Farm machinery and equipment ......... Lawn and garden equipment .............. Construction and related machinery ....... Construction machinery ...................... Mining machinery ............................... Oil and gas field machinery ................ Elevators and moving stairways ......... Conveyors and conveying equipment ......................................... Industrial trucks and tractors .............. Metalworking machinery ......................... Machine tools, metal cutting types ..... Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ... Machine tool accessories ................... Power-driven handtools ...................... Welding apparatus ............................. Special industry machinery .................... Paper industries machinery ................ Special industry machinery, n.e.c. ..... General industrial machinery .................. Struck by object 344 3441 3442 3443 3444 3446 3448 3449 345 3451 3452 346 3462 3463 3465 3469 347 3471 3479 348 3482 13,791 3,735 2,093 3,200 2,797 1,212 379 375 1,499 832 667 5,008 1,118 132 2,284 1,377 2,865 1,828 1,037 370 77 6,166 2,088 864 1,259 1,201 408 187 157 681 423 258 1,838 475 47 618 674 1,073 501 572 90 10 3,557 1,322 474 728 663 189 82 97 242 149 93 877 304 11 207 345 545 215 330 27 – 3483 3484 93 196 22 58 15 12 349 3491 3492 3494 5,059 496 362 375 2,041 191 131 145 3496 3498 3499 35 3511 352 3523 3524 353 3531 3532 3533 3534 1,251 818 1,372 28,849 369 2,538 2,253 285 4,206 2,038 276 473 249 3535 3537 354 3541 3544 3545 3546 3548 355 3554 3559 356 484 582 4,363 498 2,249 479 213 240 1,842 278 751 4,090 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 953 297 129 150 200 80 – 50 155 110 45 502 – 9 265 177 207 115 92 23 5 1,158 325 141 234 296 105 – – 237 136 101 381 110 13 121 134 231 116 115 36 5 337 – 80 145 63 – – – 17 – – 119 – – 42 41 82 70 – 17 10 – 794 113 94 239 175 107 – – 98 75 – 339 53 7 171 92 223 161 62 34 8 27 6 13 13 893 104 47 49 314 27 31 35 664 – 43 30 270 – – – 307 61 28 28 540 344 482 10,573 116 899 802 97 1,220 439 71 184 44 283 146 175 4,684 55 479 444 35 734 236 36 96 – 56 72 86 1,894 26 112 92 20 146 62 – – 13 174 95 211 2,812 30 244 205 39 224 79 19 49 – 37 131 88 616 9 48 44 – 138 88 – 13 – 64 57 56 1,898 15 87 75 12 253 94 28 33 – 208 243 1,935 202 1,083 183 69 73 742 38 306 1,323 160 173 909 – 634 38 36 25 351 – 128 456 18 – 386 – 189 76 9 14 110 – 64 252 Page 7 – Fall on same level 14 See footnotes at end of table. – Fall to lower level – 30 442 – 188 28 16 19 210 9 86 525 – 12 86 – – – 7 13 – – – 70 35 19 335 – 191 51 9 25 113 19 55 331 Slips or trips without fall 353 – 37 147 77 – – – 69 – 66 135 – – 71 15 51 51 – 9 – – – 133 20 7 – 23 – 69 800 14 64 56 7 178 138 16 – – – – 88 – 58 – 10 – 11 – – 189 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 3,259 762 617 780 562 384 81 72 354 218 135 1,087 378 18 405 266 677 489 188 111 13 1,762 302 350 423 280 286 62 59 233 161 72 464 173 – 151 135 372 292 80 64 7 697 65 190 194 163 – – – 74 46 – 464 – 11 362 73 183 129 54 51 17 24 70 7 47 6 28 1,121 113 92 106 583 51 49 67 251 125 331 7,698 85 815 720 95 1,392 665 106 131 142 158 169 862 – 396 157 57 48 462 89 214 1,188 Total Fabricated structural metal products ...... Fabricated structural metal ................. Metal doors, sash, and trim ................ Fabricated plate work (boiler shops) .. Sheet metalwork ................................. Architectural metal work ..................... Prefabricated metal buildings ............. Miscellaneous metal work .................. Screw machine products, bolts, etc. ....... Screw machine products .................... Bolts, nuts, rivets, and washers .......... Metal forgings and stampings ................ Iron and steel forgings ........................ Nonferrous forgings ............................ Automotive stampings ........................ Metal stampings, n.e.c. ..................... Metal services, n.e.c. ............................. Plating and polishing .......................... Metal coating and allied services ....... Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c. ......... Small arms ammunition ...................... Ammunition, except for small arms, n.e.c. ................................................ Small arms ......................................... Miscellaneous fabricated metal products ................................................ Industrial valves .................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .. Valves and pipe fittings, n.e.c. ........... Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ............................................ Fabricated pipe and fittings ................ Fabricated metal products, n.e.c. ...... Industrial machinery and equipment .......... Turbines and turbine generator sets .. Farm and garden machinery .................. Farm machinery and equipment ......... Lawn and garden equipment .............. Construction and related machinery ....... Construction machinery ...................... Mining machinery ............................... Oil and gas field machinery ................ Elevators and moving stairways ......... Conveyors and conveying equipment ......................................... Industrial trucks and tractors .............. Metalworking machinery ......................... Machine tools, metal cutting types ..... Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ... Machine tool accessories ................... Power-driven handtools ...................... Welding apparatus ............................. Special industry machinery .................... Paper industries machinery ................ Special industry machinery, n.e.c. ..... General industrial machinery .................. Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 833 280 79 160 211 104 – – 71 – 45 103 – – 41 42 299 241 58 9 – 138 – 15 – 57 – – – – – – 245 – 6 170 44 75 39 – 7 6 – – – – 395 43 54 33 260 18 9 – – – – 103 69 159 3,949 51 482 447 35 614 187 39 49 114 93 – 133 2,398 87 207 182 25 491 343 15 38 – 102 73 49 1,680 – 105 96 9 246 151 – 39 – 123 88 379 – 117 58 33 25 284 63 109 676 37 45 277 – 148 – 31 – 94 36 34 354 See footnotes at end of table. Page 8 – 49 245 – 112 17 – 24 215 54 60 234 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 58 – 15 383 – 39 – 14 45 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 429 42 37 45 – – – – – – – – – – – – 83 51 146 2,673 37 273 252 21 226 94 31 19 13 40 – – 10 17 10 – 31 40 – – 40 7 – 10 88 40 42 17 25 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 52 – – All other events5 – – – – – – 29 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 93 Total By person – – – – – – – – 20 1,154 305 87 253 287 92 – 88 114 – 88 632 92 32 359 131 191 136 54 33 7 – 39 464 – 206 20 – 50 155 24 67 348 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Pumps and pumping equipment ......... Ball and roller bearings ....................... Air and gas compressors .................... Blowers and fans ................................ Packaging machinery ......................... Speed changers, drives, and gears .... Power transmission equipment, n.e.c. ................................................ General industrial machinery, n.e.c. .. Computer and office equipment ............. Electronic computers .......................... Office machines, n.e.c. ...................... Refrigeration and service machinery ...... Automatic vending machines ............. Refrigeration and heating equipment ......................................... Measuring and dispensing pumps ...... Service industry machinery, n.e.c. .... Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ................... Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves ..... Fluid power cylinders and actuators ... Fluid power pumps and motors .......... Scales and balances, except laboratory ......................................... Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............... Electronic and other electric equipment ..... Electric distribution equipment ............... Transformers, except electronic ......... Switchgear and switchboard apparatus ......................................... Electrical industrial apparatus ................ Motors and generators ....................... Electrical industrial apparatus, n.e.c. ................................................ Household appliances ............................ Household cooking equipment ........... Household refrigerators and freezers ............................................ Household laundry equipment ............ Electric housewares and fans ............ Household vacuum cleaners .............. Household appliances, n.e.c. ............ Electric lighting and wiring equipment .... Current-carrying wiring devices .......... Noncurrent-carrying wiring devices .... Residential lighting fixtures ................. Commercial lighting fixtures ............... Vehicular lighting equipment .............. Household audio and video equipment and audio recordings ............................ Household audio and video equipment ......................................... Radio and TV communications equipment ......................................... Electronic components and accessories .......................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – Fall to lower level Fall on same level 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 306 598 551 725 302 342 78 230 107 224 130 110 34 120 51 63 17 49 – 3568 3569 357 3571 3579 358 3581 373 496 1,478 857 133 3,304 235 94 154 294 195 32 1,137 57 40 64 120 62 24 414 28 – – 44 19 44 77 33 18 – 280 10 – 310 – 3585 3586 3589 359 3592 3593 3594 2,326 23 655 5,876 216 342 – 789 7 258 2,704 82 149 – 284 – 91 1,095 30 76 13 183 – 84 490 8 65 12 245 – 41 738 29 8 – 3596 3599 36 361 3612 87 5,034 14,130 1,161 757 20 2,416 3,886 306 208 13 963 1,513 127 115 – 403 956 32 27 – 689 1,104 107 60 3613 362 3621 – 1,578 869 – 492 226 – 240 87 – 81 55 – 116 72 – – 3629 363 3631 68 1,790 228 16 543 64 – 181 12 – 178 30 – 160 – – 3632 3633 3634 3635 3639 364 3643 3644 3645 3646 3647 505 310 264 212 271 2,085 631 238 191 250 260 154 79 94 52 99 590 203 68 74 53 52 57 16 32 21 44 173 58 15 – – 31 57 33 20 16 35 20 43 15 – 147 88 – – 14 – – 210 42 38 – 15 20 365 1,101 371 109 74 150 41 115 3651 642 200 69 46 48 27 77 3663 579 118 69 29 18 17 68 17 367 3,949 977 413 298 227 102 414 81 See footnotes at end of table. Page 9 32 18 45 48 – 13 10 76 – 68 63 – – – – – 33 70 58 Slips or trips without fall – – – – – 35 – 14 78 – 55 – 21 117 – 19 – – 91 344 42 – 66 – 19 8 – – 29 15 8 – – – – 26 – 83 18 – 32 – 145 54 25 258 28 – – 38 18 – 46 – 188 – 35 317 22 30 16 11 153 8 – – – 249 1,206 41 25 – 137 279 – 12 – 7 – 33 – – 80 50 – 131 – 32 23 14 26 15 174 39 29 – – 32 29 24 – 25 – 7 13 – – – 32 – – – – 8 22 – 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 90 143 111 261 76 84 60 64 48 180 – – 19 68 57 44 12 58 159 145 457 250 33 971 80 95 92 245 134 25 413 41 721 10 137 1,253 42 66 – 299 – 58 681 25 46 – 207 – 62 260 26 29 – 16 439 15 – – 45 1,025 3,624 370 238 26 554 2,192 232 133 7 162 2,322 234 164 – 408 691 58 46 – 426 290 – 315 223 – 258 169 12 396 57 – 178 32 19 319 66 10 61 8 87 66 79 31 76 586 137 76 – 79 85 32 30 42 15 28 333 77 57 – 40 38 94 59 44 39 17 279 89 36 – 25 41 17 6 273 166 138 35 154 93 106 89 58 1,022 638 Total Pumps and pumping equipment ......... Ball and roller bearings ....................... Air and gas compressors .................... Blowers and fans ................................ Packaging machinery ......................... Speed changers, drives, and gears .... Power transmission equipment, n.e.c. ................................................ General industrial machinery, n.e.c. .. Computer and office equipment ............. Electronic computers .......................... Office machines, n.e.c. ...................... Refrigeration and service machinery ...... Automatic vending machines ............. Refrigeration and heating equipment ......................................... Measuring and dispensing pumps ...... Service industry machinery, n.e.c. .... Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ................... Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves ..... Fluid power cylinders and actuators ... Fluid power pumps and motors .......... Scales and balances, except laboratory ......................................... Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............... Electronic and other electric equipment ..... Electric distribution equipment ............... Transformers, except electronic ......... Switchgear and switchboard apparatus ......................................... Electrical industrial apparatus ................ Motors and generators ....................... Electrical industrial apparatus, n.e.c. ................................................ Household appliances ............................ Household cooking equipment ........... Household refrigerators and freezers ............................................ Household laundry equipment ............ Electric housewares and fans ............ Household vacuum cleaners .............. Household appliances, n.e.c. ............ Electric lighting and wiring equipment .... Current-carrying wiring devices .......... Noncurrent-carrying wiring devices .... Residential lighting fixtures ................. Commercial lighting fixtures ............... Vehicular lighting equipment .............. Household audio and video equipment and audio recordings ............................ Household audio and video equipment ......................................... Radio and TV communications equipment ......................................... Electronic components and accessories .......................................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 15 – 61 – – – – Fires and explosions – – 20 – – – 28 – – 105 – 49 – – 106 27 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other events5 51 51 80 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 165 – 105 572 15 34 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 9 498 1,536 64 44 – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 228 85 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 203 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 86 46 19 31 17 217 82 10 – 55 22 18 – – – – 89 18 9 – – – – 45 159 14 21 – – – – 76 646 264 48 – – – 386 Page 10 – – All other assaults – See footnotes at end of table. – Total By person – – – – – – – 69 211 145 16 292 22 18 – – – – – – Assaults and violent acts 87 – – 39 13 – 20 – 158 64 14 – 8 14 72 – – 50 – 7 – – 38 215 – – – – – – 45 – 7 10 – – 15 31 – – – 12 – 15 9 – – 22 8 15 9 38 56 221 149 13 295 18 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Electron tubes .................................... Printed circuit boards .......................... Semiconductors and related devices ............................................. Electronic capacitors .......................... Electronic components, n.e.c. ........... Miscellaneous electrical equipment and supplies ................................................ Storage batteries ................................ Primary batteries, dry and wet ............ Engine electrical equipment ............... Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c. ................................................ Transportation equipment .......................... Motor vehicles and equipment ............... Motor vehicles and car bodies ............ Truck and bus bodies ......................... Motor vehicle parts and accessories .. Truck trailers ....................................... Aircraft and parts .................................... Aircraft ................................................ Aircraft engines and engine parts ....... Aircraft parts and equipment, n.e.c. .. Ship and boat building and repairing ...... Ship building and repairing ................. Boat building and repairing ................. Railroad equipment ................................ Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts ............ Guided missiles, space vehicles, parts .. Guided missiles and space vehicles .. Miscellaneous transportation equipment ............................................. Travel trailers and campers ................ Tanks and tank components .............. Transportation equipment, n.e.c. ....... Instruments and related products ............... Search and navigation equipment .......... Measuring and controlling devices ......... Laboratory apparatus and furniture .... Environmental controls ....................... Process control instruments ............... Fluid meters and counting devices ..... Medical instruments and supplies .......... Surgical and medical instruments ...... Surgical appliances and supplies ....... Dental equipment and supplies .......... Electromedical equipment .................. Photographic equipment and supplies ... Miscellaneous manufacturing industries .... Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ..... Jewelry, precious metal ...................... Silverware and plated ware ................ Musical instruments ................................ Toys and sporting goods ........................ Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............................................ Struck by object 3671 3672 515 667 142 223 68 94 3674 3675 3679 1,160 – 1,139 260 20 282 150 – 86 369 3691 3692 3694 1,167 186 261 407 336 – 77 136 165 – 35 68 3699 37 371 3711 3713 3714 3715 372 3721 3724 3728 373 3731 3732 374 375 376 3761 231 32,327 18,300 7,000 1,528 8,501 848 5,748 3,071 677 2,000 5,369 3,735 1,634 511 482 305 167 61 9,210 5,268 1,614 411 2,841 289 1,239 486 198 555 1,652 1,130 521 150 157 79 30 379 3792 3795 3799 38 381 382 3821 3822 3823 3824 384 3841 3842 3843 3845 386 39 391 3911 3914 393 394 1,613 737 46 830 5,971 437 2,080 225 290 510 – 2,602 1,130 1,018 198 – 469 5,681 338 213 95 279 1,419 3944 361 Struck against object 46 80 59 – 96 Fall to lower level – Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 14 9 – 43 33 12 88 36 13 21 113 – 151 – 24 7 5 70 13 11 32 – – 69 – – 47 30 22 21 107 – 16 44 54 3,735 2,195 603 187 1,207 131 409 141 76 192 659 437 222 27 35 33 12 – 2,517 1,305 555 124 506 90 507 297 20 189 522 344 178 54 16 27 8 – 1,734 1,147 254 85 751 51 202 – 55 134 141 69 72 53 78 12 – – 1,100 336 153 50 82 35 323 262 17 44 347 246 100 – – 17 10 – 2,465 1,170 466 154 496 30 473 235 71 166 513 361 152 98 17 62 44 – 930 527 214 42 211 22 211 98 – 107 128 103 25 14 8 7 – 665 329 12 325 1,451 74 485 101 40 132 18 751 210 386 128 – 75 1,839 86 33 48 – 473 377 197 – 177 481 37 231 – – 58 – 176 62 86 – 12 18 711 23 – 16 18 200 85 48 7 29 539 25 88 – 12 – – 376 89 181 94 12 – 391 24 11 11 – 72 102 65 – 36 317 11 120 – 22 – 12 149 50 83 15 – 18 597 37 13 21 16 183 71 41 5 25 157 24 74 – 13 47 – 47 31 – – – – 301 24 – – – 43 132 48 11 74 644 59 228 17 38 32 – 254 114 93 – – – 421 30 18 – – 128 35 23 82 29 30 12 29 60 See footnotes at end of table. Page 11 54 Caught in or compressed or crushed – – 43 13 – 11 167 6 37 – 19 – – 68 39 – – – – 123 – – – – 11 – 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 205 178 143 113 81 47 242 – 285 140 – 176 198 14 233 309 – 73 84 187 – 45 47 183 66 36 44 86 7,510 4,501 1,479 468 2,234 210 1,310 668 187 456 992 714 278 144 122 48 24 61 3,647 2,209 606 217 1,245 104 694 419 87 188 382 254 128 88 73 14 8 32 4,239 2,809 1,416 114 1,209 41 894 538 54 302 251 122 129 18 117 36 23 393 198 11 184 1,646 113 618 – 59 187 – 591 267 243 19 – 222 1,500 54 35 13 67 388 187 89 6 92 917 73 381 – 35 112 – 246 102 100 18 – 160 889 25 18 – – 165 115 46 – 68 811 43 264 20 79 46 – 424 268 99 – – – 550 59 32 22 72 139 45 335 10 142 14 12 – – 111 43 – – – – 260 8 – – – 92 125 41 31 7 Total Electron tubes .................................... Printed circuit boards .......................... Semiconductors and related devices ............................................. Electronic capacitors .......................... Electronic components, n.e.c. ........... Miscellaneous electrical equipment and supplies ................................................ Storage batteries ................................ Primary batteries, dry and wet ............ Engine electrical equipment ............... Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c. ................................................ Transportation equipment .......................... Motor vehicles and equipment ............... Motor vehicles and car bodies ............ Truck and bus bodies ......................... Motor vehicle parts and accessories .. Truck trailers ....................................... Aircraft and parts .................................... Aircraft ................................................ Aircraft engines and engine parts ....... Aircraft parts and equipment, n.e.c. .. Ship and boat building and repairing ...... Ship building and repairing ................. Boat building and repairing ................. Railroad equipment ................................ Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts ............ Guided missiles, space vehicles, parts .. Guided missiles and space vehicles .. Miscellaneous transportation equipment ............................................. Travel trailers and campers ................ Tanks and tank components .............. Transportation equipment, n.e.c. ....... Instruments and related products ............... Search and navigation equipment .......... Measuring and controlling devices ......... Laboratory apparatus and furniture .... Environmental controls ....................... Process control instruments ............... Fluid meters and counting devices ..... Medical instruments and supplies .......... Surgical and medical instruments ...... Surgical appliances and supplies ....... Dental equipment and supplies .......... Electromedical equipment .................. Photographic equipment and supplies ... Miscellaneous manufacturing industries .... Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ..... Jewelry, precious metal ...................... Silverware and plated ware ................ Musical instruments ................................ Toys and sporting goods ........................ Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............................................ Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment See footnotes at end of table. Page 12 12 79 – 92 – 27 – 12 60 – 59 – 33 23 – 1,352 703 159 90 299 119 116 – 70 33 418 250 169 36 18 7 – Fires and explosions Total All other assaults – – – – – – – – 33 28 – – – – – – – – – – – – 166 14 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – 117 – 19 55 7 – – 10 – 400 228 81 – 126 – 32 – – – 76 63 13 15 16 – – All other events5 By person 19 – – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 35 4,984 2,715 1,390 193 997 92 1,116 756 75 285 938 692 247 31 25 44 34 – – – – – – – – – – – – 114 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 116 45 5 66 666 105 208 16 30 – – 289 141 97 18 – – 557 74 66 – 86 127 – – – – – 19 52 – – Assaults and violent acts 30 – – 30 50 – 21 – – – – 27 10 – – 41 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 97 33 – – – – – – – – – 48 17 17 – – – – – – – 51 51 40 – – – – – – 40 – – – – – 13 – – – – 8 – – – – – – – – 26 40 – – – – – – 49 16 40 25 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. .... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies .... Lead pencils and art goods ................ Costume jewelry and notions ................. Fasteners, buttons, needles, and pins ................................................... Miscellaneous manufactures .................. Brooms and brushes .......................... Signs and advertising specialities ...... Burial caskets ..................................... Hard surface floor coverings, n.e.c. ... Manufacturing industries, n.e.c. ........ Nondurable goods ........................................ Food and kindred products ......................... Meat products ......................................... Meat packing plants ........................... Sausages and other prepared meats ................................................ Poultry slaughtering and processing .. Dairy products ........................................ Cheese, natural and processed ......... Dry, condensed, evaporated products ............................................ Ice cream and frozen desserts ........... Fluid milk ............................................ Preserved fruits and vegetables ............. Canned fruits and vegetables ............. Dehydrated fruits, vegetables, soups ................................................ Pickles, sauces, and salad dressings .......................................... Frozen fruits and vegetables .............. Frozen specialities, n.e.c. .................. Grain mill products ................................. Flour and other grain mill products ..... Cereal breakfast foods ....................... Prepared flour mixes and doughs ...... Prepared feeds, n.e.c. ....................... Bakery products ..................................... Bread, cake, and related products ..... Cookies and crackers ......................... Sugar and confectionery products .......... Candy and other confectionery products ............................................ Chocolate and cocoa products ........... Fats and oils ........................................... Beverages .............................................. Malt beverages ................................... Wines, brandy, and brandy spirits ...... Bottled and canned soft drinks ........... Flavoring extracts and syrups, n.e.c. ................................................ Miscellaneous food and kindred products ................................................ Fresh or frozen prepared fish ............. 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 3949 395 3952 396 1,040 332 101 182 387 103 14 63 167 23 – 24 42 38 5 11 171 32 – 22 14 27 7 9 67 17 11 8 3965 399 3991 3993 3995 3996 3999 72 3,130 193 1,444 333 43 1,117 20 1,068 62 534 – 17 365 – 423 12 268 – 5 115 – 232 21 104 – 5 77 13 308 26 138 – 6 122 – 197 – 154 – – 33 – 234 15 100 – – 112 – 100 6 58 – – 15 20 201 2011 100,659 36,732 9,446 3,070 31,692 10,910 2,981 1,044 11,836 4,163 1,199 522 7,263 2,680 550 190 11,110 3,515 1,095 286 3,987 1,844 304 82 10,921 4,321 1,034 291 3,160 1,363 320 83 2013 2015 202 2022 3,344 3,031 4,226 1,016 941 996 942 249 318 360 460 127 207 153 229 49 402 408 243 72 143 79 285 84 334 409 611 68 159 79 226 26 2023 2024 2026 203 2033 338 486 2,288 3,795 1,454 50 158 468 1,340 500 15 70 244 434 149 – – 132 400 130 12 63 86 339 123 – – 162 252 78 45 114 381 513 258 – – 149 188 49 2034 – 2035 2037 2038 204 2041 2043 2045 2048 205 2051 2052 206 492 724 731 2,190 307 188 439 759 4,568 3,462 886 2,029 191 250 247 702 109 43 173 250 1,536 1,226 226 564 104 40 59 169 – – 46 – 519 387 82 227 53 116 55 248 64 8 64 81 308 238 57 115 2064 2066 207 208 2082 2084 2086 1,243 165 865 5,586 388 567 4,208 328 68 204 1,228 67 102 991 142 10 – 477 36 55 358 66 15 118 427 22 – 371 106 38 – 237 9 18 183 – 344 47 – 206 2087 258 59 – – – – 209 2092 4,028 1,313 1,414 442 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 13 609 234 – 284 88 8 – – – – 13 – – – 60 52 30 173 – 15 15 94 199 170 25 61 – – 57 117 256 – 31 59 117 645 549 78 191 490 106 16 10 188 82 90 99 273 – 35 60 84 619 423 159 246 111 27 78 473 47 53 346 – 476 143 44 31 65 – 12 – – 122 61 44 57 – 6 – 225 9 – 168 – 106 31 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Nondurable goods ........................................ Food and kindred products ......................... Meat products ......................................... Meat packing plants ........................... Sausages and other prepared meats ................................................ Poultry slaughtering and processing .. Dairy products ........................................ Cheese, natural and processed ......... Dry, condensed, evaporated products ............................................ Ice cream and frozen desserts ........... Fluid milk ............................................ Preserved fruits and vegetables ............. Canned fruits and vegetables ............. Dehydrated fruits, vegetables, soups ................................................ Pickles, sauces, and salad dressings .......................................... Frozen fruits and vegetables .............. Frozen specialities, n.e.c. .................. Grain mill products ................................. Flour and other grain mill products ..... Cereal breakfast foods ....................... Prepared flour mixes and doughs ...... Prepared feeds, n.e.c. ....................... Bakery products ..................................... Bread, cake, and related products ..... Cookies and crackers ......................... Sugar and confectionery products .......... Candy and other confectionery products ............................................ Chocolate and cocoa products ........... Fats and oils ........................................... Beverages .............................................. Malt beverages ................................... Wines, brandy, and brandy spirits ...... Bottled and canned soft drinks ........... Flavoring extracts and syrups, n.e.c. ................................................ Miscellaneous food and kindred products ................................................ Fresh or frozen prepared fish ............. Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 258 75 33 44 119 39 10 28 103 47 30 16 20 873 41 382 – 12 276 14 595 24 283 – 6 168 11 216 47 – – – 107 12 105 – 54 – – 43 24,296 8,465 1,890 593 12,597 4,376 888 222 7,786 2,280 1,160 408 5,348 2,464 768 191 2,624 1,065 192 97 831 466 1,127 268 424 242 538 97 313 439 191 79 304 274 262 119 42 54 125 – – – 90 70 661 673 282 66 51 294 372 167 – – 105 59 17 – – – – – – – – – – 135 123 9 35 Total Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. .... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies .... Lead pencils and art goods ................ Costume jewelry and notions ................. Fasteners, buttons, needles, and pins ................................................... Miscellaneous manufactures .................. Brooms and brushes .......................... Signs and advertising specialities ...... Burial caskets ..................................... Hard surface floor coverings, n.e.c. ... Manufacturing industries, n.e.c. ........ Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – 85 39 – 14 – 31 74 152 38 41 79 266 102 – 5 – – – 96 – 43 – – 46 Total 8 By person All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 107 13 – 21 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 235 13 79 – 5 120 192 97 8 – 317 131 61 32 – 187 86 28 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 73 – 207 340 125 – – – – 19 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 71 62 205 – 21 – – 459 348 108 288 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 214 14 149 898 40 103 707 9 27 14 – 10,335 3,791 728 250 272 207 434 107 10 10 – 130 45 33 12 6 14 21 – – 63 94 161 481 106 44 82 162 1,089 874 176 506 42 44 97 157 – 20 13 – 636 515 92 325 – – 189 90 85 140 54 42 59 138 – 9 14 – 197 125 51 127 331 35 92 1,720 113 160 1,370 224 24 – 962 58 117 780 122 – – 136 7 20 89 77 – 149 284 52 86 93 20 – – 251 5 – 224 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 19 – – – – – – 289 99 – 888 260 – 468 126 56 33 69 – 5 17 19 221 98 See footnotes at end of table. Page 14 274 85 19 8 61 151 71 16 – – – – 24 22 19 20 – 16 – – – – 22 22 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Potato chips and similar snacks ......... Food preparations, n.e.c. .................. Tobacco products ....................................... Cigarettes ............................................... Textile mill products .................................... Broadwoven fabric mills, cotton .............. Broadwoven fabric mills, manmade ....... Knitting mills ........................................... Hosiery, n.e.c. ................................... Knit outerwear mills ............................ Weft knit fabric mills ........................... Textile finishing, except wool .................. Finishing plants, manmade ................ Finishing plants, n.e.c. ....................... Carpets and rugs .................................... Yarn and thread mills ............................. Yarn spinning mills ............................. Throwing and winding mills ................ Miscellaneous textile goods ................... Nonwoven fabrics ............................... Textile goods, n.e.c. .......................... Apparel and other textile products .............. Men’s and boys’ furnishings ................... Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............................................... Hats, caps, and millinery ........................ Miscellaneous fabricated textile products ................................................ Curtains and draperies ....................... Housefurnishings, n.e.c. .................... Fabricated textile products, n.e.c. ..... Paper and allied products ........................... Pulp mills ................................................ Paper mills .............................................. Paperboard mills .................................... Paperboard containers and boxes ......... Corrugated and solid fiber boxes ....... Sanitary food containers ..................... Miscellaneous converted paper products ................................................ Paper coated and laminated, packaging ......................................... Paper coated and laminated, n.e.c. ... Bags: plastics, laminated, and coated ............................................... Bags: uncoated paper and multiwall .. Die-cut paper and board ..................... Sanitary paper products ..................... Envelopes ........................................... Converted paper products, n.e.c. ...... Printing and publishing ............................... Newspapers ........................................... Periodicals .............................................. Books ..................................................... Book publishing .................................. Book printing ...................................... 2096 2099 21 211 22 221 222 225 2252 2253 2257 226 2262 2269 227 228 2281 2282 229 2297 2299 23 232 639 1,381 452 282 3,690 210 214 734 224 140 158 613 203 229 425 448 322 102 771 200 231 5,179 1,478 246 449 131 81 1,228 84 71 171 37 55 25 193 87 – 92 201 157 – 295 66 96 1,491 347 2325 235 703 – 146 18 Struck by object 69 145 41 20 462 25 – 76 20 36 – 51 – – 64 99 95 – 86 – – 527 138 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 59 100 41 25 289 7 38 32 13 – – 66 – – – – – – 84 – – 389 93 115 198 40 27 438 52 – 55 – 12 13 76 – – 25 52 – – 110 – – 468 90 56 – 22 – Fall to lower level 13 57 39 16 132 19 – 46 8 15 – – – – – – – – 20 – – 68 36 58 – Fall on same level 59 167 47 33 480 15 19 144 39 34 9 76 – – 70 – – – 54 – – 774 139 16 – 57 – Slips or trips without fall 25 – 10 10 86 – – 9 – – – – – – – – – – 51 – – 80 – – – 239 2391 2392 2399 26 261 262 263 265 2653 2656 2,506 230 343 756 10,091 79 2,004 617 3,383 2,082 272 892 64 89 304 3,929 16 638 208 1,307 758 132 314 19 42 – 1,432 9 256 74 383 235 – 249 30 17 135 735 – 119 61 284 127 – 275 14 25 119 1,640 – 236 66 602 369 76 – – – – 325 – 79 25 155 100 20 334 36 40 173 914 20 175 68 316 213 36 17 – 302 – 88 17 137 56 – 267 4,008 1,761 710 268 733 66 336 59 2671 2672 445 515 200 171 76 99 18 33 101 32 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2679 27 271 272 273 2731 2732 1,059 277 367 482 441 335 14,697 5,068 400 888 444 444 581 131 159 157 193 127 4,477 1,319 118 251 – 152 283 12 70 58 41 44 1,370 371 72 134 – 74 73 40 222 69 75 68 93 62 1,861 492 21 66 14 52 See footnotes at end of table. Page 15 – 21 50 – 1,067 396 22 41 19 – – – 42 53 18 – – 16 – – 529 268 9 30 15 15 87 17 40 28 39 – 1,513 848 48 44 – – 31 – – 13 10 – – 11 – 13 467 250 8 35 – 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Potato chips and similar snacks ......... Food preparations, n.e.c. .................. Tobacco products ....................................... Cigarettes ............................................... Textile mill products .................................... Broadwoven fabric mills, cotton .............. Broadwoven fabric mills, manmade ....... Knitting mills ........................................... Hosiery, n.e.c. ................................... Knit outerwear mills ............................ Weft knit fabric mills ........................... Textile finishing, except wool .................. Finishing plants, manmade ................ Finishing plants, n.e.c. ....................... Carpets and rugs .................................... Yarn and thread mills ............................. Yarn spinning mills ............................. Throwing and winding mills ................ Miscellaneous textile goods ................... Nonwoven fabrics ............................... Textile goods, n.e.c. .......................... Apparel and other textile products .............. Men’s and boys’ furnishings ................... Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............................................... Hats, caps, and millinery ........................ Miscellaneous fabricated textile products ................................................ Curtains and draperies ....................... Housefurnishings, n.e.c. .................... Fabricated textile products, n.e.c. ..... Paper and allied products ........................... Pulp mills ................................................ Paper mills .............................................. Paperboard mills .................................... Paperboard containers and boxes ......... Corrugated and solid fiber boxes ....... Sanitary food containers ..................... Miscellaneous converted paper products ................................................ Paper coated and laminated, packaging ......................................... Paper coated and laminated, n.e.c. ... Bags: plastics, laminated, and coated ............................................... Bags: uncoated paper and multiwall .. Die-cut paper and board ..................... Sanitary paper products ..................... Envelopes ........................................... Converted paper products, n.e.c. ...... Printing and publishing ............................... Newspapers ........................................... Periodicals .............................................. Books ..................................................... Book publishing .................................. Book printing ...................................... In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 30 63 19 Fires and explosions Total By person – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 200 328 154 94 814 39 51 176 46 14 70 116 – – 148 64 56 – 159 – – 1,079 385 82 206 50 31 379 17 – 75 24 – 28 68 – – 31 – – – 90 – – 629 246 – 239 23 – 87 58 – 18 38 – – 32 – 20 – 16 – – 980 435 21 154 – – 263 – – 26 – 12 – 92 – – 26 53 19 – 54 17 – 276 27 197 – 139 – 219 – – – 488 70 79 105 2,446 17 475 129 856 525 38 255 43 33 – 1,037 9 161 37 367 253 17 302 25 66 101 510 – 106 23 180 93 – 220 19 9 – 289 – 74 26 36 – – – – – – 188 – 45 29 – – 11 – – – – – – 971 463 199 150 85 – 125 137 34 49 217 59 74 116 130 81 3,895 1,128 87 316 – 132 143 27 – 60 56 51 2,175 580 47 164 – 70 27 – – – 29 36 – 1,169 277 63 66 17 49 See footnotes at end of table. Page 16 50 – – 93 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 37 11 9 – 24 – Assaults and violent acts 5 31 – – 66 – – – 9 – 32 18 – – 326 95 11 9 – – – – 549 330 14 15 13 – All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 38 104 48 43 343 11 33 74 33 – 7 44 – – 45 – – – 101 – – 390 95 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 19 11 33 – 14 – 12 6 – – – 10 10 – – – – 53 19 – – 6 – – – – 10 191 14 41 60 1,136 20 313 82 356 279 – 364 – – – – – – – – 29 93 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 53 23 7 – – – – – – – – 47 27 – – – – 26 13 – – – – – 21 15 – – – – 67 33 39 1,721 524 41 122 – 75 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Miscellaneous publishing ....................... Commercial printing ............................... Commercial printing, lithographic ....... Commercial printing, n.e.c. ................ Greeting cards ........................................ Blankbooks and bookbinding ................. Blankbooks and looseleaf binders ...... Bookbinding and related work ............ Printing trade services ............................ Platemaking services ......................... Chemicals and allied products ................... Industrial inorganic chemicals ................ Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ................................................ Plastics materials and synthetics ........... Plastics materials and resins .............. Organic fibers, noncellulosic .............. Drugs ...................................................... Medicinals and botanicals .................. Pharmaceutical preparations .............. Diagnostic substances ....................... Biological products except diagnostic ......................................... Soap, cleaners, and toilet goods ............ Soap and other detergents ................. Polishes and sanitation goods ............ Toilet preparations .............................. Paints and allied products ...................... Industrial organic chemicals ................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. ... Agricultural chemicals ............................ Agricultural chemicals, n.e.c. ............. Miscellaneous chemical products ........... Printing ink .......................................... Chemical preparations, n.e.c. ............ Petroleum and coal products ...................... Petroleum refining .................................. Asphalt paving and roofing materials ..... Asphalt paving mixtures and blocks ... Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products .................................................... Tires and inner tubes .............................. Rubber and plastics footwear ................. Hose and belting and gaskets and packing ................................................. Rubber and plastics hose and belting ............................................... Gaskets, packing and sealing devices ............................................. Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c. ........ Mechanical rubber goods ................... Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c. .... Miscellaneous plastics products, n.e.c. .................................... Unsupported plastics film and sheet .. Unsupported plastics profile shapes .. Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed – 477 213 254 16 72 61 – – – 496 14 – 953 687 234 28 105 – 69 – 31 586 43 – 147 118 – – – – – – 35 391 55 – 13 103 45 34 142 8 119 – 27 39 16 17 87 17 53 10 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 274 275 2752 2759 277 278 2782 2789 279 2796 28 281 405 6,256 4,000 2,063 193 646 289 357 222 178 7,841 526 110 2,153 1,415 661 56 226 120 105 – 46 1,983 157 – 625 439 158 11 49 – – 17 – 808 95 2819 282 2821 2824 283 2833 2834 2835 280 1,101 445 328 2,354 180 1,747 200 56 280 118 85 554 27 415 37 29 118 49 37 265 14 199 21 2836 284 2841 2842 2844 285 286 2869 287 2879 289 2893 2899 29 291 295 2951 227 1,282 197 404 598 659 657 474 613 – 650 290 210 1,709 507 861 451 – 375 62 107 198 172 134 113 172 15 140 – 54 471 – 273 – 30 301 302 19,444 1,742 76 6,850 499 27 2,826 199 13 1,363 86 7 2,353 172 7 505 39 – 1,822 117 – 464 34 – 305 1,235 305 113 96 92 65 174 27 3052 530 90 45 27 17 28 98 3053 306 3061 3069 705 1,873 1,068 804 215 665 393 272 67 232 153 80 69 45 75 347 206 141 38 50 12 39 76 111 55 57 308 3081 3082 14,518 1,614 472 5,353 882 166 2,268 284 71 1,736 440 45 350 20 – 1,418 71 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 17 – 97 – – 61 70 57 57 52 – 56 – – 80 18 – – 49 19 14 111 – 82 8 17 156 – 58 66 46 51 44 42 – – – – 167 – – – – – 1,129 150 36 13 93 – – – 81 – 53 52 21 7 74 – 49 31 – 32 30 68 – 57 – – 158 20 – – 18 – 15 94 – – – – 381 280 96 11 34 – – – 37 792 35 – 123 84 – 9 – – – – – 260 – – – 65 17 18 326 10 265 44 – 101 – 18 75 41 60 44 90 – 74 – 18 198 – – – 58 33 15 96 23 70 – – 36 12 – 6 – 15 10 – – 15 – – 113 20 – – – 19 58 35 – 344 – – 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 94 1,880 1,127 687 43 180 43 137 – – 1,938 78 – 1,041 623 373 33 97 17 80 – 13 1,039 39 18 489 338 141 47 107 82 – – 15 721 – – 180 65 114 – – – – – – 717 86 48 304 125 77 550 15 439 28 25 137 76 22 309 8 250 22 11 96 41 37 242 20 164 21 36 92 28 20 169 14 101 35 – 349 55 152 106 181 154 104 75 – 247 162 39 315 – 182 – – 200 – 68 65 78 63 42 51 – 162 112 – 121 – – – 4,982 663 17 2,650 272 14 1,598 88 25 782 34 – 369 164 157 19 – 182 79 53 12 – – 188 550 338 212 85 288 171 117 103 153 129 – – 110 48 63 – – – – 3,383 372 77 1,912 196 – 1,175 68 – 616 – – 286 – – Total Miscellaneous publishing ....................... Commercial printing ............................... Commercial printing, lithographic ....... Commercial printing, n.e.c. ................ Greeting cards ........................................ Blankbooks and bookbinding ................. Blankbooks and looseleaf binders ...... Bookbinding and related work ............ Printing trade services ............................ Platemaking services ......................... Chemicals and allied products ................... Industrial inorganic chemicals ................ Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ................................................ Plastics materials and synthetics ........... Plastics materials and resins .............. Organic fibers, noncellulosic .............. Drugs ...................................................... Medicinals and botanicals .................. Pharmaceutical preparations .............. Diagnostic substances ....................... Biological products except diagnostic ......................................... Soap, cleaners, and toilet goods ............ Soap and other detergents ................. Polishes and sanitation goods ............ Toilet preparations .............................. Paints and allied products ...................... Industrial organic chemicals ................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. ... Agricultural chemicals ............................ Agricultural chemicals, n.e.c. ............. Miscellaneous chemical products ........... Printing ink .......................................... Chemical preparations, n.e.c. ............ Petroleum and coal products ...................... Petroleum refining .................................. Asphalt paving and roofing materials ..... Asphalt paving mixtures and blocks ... Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products .................................................... Tires and inner tubes .............................. Rubber and plastics footwear ................. Hose and belting and gaskets and packing ................................................. Rubber and plastics hose and belting ............................................... Gaskets, packing and sealing devices ............................................. Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c. ........ Mechanical rubber goods ................... Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c. .... Miscellaneous plastics products, n.e.c. .................................... Unsupported plastics film and sheet .. Unsupported plastics profile shapes .. Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – 76 17 – 48 91 39 33 92 13 61 – – 91 – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 18 20 101 15 18 37 42 144 82 – 16 47 – – 217 – 118 – – 122 102 19 5 – – – – 15 261 – – – – – – – – – – – – – Total By person – – 17 15 – – – – – – – 33 – 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 360 65 – – – 29 20 – 6 – – 92 – – 10 10 – – 12 – 80 9 – 57 – 16 38 17 10 – – – – – 16 66 5 8 – 9 7 36 – – – – – – – – – – 14 – – – 760 455 291 17 69 – 45 – – 730 69 – 69 127 45 55 218 49 146 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 100 – 19 58 73 66 50 52 – – – – 139 – – – 5 – – 8 – 7 – – – – – 1,970 196 – – – – 101 – – – 54 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 47 170 56 114 – – – – – 13 50 All other events5 – – 13 74 All other assaults 69 50 – – 19 – – 1,504 118 125 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Laminated plastics plate and sheet .... Plastics pipe ....................................... Plastics bottles ................................... Plastics foam products ....................... Custom compound purchased resins ................................................ Plastics plumbing fixtures ................... Plastics products, n.e.c. .................... Leather and leather products ..................... Leather tanning and finishing ................. Footwear, except rubber ........................ House slippers .................................... Men’s footwear, except athletic .......... Women’s footwear, except athletic ..... Transportation and public utilities9 ............ Railroad transportation9 .............................. Local and interurban passenger transit ...... Local and suburban transportation ......... Taxicabs ................................................. Intercity and rural bus transportation ...... Bus charter service ................................. School buses .......................................... Trucking and warehousing ......................... Trucking and courier services, except air ......................................................... Public warehousing and storage ............ Trucking terminal facilities ...................... Water transportation ................................... Water transportation of passengers ....... Water transportation services ................. Transportation by air .................................. Air transportation, scheduled .................. Transportation services .............................. Passenger transportation arrangement .. Freight transportation arrangement ........ Miscellaneous transportation services ... Communications ......................................... Telephone communications ................... Cable and other pay television services ................................................ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ............ Electric services ..................................... Gas production and distribution .............. Combination utility services .................... Water supply .......................................... Sanitary services .................................... Struck against object – – – – – Slips or trips without fall 153 225 184 470 43 104 42 231 3087 3088 3089 31 311 314 3142 3143 3144 556 398 8,735 822 204 331 18 199 50 173 122 2,978 222 63 71 6 49 9 81 80 1,332 128 37 21 – 12 – 58 27 671 35 16 14 – 11 – 11 849 51 – 33 – 24 – 15 – 263 60 16 12 – 8 – 19 49 915 61 24 14 – 8 6 – – 182 14 – 9 – – – 40 41 411 412 413 414 415 42 168,632 4,624 12,041 7,593 586 971 769 2,122 58,413 35,694 868 1,598 987 – 255 108 198 13,745 17,132 405 654 359 – 171 46 50 7,179 11,280 302 586 394 18 – 43 85 3,782 4,235 71 148 73 – – – 43 1,570 13,105 902 594 262 19 – 63 174 5,690 17,405 82 975 421 – 91 157 260 6,847 6,426 6 506 303 – – 33 99 2,195 421 422 423 44 448 449 45 451 47 472 473 478 48 481 52,051 5,859 504 5,619 189 4,390 49,668 45,395 3,999 684 1,839 1,450 21,492 16,037 12,318 1,367 60 1,651 47 1,269 11,177 9,875 812 68 416 329 3,059 2,065 6,482 668 – 817 28 654 5,104 4,430 353 40 174 139 1,297 846 3,355 408 20 387 14 276 4,001 3,540 251 – 146 84 1,178 823 1,421 137 – 287 – 217 1,326 1,217 126 – 62 57 325 194 5,301 368 – 388 15 316 2,222 1,865 342 45 207 90 1,843 1,155 6,315 486 – 538 18 345 4,411 4,147 424 159 151 114 3,085 2,350 1,994 197 – 293 – 265 1,601 1,465 121 – 66 – 1,055 860 484 49 491 492 493 494 495 3,814 12,733 3,832 1,675 1,808 986 4,365 818 2,775 822 277 323 249 1,090 351 1,322 420 113 123 135 520 295 791 217 92 83 85 310 121 382 95 47 75 – 156 507 1,114 465 192 81 88 284 359 1,040 303 173 150 – 346 161 648 194 71 159 72 151 372,192 104,021 56,090 28,195 14,344 18,577 53,355 13,111 108,791 53,986 9,692 2,602 6,157 14,570 9,005 1,162 470 1,223 7,580 3,111 542 – 570 5,537 2,793 634 85 627 6,750 3,480 304 91 671 10,888 5,240 1,408 137 360 3,184 1,483 161 – 99 29,379 16,029 2,450 674 2,631 See footnotes at end of table. Page 19 60 67 39 59 55 62 181 Fall on same level 440 433 443 1,427 50 501 502 503 – Fall to lower level 3083 3084 3085 3086 Wholesale and retail trade ........................... Wholesale trade ........................................... Wholesale trade— durable goods .............. Motor vehicles, parts, and supplies ........ Furniture and homefurnishings ............... Lumber and construction materials ........ Struck by object Caught in or compressed or crushed – 55 100 174 – – – 66 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Laminated plastics plate and sheet .... Plastics pipe ....................................... Plastics bottles ................................... Plastics foam products ....................... Custom compound purchased resins ................................................ Plastics plumbing fixtures ................... Plastics products, n.e.c. .................... Leather and leather products ..................... Leather tanning and finishing ................. Footwear, except rubber ........................ House slippers .................................... Men’s footwear, except athletic .......... Women’s footwear, except athletic ..... In lifting – 134 38 95 155 92 2,094 209 59 77 – 48 19 80 52 1,350 141 17 60 – 38 11 46,231 765 3,658 3,065 – 284 75 184 14,408 – – – – – Total All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – 58 – – 144 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 78 85 747 179 16 105 – 62 14 13 435 10 10 – – – – 40 – 152 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 23,258 – 2,473 2,146 – 161 45 74 6,712 5,030 74 220 121 – – 20 73 741 4,876 127 347 189 – – 80 39 981 16,201 584 2,597 1,287 344 – 128 774 7,418 12,486 1,703 220 1,070 42 800 19,123 17,909 975 62 533 380 3,312 2,444 5,627 969 117 493 21 336 10,301 9,639 448 44 199 205 1,451 943 583 103 55 – 18 – 1,048 1,002 362 103 63 196 2,059 1,802 852 128 – 179 17 150 1,330 1,214 155 75 40 40 1,126 846 6,693 662 62 640 – 503 2,452 2,285 242 18 150 74 1,460 1,016 661 2,903 714 340 445 151 1,230 353 1,367 288 117 200 65 693 175 494 170 91 151 – 51 105 632 227 36 59 93 209 269 808 196 57 109 109 334 Wholesale and retail trade ........................... 102,139 65,624 10,987 15,374 15,306 1,009 3,492 19,807 9,111 1,415 577 900 2,619 1,318 305 98 77 2,378 1,340 278 – 114 8,682 4,205 1,262 331 274 240 196 – – – 641 310 – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 20 All other events5 By person 39 17 32,486 15,009 2,074 1,027 1,444 47 Fires and explosions 87 Wholesale trade ........................................... Wholesale trade— durable goods .............. Motor vehicles, parts, and supplies ........ Furniture and homefurnishings ............... Lumber and construction materials ........ 147 62 – 351 Assaults and violent acts – – – – Transportation and public utilities9 ............ Railroad transportation9 .............................. Local and interurban passenger transit ...... Local and suburban transportation ......... Taxicabs ................................................. Intercity and rural bus transportation ...... Bus charter service ................................. School buses .......................................... Trucking and warehousing ......................... Trucking and courier services, except air ......................................................... Public warehousing and storage ............ Trucking terminal facilities ...................... Water transportation ................................... Water transportation of passengers ....... Water transportation services ................. Transportation by air .................................. Air transportation, scheduled .................. Transportation services .............................. Passenger transportation arrangement .. Freight transportation arrangement ........ Miscellaneous transportation services ... Communications ......................................... Telephone communications ................... Cable and other pay television services ................................................ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ............ Electric services ..................................... Gas production and distribution .............. Combination utility services .................... Water supply .......................................... Sanitary services .................................... 50 19 Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 23 937 65 15 39 – 18 – 210 – – – – – – – 82 1,774 53 371 222 – – 36 64 753 730 52 321 210 – – – 61 142 1,045 – 50 13 – – 34 – 611 21,679 1,163 1,166 728 – 89 69 255 5,554 80 399 347 – – – – 178 174 91 78 – – 186 66 122 – – – – – – – 82 78 – – 78 – 277 333 – – – – 135 135 – – – – 108 45 5,029 496 – 825 28 726 6,069 5,439 474 51 209 191 4,307 3,434 65 139 37 51 34 – 11 – – – – – – – 63 131 35 51 32 – – 694 2,120 687 366 288 130 649 2,764 728 34,822 348 219 – – – 293 92 – – – 11,544 5,374 1,397 155 468 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 58 17 19 9 – – 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Professional and commercial equipment ............................................. Metals and minerals, except petroleum .. Electrical goods ...................................... Hardware, plumbing and heating equipment ............................................. Machinery, equipment, and supplies ...... Miscellaneous durable goods ................. Wholesale trade— nondurable goods ........ Paper and paper products ...................... Drugs, proprietaries, and sundries ......... Apparel, piece goods, and notions ......... Groceries and related products .............. Farm-product raw materials ................... Chemicals and allied products ............... Petroleum and petroleum products ........ Beer, wine, and distilled beverages ........ Miscellaneous nondurable goods ........... Retail trade ................................................... Building materials and garden supplies ...... Lumber and other building materials ...... Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores .......... Hardware stores ..................................... Retail nurseries and garden stores ........ Mobile home dealers .............................. General merchandise stores ...................... Department stores .................................. Miscellaneous general merchandise stores .................................................... Food stores ................................................ Grocery stores ........................................ Fruit and vegetable markets ................... Retail bakeries ........................................ Miscellaneous food stores ...................... Automotive dealers and service stations .... New and used car dealers ...................... Used car dealers .................................... Auto and home supply stores ................. Gasoline service stations ....................... Boat dealers ........................................... Recreational vehicle dealers .................. Motorcycle dealers ................................. Apparel and accessory stores .................... Women’s clothing stores ........................ Women’s accessory and specialty stores .................................................... Children’s and infants’ wear stores ........ Family clothing stores ............................. Shoe stores ............................................ Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores .................................................... Furniture and homefurnishings stores ........ Furniture and homefurnishings stores .... Household appliance stores ................... Radio, television, and computer 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 504 505 506 5,771 3,561 4,967 1,261 1,703 1,002 743 753 647 356 355 179 71 463 142 358 413 669 538 225 667 177 96 130 507 508 509 51 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 4,821 11,271 5,144 54,805 2,906 2,879 1,562 27,460 1,366 1,618 2,212 6,006 8,796 1,371 2,972 1,964 13,350 759 500 351 6,717 394 387 423 1,155 2,665 967 1,686 1,354 5,565 300 213 108 2,342 202 255 205 541 1,397 276 466 288 4,469 291 163 65 2,767 115 – 108 386 509 – 486 210 2,744 150 88 164 1,346 – – – 187 616 165 500 309 3,269 109 178 58 1,472 129 106 183 283 752 330 948 627 5,647 202 314 351 2,730 116 87 345 571 931 100 495 186 1,701 95 – 63 949 – – 113 234 125 52 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 263,401 23,657 19,472 861 1,659 1,215 451 47,009 41,029 74,643 7,167 5,949 155 498 380 185 12,959 11,049 41,520 4,046 3,341 87 256 209 153 8,016 6,625 20,615 1,852 1,594 – 114 77 – 3,082 2,893 8,808 852 688 – 76 59 – 1,397 1,074 11,827 1,336 1,168 – 64 40 – 2,860 2,680 42,467 1,691 1,269 116 144 126 – 6,873 6,162 9,927 672 473 – 36 150 – 1,803 1,684 539 54 541 543 546 549 55 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 56 562 3,298 52,845 50,204 252 963 510 34,988 17,187 1,220 8,099 6,837 472 481 528 6,770 930 1,390 15,861 15,098 – 157 126 10,534 5,322 – 2,769 1,534 158 126 176 1,723 310 1,081 8,334 7,813 – – – 5,280 2,107 – 1,662 872 – – 109 1,091 128 – 4,409 4,250 – – – 3,000 1,806 – 577 470 – – – 555 175 258 2,819 2,743 – – – 830 448 – 197 87 – – – 57 – – 1,066 989 – – – 1,652 841 – 162 361 122 – 113 806 118 409 8,221 7,732 – 338 67 4,327 2,215 – 596 1,444 – – – 817 106 – 978 937 – – – 1,582 639 – 239 217 – 102 – 360 – 563 564 565 566 559 406 3,510 978 – – 930 172 – – 606 135 – – 262 – – – – 191 202 – – 562 – – – 200 136 569 57 571 572 573 203 13,342 9,393 1,457 2,493 73 3,823 2,967 284 572 49 2,081 1,613 176 292 – 1,074 891 – 130 – 426 298 – 78 – 824 610 – 162 – 1,112 712 117 284 – 248 182 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 21 – – 45 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 2,014 615 1,551 1,300 187 923 231 – – 1,704 3,611 968 17,477 1,151 727 425 8,983 340 439 775 2,633 2,004 1,077 2,283 449 10,696 624 455 341 5,657 189 185 353 1,592 1,301 69,653 8,483 7,269 397 441 285 – 13,984 11,908 Total Professional and commercial equipment ............................................. Metals and minerals, except petroleum .. Electrical goods ...................................... Hardware, plumbing and heating equipment ............................................. Machinery, equipment, and supplies ...... Miscellaneous durable goods ................. Wholesale trade— nondurable goods ........ Paper and paper products ...................... Drugs, proprietaries, and sundries ......... Apparel, piece goods, and notions ......... Groceries and related products .............. Farm-product raw materials ................... Chemicals and allied products ............... Petroleum and petroleum products ........ Beer, wine, and distilled beverages ........ Miscellaneous nondurable goods ........... Retail trade ................................................... Building materials and garden supplies ...... Lumber and other building materials ...... Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores .......... Hardware stores ..................................... Retail nurseries and garden stores ........ Mobile home dealers .............................. General merchandise stores ...................... Department stores .................................. Miscellaneous general merchandise stores .................................................... Food stores ................................................ Grocery stores ........................................ Fruit and vegetable markets ................... Retail bakeries ........................................ Miscellaneous food stores ...................... Automotive dealers and service stations .... New and used car dealers ...................... Used car dealers .................................... Auto and home supply stores ................. Gasoline service stations ....................... Boat dealers ........................................... Recreational vehicle dealers .................. Motorcycle dealers ................................. Apparel and accessory stores .................... Women’s clothing stores ........................ Women’s accessory and specialty stores .................................................... Children’s and infants’ wear stores ........ Family clothing stores ............................. Shoe stores ............................................ Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores .................................................... Furniture and homefurnishings stores ........ Furniture and homefurnishings stores .... Household appliance stores ................... Radio, television, and computer stores .. Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 49 494 74 299 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 299 148 1,301 103 132 47 461 – – – 210 256 – 503 233 1,038 – 118 – 214 – 198 – 16 380 531 630 311 4,476 134 668 54 2,428 – 140 92 236 699 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 163 – – 330 – – – 73 188 – – – – 163 – – 129 – – – – – – – – – – – – 202 – – – – 188 – – – – 295 1,200 323 6,170 341 218 203 3,434 74 185 106 637 974 45,817 5,169 4,439 250 274 160 – 9,114 7,664 8,367 316 254 – 28 – – 1,151 1,057 12,996 315 243 – 16 – – 1,761 1,589 6,624 831 625 – 45 94 – 455 355 768 – – – – – – – – 2,851 205 204 – – – – 829 658 2,416 112 110 – – – – 769 598 435 93 93 – – – – – – 23,278 2,636 2,019 106 384 87 – 4,330 3,886 916 16,177 15,479 – 129 105 8,163 3,602 – 2,489 1,611 – – – 1,605 255 441 11,855 11,231 – 107 66 4,460 1,598 – 1,714 988 – – – 1,070 83 – 3,395 3,358 – – – 564 266 – 86 154 – – – 219 – 166 1,835 1,578 18 137 79 1,477 586 – 246 558 – – – 76 – – 759 590 – 166 – 2,433 1,387 – 780 94 – – – 94 44 – – – – – – 318 – – 84 114 – – – – – – 280 280 – – – 474 151 – – 288 – – – 32 – – 261 261 – – – 408 123 – – 274 – – – 26 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 181 4,273 4,164 – – 73 3,463 2,139 – 617 462 – 141 – 1,040 64 – – 919 175 – – 647 139 – – 145 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 252 – 430 201 – 4,789 3,302 699 788 – 2,974 2,137 348 489 – 259 181 – 67 – 164 122 – – – 601 445 – 148 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,453 866 202 385 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 22 – – – – 70 36 28 – – 70 – – – 23 640 357 538 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total 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 Eating and drinking places ......................... Miscellaneous retail .................................... Drug stores and proprietary stores ......... Liquor stores ........................................... Used merchandise stores ....................... Miscellaneous shopping goods stores ... Nonstore retailers ................................... Fuel dealers ............................................ Retail stores, n.e.c. ................................ 58 59 591 592 593 594 596 598 599 60,842 23,948 4,949 434 1,452 6,882 4,023 2,450 3,759 17,111 5,464 978 178 344 1,524 653 492 1,294 9,753 2,919 631 – 206 1,021 360 271 400 5,114 1,529 228 108 – 317 181 96 547 1,948 480 96 – – 122 94 – – 1,563 1,721 215 – 95 772 177 179 274 16,548 2,878 534 – 142 868 552 292 417 3,709 575 49 – – 232 147 92 – Finance, insurance, and real estate ............ Depository institutions ................................ Central reserve depositories .................. Commercial banks .................................. Savings institutions ................................. Credit unions .......................................... Nondepository institutions .......................... Federal and federal-sponsored credit .... Business credit institutions ..................... Mortgage bankers and brokers .............. Security and commodity brokers ................ Security brokers and dealers .................. Insurance carriers ....................................... Life insurance ......................................... Medical service and health insurance .... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ..... Pension, health, and welfare funds ........ Insurance agents, brokers, and service ..... Real estate ................................................. Real estate operators and lessors .......... Real estate agents and managers ......... Subdividers and developers ................... Trusts ..................................................... 60 601 602 603 606 61 611 615 616 62 621 63 631 632 633 637 64 65 651 653 655 673 36,689 8,043 181 4,809 1,519 1,190 2,162 156 429 706 1,029 478 5,637 950 1,721 2,195 359 1,734 17,075 7,706 7,296 1,875 300 6,345 879 31 404 210 196 179 – 44 – 149 88 421 61 129 176 – 130 4,342 1,855 1,880 607 – 3,033 512 11 216 160 104 86 17 13 – 90 63 174 45 39 55 – – 2,041 809 978 254 20 2,568 273 8 147 – – 78 – 26 – 50 17 205 14 74 99 – – 1,824 818 691 314 – 497 86 9 39 – – – – – – – 6 30 – 10 17 – – 319 144 140 – – 2,763 733 – 376 315 – 129 – 27 – 70 23 348 75 119 118 – 113 1,359 678 571 103 – 6,265 1,454 14 852 229 245 401 20 107 – 403 98 1,136 249 392 370 – 360 2,362 1,006 1,165 139 70 1,315 282 7 222 – – 263 – – 191 55 28 120 16 39 27 – – 556 276 249 – – 70 701 72 372,159 24,427 23,723 10,498 67,300 5,480 5,367 2,448 33,961 2,582 2,494 1,301 21,900 2,117 2,095 643 7,728 446 446 378 16,815 1,120 1,105 358 58,895 5,780 5,587 1,916 13,891 1,360 1,266 340 721 722 723 726 729 73 733 734 736 6,870 1,000 1,411 496 690 49,881 1,135 14,049 6,534 1,599 – 408 128 159 11,135 413 3,063 1,783 765 – 316 – – 5,335 278 1,107 751 380 – – – 112 3,615 – 1,405 521 363 – – – – 1,681 – 518 408 165 – 120 – – 3,397 – 1,354 522 1,070 – 258 118 320 7,514 – 2,091 718 224 – – – – 2,060 – 586 221 737 738 75 751 753 754 76 4,525 15,375 17,917 3,532 9,666 3,742 6,501 965 2,837 6,210 756 3,941 1,328 2,172 433 1,416 3,247 290 2,214 666 1,045 405 835 1,599 343 805 345 545 55 354 742 42 496 202 308 148 772 1,048 194 417 410 397 911 2,825 1,563 564 459 417 334 81 814 574 125 174 248 207 Services ......................................................... Hotels and other lodging places ................. Hotels and motels ................................... Personal services ....................................... Laundry, cleaning, and garment services ................................................ Photographic studios, portrait ................. Beauty shops .......................................... Funeral service and crematories ............ Miscellaneous personal services ............ Business services ....................................... Mailing, reproduction, stenographic ....... Services to buildings .............................. Personnel supply services ...................... Computer and data processing services ................................................ Miscellaneous business services ........... Auto repair, services, and parking .............. Automotive rentals, no drivers ................ Automotive repair shops ......................... Automotive services, except repair ........ Miscellaneous repair services .................... See footnotes at end of table. Page 23 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Eating and drinking places ......................... Miscellaneous retail .................................... Drug stores and proprietary stores ......... Liquor stores ........................................... Used merchandise stores ....................... Miscellaneous shopping goods stores ... Nonstore retailers ................................... Fuel dealers ............................................ Retail stores, n.e.c. ................................ 8,981 7,471 1,925 103 481 2,111 1,451 751 650 6,030 5,146 1,196 – 344 1,462 1,065 497 514 1,523 940 178 – 80 191 262 – 180 6,700 668 73 – – 125 95 199 166 454 999 122 – – 146 149 251 298 Finance, insurance, and real estate ............ Depository institutions ................................ Central reserve depositories .................. Commercial banks .................................. Savings institutions ................................. Credit unions .......................................... Nondepository institutions .......................... Federal and federal-sponsored credit .... Business credit institutions ..................... Mortgage bankers and brokers .............. Security and commodity brokers ................ Security brokers and dealers .................. Insurance carriers ....................................... Life insurance ......................................... Medical service and health insurance .... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ..... Pension, health, and welfare funds ........ Insurance agents, brokers, and service ..... Real estate ................................................. Real estate operators and lessors .......... Real estate agents and managers ......... Subdividers and developers ................... Trusts ..................................................... 7,258 1,252 33 896 136 157 397 – 147 171 134 74 754 107 178 346 – 237 4,218 2,170 1,692 350 82 4,207 896 21 736 – – 183 – 45 – 109 59 466 64 118 220 – 220 2,259 1,269 739 250 53 3,566 1,254 36 608 245 314 245 – 64 – 80 66 1,262 228 402 448 – 311 338 99 184 – 19 1,358 248 – 187 – – 72 – – – – 29 229 27 73 74 – – 730 345 271 114 – 2,047 276 11 105 127 – 174 – – – 19 9 566 110 44 346 – 245 708 179 300 121 – Services ......................................................... 114,747 Hotels and other lodging places ................. 4,897 Hotels and motels ................................... 4,832 Personal services ....................................... 2,309 Laundry, cleaning, and garment services ................................................ 1,791 Photographic studios, portrait ................. 260 Beauty shops .......................................... – Funeral service and crematories ............ 125 Miscellaneous personal services ............ – Business services ....................................... 11,515 Mailing, reproduction, stenographic ....... 329 Services to buildings .............................. 3,899 Personnel supply services ...................... 1,767 Computer and data processing services ................................................ 676 Miscellaneous business services ........... 2,525 Auto repair, services, and parking .............. 3,334 Automotive rentals, no drivers ................ 663 Automotive repair shops ......................... 2,125 Automotive services, except repair ........ 409 Miscellaneous repair services .................... 1,511 57,831 2,508 2,469 1,111 11,803 426 426 566 17,743 1,856 1,805 435 14,849 242 235 568 868 – – – – 6,936 237 2,321 1,180 220 – 321 – – 2,419 – 327 312 396 – – – – 2,028 – 816 148 482 – – – – 3,188 – 814 209 385 1,490 1,635 361 1,028 146 907 742 601 334 59 213 – 147 88 700 1,018 125 452 399 436 150 1,463 1,673 633 647 146 452 See footnotes at end of table. Page 24 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 365 76 – – – – – – – 612 350 114 – – 65 25 – 139 610 191 103 – – 64 – – – – 159 – – – – 25 – 122 3,277 2,807 747 – 219 841 512 122 305 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 459 156 – 145 – – 31 18 – – – – 33 – 6 26 – – 237 51 174 – – 350 146 – 134 – – – – – – – – 14 – – 10 – – 178 50 128 – – 108 – – – – – 20 18 – – – – 19 – – 17 – – 59 – 45 – – 5,292 1,508 42 1,014 203 188 268 16 – – 85 63 768 77 338 263 – 301 2,206 1,032 807 365 – 319 – – – 14,877 203 189 122 13,587 161 161 41 1,291 42 – 81 40,920 3,041 2,890 1,427 11 80 – – – – 510 – 148 – – – – – – 392 – 96 – 77 – – – – 119 – – – 833 360 162 – – 6,105 183 951 837 – 290 103 – – – 100 – 226 92 – – – – – – – – – – 741 2,540 1,986 380 1,158 295 704 – – – – – – – – – – 73 – – – 40 95 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Electrical repair shops ............................ Reupholstery and furniture repair ........... Miscellaneous repair shops .................... Motion pictures ........................................... Motion picture production and services .. Motion picture distribution and services ................................................ Motion picture theaters ........................... Amusement and recreation services .......... Producers, orchestras, entertainers ....... Bowling centers ...................................... Commercial sports ................................. Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ................................................ Health services ........................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors .... Offices and clinics of dentists ................. Offices of other health practitioners ........ Nursing and personal care facilities ....... Hospitals ................................................. Medical and dental laboratories ............. Home health care services ..................... Health and allied services, n.e.c. ........... Legal services ............................................ Educational services .................................. Elementary and secondary schools ....... Colleges and universities ....................... Vocational schools ................................. Social services ........................................... Individual and family services ................. Job training and related services ............ Child day care services .......................... Residential care ...................................... Social services, n.e.c. ............................ Museums, botanical, zoological gardens ... Museums and art galleries ..................... Botanical and zoological gardens ........... Membership organizations ......................... Business associations ............................ Labor organizations ................................ Civic and social associations .................. Religious organizations .......................... Membership organizations, n.e.c. ......... Engineering and management services ..... Engineering and architectural services .. Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping .. 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 762 764 769 78 781 1,441 182 4,857 2,475 1,057 262 – 1,857 457 325 156 19 870 173 127 74 – 444 165 141 18 – 282 48 36 159 – 229 163 72 19 – 299 227 68 50 – 157 48 35 782 783 79 792 793 794 164 797 18,074 1,234 499 2,580 – – 4,306 413 217 538 15 – 2,248 208 156 332 17 – 1,232 122 – 118 – – 578 43 – 53 – – 824 126 – 105 34 – 2,790 161 – 320 – – 750 – – 30 799 80 801 802 804 805 806 807 808 809 81 82 821 822 824 83 832 833 835 836 839 84 841 842 86 861 863 864 866 869 87 871 872 13,627 164,714 8,218 762 1,548 61,170 77,152 1,544 9,601 4,708 2,160 10,839 4,453 5,779 386 42,485 12,036 4,977 6,083 17,146 2,243 1,355 755 599 5,445 416 218 3,008 723 864 15,305 3,991 1,447 3,138 22,520 1,469 – 119 8,379 11,174 139 564 542 340 1,649 587 982 – 6,052 1,387 893 1,184 2,268 321 356 150 206 1,117 – – 660 194 109 3,055 1,144 220 1,552 11,325 756 – – 4,127 5,656 57 309 273 132 898 374 484 – 3,302 761 434 767 1,107 232 186 79 107 440 – – 269 87 – 1,746 640 174 991 7,925 584 – – 2,862 3,988 49 150 194 61 524 143 346 – 2,076 453 326 248 994 – 106 57 – 426 – – 262 103 47 866 299 42 432 2,410 91 – – 1,095 1,049 32 89 45 34 164 63 100 – 388 127 75 – 87 – 38 – – 190 – – 85 – 18 323 178 – 591 4,460 374 – – 1,014 1,848 124 830 154 163 1,166 566 533 – 2,494 639 317 227 1,224 87 86 55 – 272 – – 177 – 16 868 249 163 2,251 24,225 1,338 – 277 9,414 10,913 196 1,388 675 420 2,212 1,010 1,072 98 8,097 2,621 769 1,463 2,438 806 310 208 102 883 – – 574 98 98 2,550 619 142 592 5,292 289 – – 1,853 2,392 72 495 133 195 343 160 178 – 1,769 466 105 563 592 – 95 48 – 187 – – 108 – – 672 174 90 See footnotes at end of table. Page 25 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 416 – 1,043 661 314 308 – 570 475 172 35 – 111 – 35 117 – 271 194 41 94 – 340 61 45 60 239 4,093 203 – 636 40 229 1,908 119 – 181 – – 357 – – 109 – – 1,075 31 – 85 – – 828 – – 55 3,125 69,537 1,691 – 526 30,269 32,083 232 3,313 1,290 351 2,444 917 1,360 – 9,864 3,144 942 959 4,422 398 282 134 148 1,081 – – 510 188 155 2,867 654 385 1,502 32,435 811 – 219 13,567 15,456 97 1,501 768 237 1,361 454 826 – 5,653 2,007 482 793 2,176 196 118 43 76 704 – – 276 136 123 1,842 461 202 225 4,571 918 – 232 672 2,078 222 70 281 339 454 84 305 – 687 447 82 – 88 – 26 9 17 261 – – 130 – – 1,182 257 183 949 7,520 788 – 86 2,260 3,745 114 124 314 41 394 95 291 – 1,572 504 221 170 628 – 38 32 – 299 – – 189 75 – 838 137 45 757 3,510 165 – 81 153 1,175 289 1,271 373 68 302 68 199 – 2,718 786 512 – 1,064 231 25 23 – 336 – – 148 – 89 880 292 56 Total Electrical repair shops ............................ Reupholstery and furniture repair ........... Miscellaneous repair shops .................... Motion pictures ........................................... Motion picture production and services .. Motion picture distribution and services ................................................ Motion picture theaters ........................... Amusement and recreation services .......... Producers, orchestras, entertainers ....... Bowling centers ...................................... Commercial sports ................................. Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ................................................ Health services ........................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors .... Offices and clinics of dentists ................. Offices of other health practitioners ........ Nursing and personal care facilities ....... Hospitals ................................................. Medical and dental laboratories ............. Home health care services ..................... Health and allied services, n.e.c. ........... Legal services ............................................ Educational services .................................. Elementary and secondary schools ....... Colleges and universities ....................... Vocational schools ................................. Social services ........................................... Individual and family services ................. Job training and related services ............ Child day care services .......................... Residential care ...................................... Social services, n.e.c. ............................ Museums, botanical, zoological gardens ... Museums and art galleries ..................... Botanical and zoological gardens ........... Membership organizations ......................... Business associations ............................ Labor organizations ................................ Civic and social associations .................. Religious organizations .......................... Membership organizations, n.e.c. ......... Engineering and management services ..... Engineering and architectural services .. Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping .. Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment See footnotes at end of table. Page 26 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total 39 – – – – – 87 205 12 – – – 201 – – – – – 231 – – 65 – – 171 – – 33 162 7,705 123 – – 2,711 4,157 – 369 274 – 527 438 76 – 4,364 673 676 186 2,728 101 23 12 – 289 – – 82 – 208 494 – – 134 7,536 88 – – 2,682 4,104 – 338 254 – 488 419 55 – 4,178 611 664 186 2,623 94 8 – – 64 – – 62 – – 248 – – 43 – – – 43 38 – – – – 12 – – – – 15 – 15 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 – 17 13 By person All other assaults 13 – 82 – – – – All other events5 237 – 462 425 110 32 36 – 2,777 247 – 638 – 168 35 – – – 53 – – 20 – 40 19 21 – 186 – – – 105 – 14 7 – 225 – – 19 – 206 246 – – 1,794 15,337 1,064 156 130 4,420 7,576 142 1,177 671 221 1,334 528 768 – 4,862 1,369 462 1,148 1,689 194 114 85 – 720 – – 430 91 115 1,858 428 140 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Research and testing services ............... Management and public relations .......... 873 874 3,474 6,392 714 977 See footnotes at end of table. Page 27 Struck by object 315 617 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 250 275 83 61 Fall to lower level 219 237 Fall on same level 730 1,060 Slips or trips without fall 97 311 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, 2002 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Research and testing services ............... Management and public relations .......... 563 1,265 In lifting Repetitive motion 310 869 154 588 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 Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1987 Edition. 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 (Division B in the Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1987 edition) include establishments not governed by the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) rules and reporting, such as those in oil and gas extraction. Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 344 313 182 351 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – Total 43 407 By person All other assaults 15 207 28 200 All other events5 423 867 Data for mining operators in coal, metal, 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 OSHA made to its recordkeeping requirements effective January 1, 2002; therefore estimates for these industries are not comparable with estimates for other industries. 8 Data conforming to OSHA definitions 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. 9 Data for employers in railroad transportation are provided to BLS by the Federal Railroad Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation. These data do not reflect the changes OSHA made to its recordkeeping requirements effective January 1, 2002; therefore estimates for these industries are not comparable with estimates for other industries. SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor NOTE: Dashes indicate data that are not available. Because of rounding, data may not sum to totals. n.e.c. = not elsewhere classified. Page 28
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