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, 2000 Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects SIC code3 Industry2 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 1,664,018 443,614 224,995 107,651 75,356 Total cases Total Private industry6 ................................... Agriculture, forestry, and fishing6 .............. Struck by object Fall to lower level Fall on same level 95,329 198,861 Slips or trips without fall 52,794 37,256 11,621 5,802 2,540 2,375 2,923 3,666 1,342 Agricultural production6 ................................ 01-02 15,060 4,771 2,173 1,260 896 1,527 1,536 661 Agricultural production— crops6 ................. 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 ......... Landscape and horticultural services ..... Forestry ...................................................... Timber tracts .......................................... Forestry services .................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping .................... 01 011 016 017 018 02 021 024 025 027 07 072 074 075 078 08 081 085 09 10,092 262 1,798 2,850 3,439 4,969 1,805 1,796 1,008 342 21,306 3,275 2,899 746 11,792 793 277 325 97 2,963 – 629 644 1,054 1,808 514 787 386 117 6,596 1,235 301 126 4,397 220 96 122 33 1,379 – 227 292 528 794 261 330 136 67 3,417 324 169 – 2,575 186 – 106 – 807 – 185 208 265 453 137 184 102 26 1,257 159 – – 902 17 – – 6 467 – 143 84 140 429 65 255 94 16 1,472 707 – – 650 – – – – 1,164 – – 293 234 363 216 60 57 29 1,361 – – – 545 – – 15 – 867 – 81 252 490 669 216 277 122 51 1,884 327 226 – 1,173 234 – – 12 589 – – 272 79 72 30 – 21 – 644 – – – 397 – – 16 – 1,109 52 17 8 5 15 – – 285 264 21 456 356 316 10 180 103 1,017 52 15 8 5 16 – 6 299 289 10 461 399 205 16 102 50 266 – – – – – – – – – – 263 241 – – – – 14 5 13 9 15 24,374 5,282 3,402 186 1,695 1,974 579 1,395 14,635 3,267 1,228 – 2,000 1,715 550 1,165 Mining7 .......................................................... Metal mining7 .............................................. Iron ores7 ................................................ Copper ores7 .......................................... Lead and zinc ores7 ................................ Gold and silver ores7 .............................. Ferroalloy ores, except vanadium7 ......... Miscellaneous metal ores7 ..................... Coal mining7 ............................................... Bituminous coal and lignite mining7 ........ Anthracite mining7 .................................. Oil and gas extraction ................................. Oil and gas field services ....................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels7 ........... Dimension stone7 ................................... Crushed and broken stone7 .................... Sand and gravel7 .................................... Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals7 .............................................. Chemical and fertilizer minerals7 ............ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals7 ..... 10 101 102 103 104 106 109 12 122 123 13 138 14 141 142 144 14,084 536 159 86 55 176 15 45 4,033 3,944 89 6,903 6,166 2,612 231 1,233 708 5,651 170 34 33 22 64 – 14 1,834 1,809 25 2,653 2,452 994 110 457 275 3,224 75 17 7 9 35 – 6 1,032 1,019 13 1,609 1,514 508 67 211 149 1,029 62 11 16 8 20 – 7 463 453 10 251 206 253 15 144 65 1,091 30 5 9 5 8 – – 309 307 – 528 482 224 27 97 58 145 147 149 167 141 132 60 57 35 31 29 21 9 11 9 20 17 5 Construction ................................................. General building contractors ...................... Residential building construction ............ Operative builders .................................. Nonresidential building construction ....... Heavy construction, except building ........... Highway and street construction ............ Heavy construction, except highway ...... 15 152 153 154 16 161 162 194,410 41,925 22,685 551 18,689 23,156 7,933 15,223 62,741 14,975 8,543 109 6,323 7,862 2,562 5,300 34,463 9,380 5,440 85 3,855 4,182 1,401 2,781 13,374 2,663 1,539 – 1,102 1,199 369 830 7,830 1,434 656 – 776 1,714 455 1,259 See footnotes at end of table. Page 1 – – – – 5,598 944 432 – 500 708 290 418 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, 2000 — 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 ................................... 454,720 256,747 68,323 69,059 73,014 Total Agriculture, forestry, and fishing6 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person 3,656 23,505 18,418 – All other assaults All other events5 5,087 181,143 .............. 6,018 3,509 510 1,791 2,078 192 2,380 Agricultural production6 ................................ 2,388 1,286 201 543 591 123 683 Agricultural production— crops6 ................. 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 ......... Landscape and horticultural services ..... Forestry ...................................................... Timber tracts .......................................... Forestry services .................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping .................... 1,775 – 419 414 783 613 269 107 163 70 3,501 302 428 148 2,097 98 – – 30 1,004 – 272 227 423 281 105 – 81 52 2,142 – 240 – 1,210 60 – – – 120 – – – 52 81 36 – 16 – 287 – – – 83 17 – – – 329 – 65 – 161 214 58 95 44 17 1,234 – 168 – 765 – – – – 502 – 116 150 165 89 – – 57 – 1,458 – – 94 1,120 – – – – Mining7 .......................................................... Metal mining7 .............................................. Iron ores7 ................................................ Copper ores7 .......................................... Lead and zinc ores7 ................................ Gold and silver ores7 .............................. Ferroalloy ores, except vanadium7 ......... Miscellaneous metal ores7 ..................... Coal mining7 ............................................... Bituminous coal and lignite mining7 ........ Anthracite mining7 .................................. Oil and gas extraction ................................. Oil and gas field services ....................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels7 ........... Dimension stone7 ................................... Crushed and broken stone7 .................... Sand and gravel7 .................................... Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals7 .............................................. Chemical and fertilizer minerals7 ............ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals7 ..... 4,402 228 86 29 21 71 5 16 1,356 1,328 28 1,947 1,846 871 77 391 219 1,909 58 19 7 – 22 – 5 501 496 5 1,051 999 299 34 126 77 127 – – – – – – – 8 8 – 113 – 6 – – – 497 17 5 5 – – – – 85 83 – 265 138 130 6 56 41 231 – – – – – – – 27 26 – 189 174 13 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 710 15 – – – 6 – – 135 134 – 485 412 75 8 40 18 61 60 63 24 14 24 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Construction ................................................. General building contractors ...................... Residential building construction ............ Operative builders .................................. Nonresidential building construction ....... Heavy construction, except building ........... Highway and street construction ............ Heavy construction, except highway ...... 43,050 9,227 4,888 110 4,229 5,101 1,688 3,413 23,536 5,424 3,076 – 2,281 2,732 839 1,893 952 – – – – 363 106 257 488 57 – – – 122 28 94 330 – – – – 76 19 57 158 – – – – 46 – – – – – 2,791 637 289 – 319 231 95 136 See footnotes at end of table. Page 2 13 7 7 6,505 832 356 – 468 946 399 547 8,014 887 245 – 638 1,596 725 871 93 – 81 – – 30 25 – – – 61 – – – – – – – – 73 39 – – – 32 643 274 351 11 – 1,698 – 1,406 192 72 – – – – 32 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 2,340 4,735 650 2,038 16 – – – – 634 274 347 – – 1,690 – 1,406 192 66 – – – – 1,651 – 285 737 379 388 145 81 131 26 2,582 813 298 – 1,113 110 – – – 25,262 5,790 3,256 – 2,481 2,539 911 1,628 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 Special trade contractors ............................ 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 ............................................ SIC code3 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 17 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 129,329 28,224 5,668 22,508 18,843 11,138 9,982 10,384 822 39,904 8,151 1,357 6,555 5,613 3,820 3,039 3,345 344 20,901 3,898 331 3,648 2,872 2,488 1,563 1,754 – 9,511 1,740 805 1,718 1,359 720 970 703 – 4,682 1,073 148 605 905 182 253 417 – 17,118 3,613 797 2,251 1,954 2,680 2,424 1,116 – 9,653 2,093 252 1,430 1,438 837 795 792 – 3,946 905 – 980 529 338 196 233 – 179 21,758 7,681 4,178 1,449 972 2,251 1,914 661 376,574 128,541 54,119 28,420 34,244 12,720 31,313 9,990 24 241 242 2421 243,925 26,431 2,202 6,542 5,399 87,942 12,227 978 3,281 2,778 38,627 6,353 771 1,681 1,505 19,131 2,277 129 421 312 20,916 2,648 55 919 735 7,624 788 113 135 116 17,043 1,766 356 442 419 6,020 459 – 98 88 2426 966 446 163 96 161 19 10 243 2431 2434 2435 2436 2439 244 2448 245 2451 2452 249 2491 2493 2499 25 251 2511 2512 2514 2515 252 2521 2522 253 254 2541 2542 2599 32 321 10,321 3,977 3,078 777 475 2,014 2,550 2,227 3,240 2,028 1,211 1,576 309 296 971 14,195 7,456 3,549 1,917 524 1,171 1,598 628 969 1,607 2,741 1,823 918 545 17,464 389 4,651 1,645 1,462 355 166 1,023 1,625 1,472 1,101 563 539 591 66 169 356 5,135 2,641 1,503 468 226 346 507 168 340 482 1,181 789 392 234 5,726 156 2,019 624 671 106 41 576 1,037 946 628 311 317 216 – 47 146 2,266 1,093 521 242 80 194 223 107 117 242 597 370 227 51 2,551 82 1,149 419 410 70 65 185 174 157 259 154 105 144 – 62 57 1,216 557 354 104 34 48 147 19 128 112 247 158 90 137 1,237 16 976 409 260 130 59 118 363 341 124 41 83 211 – 56 137 1,299 808 543 95 54 90 123 39 84 105 228 183 45 31 1,501 56 191 58 75 11 14 – – – 307 216 91 40 – – 20 266 132 67 – – 41 12 10 – 11 102 65 36 10 1,112 11 544 164 154 37 57 132 72 63 218 157 61 135 – – 97 1,187 642 263 139 44 143 105 – 84 117 204 146 58 76 1,485 20 188 68 46 14 14 46 – – 96 79 16 – – – – 248 140 66 63 – – 37 20 18 29 41 – 9 – 569 – 322 3229 1,360 1,028 390 295 133 119 136 95 96 60 76 47 132 110 78 41 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 .................. Upholstered 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 ... Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. .............. Stone, clay, and glass products ................. Flat glass ................................................ Glass and glassware, pressed or blown .................................................... Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ........ Total cases 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total In lifting Repetitive motion Special trade contractors ............................ 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 ............................................ 28,721 6,669 1,271 5,797 4,926 1,806 1,636 2,363 – 15,380 3,723 377 2,344 3,257 1,198 915 1,188 – 1,924 313 – 466 300 266 90 124 – 4,727 981 232 969 546 126 831 197 – 5,531 1,146 – 1,026 680 210 118 889 – 562 186 – 226 – – – 104 – 309 – – 82 134 – – – – 201 – – – 134 – – – – 108 – – – – – – – – 4,078 2,237 291 776 1,382 – – – – Manufacturing ............................................... 97,384 51,232 30,583 18,289 7,575 795 698 430 268 38,686 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 .................. Upholstered 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 ... Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. .............. Stone, clay, and glass products ................. Flat glass ................................................ Glass and glassware, pressed or blown .................................................... Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ........ 63,349 6,693 186 1,666 1,294 33,056 3,270 73 616 497 19,833 961 – 213 127 11,118 388 – 114 100 4,177 479 127 64 60 584 70 – – – 374 70 – – – 223 40 – – – 152 29 – – – 25,861 2,529 296 520 410 322 105 65 – – – – 85 2,945 1,219 861 262 100 504 475 371 1,012 684 328 408 147 52 209 4,146 2,137 925 717 91 316 542 239 303 445 818 583 236 140 4,495 129 1,536 636 435 92 42 331 266 239 616 420 197 162 – – 99 2,467 1,340 559 486 52 192 306 128 178 208 509 358 152 74 2,358 46 412 210 95 19 – 62 71 – 125 86 39 130 – 11 120 1,316 697 239 288 37 109 207 90 118 251 107 – 86 40 552 8 155 35 49 8 51 – – – 61 47 13 23 – – – 324 173 75 – 49 33 12 – – 51 69 – 33 11 794 11 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 336 272 130 110 80 68 106 72 See footnotes at end of table. Page 4 – – 84 21 15 – 15 – 85 79 50 – – 68 – – 62 173 129 82 – – 18 – – – 25 14 – 8 – 909 12 22 17 Total – – All other assaults 14 13 All other events5 16,933 4,106 1,539 2,726 2,721 1,056 829 1,223 – 2,700 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,128 554 313 63 33 165 154 119 269 165 103 162 63 19 80 1,345 726 322 170 69 148 169 72 98 189 199 143 56 33 1,806 37 – – – – – – 141 105 29 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – By person – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 24 19 – – – – – – – – – – – – 15 10 14 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Products of purchased glass .................. Structural clay products .......................... Brick and structural clay tile ................ Pottery and related products .................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures .................. Pottery products, n.e.c. ..................... Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ................................................ Concrete block and brick .................... Concrete products, n.e.c. .................. Ready-mixed concrete ....................... Gypsum products ............................... Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ................................................ Abrasive products ............................... Primary metal industries ............................. Blast furnace and basic steel products ... Blast furnaces and steel mills ............. Steel wire and related products .......... Steel pipe and tubes ........................... Iron and steel foundries .......................... Gray and ductile iron foundries .......... Steel investment foundries ................. 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 wiredrawing and insulating .......................................... Nonferrous foundries (castings) ............. Aluminum die— castings .................... Nonferrous die— casting except aluminum .......................................... Aluminum foundries ............................ Miscellaneous primary metal products ... Metal heat treating .............................. Fabricated metal products .......................... Metal cans and shipping containers ....... Metal cans .......................................... Cutlery, handtools, and hardware .......... Cutlery ................................................ 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 .... Fabricated structural metal products ...... Fabricated structural metal ................. Metal doors, sash, and trim ................ Fabricated plate work (boiler shops) .. Struck by object Struck against object 323 325 3251 326 3261 3269 1,436 951 489 1,016 124 488 601 226 87 218 10 107 326 92 – 85 – – 159 46 20 67 – – 327 3271 3272 3273 3275 9,457 940 3,712 4,599 171 3,240 409 1,503 1,247 72 1,350 122 789 437 – 567 91 319 139 14 329 3291 33 331 3312 3315 3317 332 3321 3324 333 3331 3334 3339 334 335 3351 3353 3354 1,700 309 21,179 5,444 2,647 967 1,323 5,088 3,031 376 623 27 458 138 446 4,439 636 331 1,121 510 69 7,801 2,045 896 302 599 2,165 1,350 125 134 11 79 43 137 1,498 228 107 409 274 – 3,481 795 399 137 200 1,153 599 56 54 – 33 17 – 655 93 43 158 3357 336 3363 1,790 4,024 1,688 532 1,443 462 3364 3365 339 3398 34 341 3411 342 3421 3423 3429 343 3431 3432 3433 344 3441 3442 3443 381 1,232 1,115 914 43,323 513 336 3,102 247 1,122 1,529 950 291 294 365 16,730 4,436 2,102 3,685 129 532 378 323 18,105 152 69 1,107 87 535 395 208 60 46 102 7,809 2,471 766 1,549 See footnotes at end of table. Page 5 Caught in or compressed or crushed 84 62 20 52 Fall to lower level 37 53 90 86 Slips or trips without fall 11 – – – – – 120 20 – 1,034 157 337 480 56 842 – 254 542 – 866 69 391 378 – 353 71 91 187 – 103 – 1,553 562 235 55 168 275 190 21 11 – – 8 63 363 51 28 61 83 – 1,960 602 234 102 200 368 247 22 55 8 37 10 – 388 66 35 139 50 13 609 249 158 – – 80 59 – 33 – 21 12 – 83 23 9 7 121 13 1,298 471 288 68 – 189 134 13 33 – 21 10 – 277 26 67 86 51 – 640 203 124 – – 252 60 – 19 – 18 – – 90 14 – 39 224 589 196 182 210 73 106 465 168 26 40 78 210 79 31 72 54 56 225 187 157 8,033 – – 475 57 229 135 98 – – 56 3,681 1,103 468 856 19 71 69 35 116 66 – 4,912 77 – 361 9 196 147 53 – – – 1,867 554 121 260 14 17 108 – 1,311 – – 63 6 – 30 36 – – 36 626 182 73 89 19 53 83 – 3,016 – – 189 18 44 102 25 – – – 907 138 131 180 – – – Fall on same level 29 – – 2,575 47 – 209 17 112 79 36 – 16 – 947 317 149 227 28 – – – 11 – – 964 16 16 61 6 – 46 33 18 14 – 165 – – 78 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 355 363 183 306 59 110 195 246 98 102 28 – 100 77 – 55 10 – 76 – – 128 – 117 1,956 239 778 905 19 1,005 136 472 377 19 148 – 110 – – 584 116 5,650 1,306 551 388 292 1,196 727 97 165 – 123 39 101 1,436 193 77 298 403 72 2,496 492 217 127 – 562 286 42 37 – 19 17 – 674 88 20 157 77 – 955 107 38 – – 342 184 62 32 – 21 11 – 276 22 14 53 737 1,058 475 311 474 216 100 311 389 296 11,161 113 83 969 79 277 563 365 125 140 101 4,101 710 772 935 54 100 207 177 6,005 63 53 529 50 132 307 182 43 81 58 2,053 320 438 531 Total Products of purchased glass .................. Structural clay products .......................... Brick and structural clay tile ................ Pottery and related products .................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures .................. Pottery products, n.e.c. ..................... Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ................................................ Concrete block and brick .................... Concrete products, n.e.c. .................. Ready-mixed concrete ....................... Gypsum products ............................... Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ................................................ Abrasive products ............................... Primary metal industries ............................. Blast furnace and basic steel products ... Blast furnaces and steel mills ............. Steel wire and related products .......... Steel pipe and tubes ........................... Iron and steel foundries .......................... Gray and ductile iron foundries .......... Steel investment foundries ................. 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 wiredrawing and insulating .......................................... Nonferrous foundries (castings) ............. Aluminum die— castings .................... Nonferrous die— casting except aluminum .......................................... Aluminum foundries ............................ Miscellaneous primary metal products ... Metal heat treating .............................. Fabricated metal products .......................... Metal cans and shipping containers ....... Metal cans .......................................... Cutlery, handtools, and hardware .......... Cutlery ................................................ 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 .... Fabricated structural metal products ...... Fabricated structural metal ................. Metal doors, sash, and trim ................ Fabricated plate work (boiler shops) .. Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Fires and explosions Total – – – – – – – – – – – 380 – 232 135 – 596 – 106 451 – – 19 1,717 291 221 – – 313 205 32 83 – 75 5 70 289 29 36 105 67 13 267 111 85 20 – 43 36 – 15 – 15 – – 50 9 8 13 170 187 92 77 651 303 16 23 20 31 52 61 178 – – 2,043 – – 78 10 – 40 32 – 10 – 789 283 52 207 – – – – 594 14 – 18 – – – – – – – 259 108 33 47 – – 2,647 45 – 321 23 90 186 88 33 42 14 613 – 128 206 See footnotes at end of table. Page 6 43 Assaults and violent acts – – 11 By person All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 124 75 – 112 17 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,073 68 242 733 – – – 154 67 29 – – 33 13 – 7 – – 5 – – – – – – – – – 205 – 2,066 584 248 115 151 470 264 36 102 – 85 13 63 436 92 12 109 10 – 12 9 – – – – 118 – – – – – – – – – – 57 – – – 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 121 327 187 – – – – – – – – – – – – 19 75 83 22 22 69 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 53 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 3,738 47 – 269 13 44 178 139 – 27 90 1,327 279 98 340 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Struck by object Total 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. ................................................ Miscellaneous fabricated metal products ................................................ Industrial valves .................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .. Valves and pipe fittings, n.e.c. ........... Wire springs ....................................... Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ............................................ Fabricated pipe and fittings ................ Fabricated metal products, n.e.c. ...... Industrial machinery and equipment .......... Engines and turbines .............................. Turbines and turbine generator sets .. Internal combustion engines, n.e.c. ... 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 ................ Conveyors and conveying equipment ......................................... Industrial trucks and tractors .............. Metalworking machinery ......................... Machine tools, metal cutting types ..... Machine tools, metal forming types .... Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ... Machine tool accessories ................... Welding apparatus ............................. Special industry machinery .................... Textile machinery ............................... Woodworking machinery .................... Paper industries machinery ................ Special industry machinery, n.e.c. ..... General industrial machinery .................. Ball and roller bearings ....................... Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 321 – 88 – 397 331 66 698 116 16 227 340 185 105 80 20 – 595 152 136 – 420 298 122 856 159 134 210 353 308 210 98 20 13 – – 3444 3446 3448 3449 345 3451 3452 346 3462 3463 3465 3469 347 3471 3479 348 3482 4,173 917 1,117 300 2,902 1,819 1,083 7,759 1,358 281 3,096 2,954 3,905 2,255 1,650 662 179 1,863 402 581 176 1,305 945 361 3,274 533 175 1,053 1,478 1,417 718 699 105 44 669 176 314 95 380 260 119 1,542 228 – 508 749 754 355 399 62 25 3483 115 8 7 349 3491 3492 3494 3495 6,800 550 617 442 309 2,728 219 134 212 178 1,006 79 59 79 78 568 95 28 56 – 950 35 40 75 89 3496 3498 3499 35 351 3511 3519 352 3523 3524 353 3531 3532 3533 1,599 814 2,129 39,438 1,457 181 1,276 2,209 1,803 406 6,734 3,019 587 1,043 680 365 780 15,917 358 40 319 968 813 155 2,399 1,015 221 391 239 109 318 6,445 81 13 67 514 443 70 1,000 448 150 118 126 61 152 3,655 103 16 87 154 134 20 370 193 – – 249 167 236 3,827 111 8 103 251 211 40 700 215 19 197 3535 3537 354 3541 3542 3544 3545 3548 355 3552 3553 3554 3559 356 3562 706 723 6,262 810 529 2,843 1,000 429 3,014 396 264 465 1,093 5,175 636 261 201 2,714 313 236 1,338 410 167 1,143 269 118 141 436 2,126 173 97 72 934 84 86 463 133 – 356 – – 29 163 932 61 102 90 585 80 – 244 94 77 181 – – 12 62 489 74 See footnotes at end of table. Page 7 – 16 865 106 – 489 138 – 456 188 – 70 130 516 – Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 112 126 – – 54 – 28 177 52 – 74 50 188 123 64 20 – 166 – – – 196 144 52 432 149 – 132 143 327 174 153 43 9 9 21 – 111 17 – 14 – 338 48 56 28 – – – – – 10 56 913 29 8 21 62 57 – 172 42 52 – 86 37 70 2,270 72 24 48 111 79 31 417 122 – 118 – – 149 67 – – 34 – 36 – – – 10 126 14 60 – 303 15 – 90 126 17 255 – – – 113 323 61 – 19 – – – 150 – 130 297 – – 127 154 142 71 72 – – 95 12 – 13 1,023 43 – 40 50 34 16 248 105 94 – – – 92 11 – – 23 – 174 20 – 45 95 135 – 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 1,163 203 248 – 721 403 317 1,810 351 34 783 608 1,041 624 417 326 74 513 – 163 – 435 244 191 955 138 – 446 327 643 424 219 200 40 126 – – – 142 – 100 755 102 13 394 246 138 112 – 60 12 26 13 22 1,714 167 141 75 – 946 88 80 43 – 485 – 101 40 – 473 – 42 8 – 378 153 659 10,590 501 58 443 577 484 93 1,906 986 125 274 174 109 393 5,668 258 25 233 296 231 65 867 449 18 164 73 56 154 2,680 215 28 187 142 93 48 333 169 – – 165 57 140 1,607 49 8 41 85 75 10 293 78 17 – 123 212 1,681 214 129 720 254 147 678 68 – 180 215 1,423 230 75 83 996 115 105 435 106 85 393 – – 109 107 794 84 Total 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. ................................................ Miscellaneous fabricated metal products ................................................ Industrial valves .................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .. Valves and pipe fittings, n.e.c. ........... Wire springs ....................................... Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ............................................ Fabricated pipe and fittings ................ Fabricated metal products, n.e.c. ...... Industrial machinery and equipment .......... Engines and turbines .............................. Turbines and turbine generator sets .. Internal combustion engines, n.e.c. ... 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 ................ Conveyors and conveying equipment ......................................... Industrial trucks and tractors .............. Metalworking machinery ......................... Machine tools, metal cutting types ..... Machine tools, metal forming types .... Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ... Machine tool accessories ................... Welding apparatus ............................. Special industry machinery .................... Textile machinery ............................... Woodworking machinery .................... Paper industries machinery ................ Special industry machinery, n.e.c. ..... General industrial machinery .................. Ball and roller bearings ....................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 458 – 92 – 208 131 77 695 84 32 374 205 274 205 69 37 – – – – – – – 19 25 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 741 16 133 53 – 15 16 33 505 26 – 26 29 – 8 85 – – – – – – 117 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 174 100 219 3,787 161 11 150 182 143 39 867 479 41 106 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 143 63 545 86 84 225 73 – 276 – – 36 123 399 – – 76 296 33 – 170 35 – 124 – – – 51 191 – 19 Total By person 48 – – – – – – 120 14 – 95 – 75 – – – – 95 378 60 – 172 45 – 223 – – 36 37 336 – Page 8 Fires and explosions 198 – – – 103 93 – 177 61 12 55 50 299 190 109 58 27 – See footnotes at end of table. Assaults and violent acts 83 – – 11 33 94 – – 71 – – 30 – – – 12 112 – 74 – – – – – – 31 18 13 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Air and gas compressors .................... Blowers and fans ................................ Packaging machinery ......................... Speed changers, drives, and gears .... Industrial furnaces and ovens ............ Power transmission equipment, n.e.c. ................................................ General industrial machinery, n.e.c. .. Computer and office equipment ............. Electronic computers .......................... Computer peripheral equipment, n.e.c. ................................................ Office machines, n.e.c. ...................... Refrigeration and service machinery ...... Automatic vending machines ............. Refrigeration and heating equipment ......................................... 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 .......... Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............... Electronic and other electric equipment ..... Electric distribution equipment ............... Transformers, except electronic ......... Electrical industrial apparatus ................ Motors and generators ....................... Relays and industrial controls ............ Household appliances ............................ Household cooking equipment ........... Household refrigerators and freezers ............................................ Electric housewares and fans ............ Household vacuum cleaners .............. Household appliances, n.e.c. ............ Electric lighting and wiring equipment .... Electric lamps ..................................... Current-carrying wiring devices .......... Commercial lighting fixtures ............... Household audio and video equipment ......................................... Communications equipment ................... Radio and TV communications equipment ......................................... Communications equipment, n.e.c. ... Electronic components and accessories .......................................... Electron tubes .................................... Printed circuit boards .......................... Semiconductors and related devices ............................................. Electronic capacitors .......................... Electronic components, n.e.c. ........... Miscellaneous electrical equipment and supplies ................................................ Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 430 1,247 319 346 379 128 727 158 110 105 78 330 67 49 34 26 179 62 31 – – 175 – 19 43 3568 3569 357 3571 559 630 1,341 511 209 235 283 97 93 119 113 54 37 39 55 24 52 48 63 17 3577 3579 358 3581 323 212 5,230 – 70 1,804 – 17 645 15 8 – 503 – 12 – 502 – 3585 3589 359 3592 3593 3594 3599 36 361 3612 362 3621 3625 363 3631 3,692 1,191 8,018 562 707 501 6,181 20,027 1,707 731 1,798 1,017 621 2,070 199 1,291 418 4,121 145 406 177 3,366 5,572 462 203 493 262 167 564 60 488 112 1,870 72 123 55 1,607 2,415 233 95 230 123 86 259 23 367 116 633 19 67 47 492 1,183 89 41 122 44 52 180 16 355 124 944 45 27 58 808 1,426 104 55 111 70 – 103 20 3632 3634 3635 3639 364 3641 3643 3646 548 467 43 58 291 2,976 242 949 577 109 128 – 123 941 62 423 177 50 241 12 54 94 42 47 9 53 199 10 87 – 17 22 8 21 395 18 220 47 3651 366 745 2,016 226 672 89 330 71 127 27 92 3663 3669 697 270 172 – 367 3671 3672 6,038 536 1,883 3674 3675 3679 369 – – – – 64 52 1,571 161 552 801 – 250 288 – 155 356 76 102 1,438 – 1,616 263 – 471 125 – 323 56 – 36 55 19 86 2,129 550 172 109 209 Page 9 27 60 – 19 9 17 29 14 Slips or trips without fall 10 – – 11 19 15 38 73 104 44 10 29 34 21 – – – 12 131 – 14 286 – 104 – 180 – – 30 142 606 158 – 44 17 – 24 – 230 – 400 23 14 27 335 1,743 126 25 133 72 – 176 23 20 57 428 33 20 33 18 15 59 – 22 38 47 15 19 – – – – 68 – 33 – 16 88 55 13 – Fall on same level 16 – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Fall to lower level 11 194 34 55 – – – 152 – 67 68 95 7 – – – 47 – – – 65 113 62 10 52 – – 19 104 – 23 665 – 167 138 – 41 31 – 34 216 – 204 88 203 – 53 12 54 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Air and gas compressors .................... Blowers and fans ................................ Packaging machinery ......................... Speed changers, drives, and gears .... Industrial furnaces and ovens ............ Power transmission equipment, n.e.c. ................................................ General industrial machinery, n.e.c. .. Computer and office equipment ............. Electronic computers .......................... Computer peripheral equipment, n.e.c. ................................................ Office machines, n.e.c. ...................... Refrigeration and service machinery ...... Automatic vending machines ............. Refrigeration and heating equipment ......................................... 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 .......... Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............... Electronic and other electric equipment ..... Electric distribution equipment ............... Transformers, except electronic ......... Electrical industrial apparatus ................ Motors and generators ....................... Relays and industrial controls ............ Household appliances ............................ Household cooking equipment ........... Household refrigerators and freezers ............................................ Electric housewares and fans ............ Household vacuum cleaners .............. Household appliances, n.e.c. ............ Electric lighting and wiring equipment .... Electric lamps ..................................... Current-carrying wiring devices .......... Commercial lighting fixtures ............... Household audio and video equipment ......................................... Communications equipment ................... Radio and TV communications equipment ......................................... Communications equipment, n.e.c. ... Electronic components and accessories .......................................... Electron tubes .................................... Printed circuit boards .......................... Semiconductors and related devices ............................................. Electronic capacitors .......................... Electronic components, n.e.c. ........... Miscellaneous electrical equipment and supplies ................................................ In lifting 178 226 62 142 114 122 150 – 75 71 181 129 345 146 89 67 165 92 – 26 – – 33 41 19 44 259 54 – – 15 10 31 41 28 – – – 46 479 19 – – 152 – 1,193 327 1,851 188 165 156 1,319 5,120 461 297 528 306 185 530 68 567 193 1,105 78 116 88 819 3,096 230 122 332 172 151 302 45 281 174 314 49 27 51 185 2,842 190 75 277 190 75 415 9 112 – 375 61 28 8 278 1,142 114 60 67 46 19 77 24 178 110 – 52 867 62 200 149 93 72 8 30 29 525 37 94 111 120 97 – 52 333 22 62 81 – – 169 – 71 – 87 292 124 223 44 40 87 112 – – – – – 1,315 170 368 834 106 212 865 – 229 521 – 272 284 – 306 180 – 223 237 – 243 131 13 60 507 294 388 106 See footnotes at end of table. Page 10 – – – – – – 15 793 – 156 – – 23 68 50 1,627 – 163 509 – Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 16 14 63 – 40 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 All other events5 18 70 – 22 52 76 70 222 88 – 10 528 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 369 112 606 78 57 29 434 2,235 156 42 197 90 92 200 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 45 33 16 43 280 53 79 69 6 19 – – – – – – – – 89 294 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 755 – 207 – – – – – – – – – – – 174 – 279 – – – – 183 – 51 6 – – 42 273 – 8 22 17 – 24 5 10 – – – 70 – – – – 39 66 – 18 32 – – 19 – – 43 27 30 7 11 16 76 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total 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 ....................................... Motor homes ...................................... 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 .. Space propulsion units and parts ....... 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 ......... Process control instruments ............... Instruments to measure electricity ...... Medical instruments and supplies .......... Surgical and medical instruments ...... Surgical appliances and supplies ....... Dental equipment and supplies .......... Ophthalmic goods .................................. Photographic equipment and supplies ... Miscellaneous manufacturing industries .... Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ..... Silverware and plated ware ................ Musical instruments ................................ Toys and sporting goods ........................ Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............................................ Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. .... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies .... Costume jewelry and notions ................. Miscellaneous manufactures .................. Brooms and brushes .......................... Signs and advertising specialities ...... Hard surface floor coverings, n.e.c. ... Manufacturing industries, n.e.c. ........ Nondurable goods ........................................ Struck by object 3691 3692 3694 349 281 1,133 91 – 286 29 12 101 3699 37 371 3711 3713 3714 3715 3716 372 3721 3724 3728 373 3731 3732 374 375 376 3764 275 47,186 28,597 12,898 2,019 11,894 1,511 275 6,880 3,832 1,202 1,845 7,511 4,701 2,810 759 387 441 – – 13,178 7,413 2,420 707 3,539 660 87 1,659 836 355 468 2,558 1,646 912 324 128 89 14 379 3792 3795 3799 38 381 382 3823 3825 384 3841 3842 3843 385 386 39 391 3914 393 394 2,612 913 – 1,650 7,845 668 2,827 780 543 3,112 1,158 1,278 261 438 704 6,837 426 148 316 2,124 3944 3949 395 396 399 3991 3993 3996 3999 Struck against object 45 45 – 104 – 5,361 3,074 1,072 400 1,260 314 28 463 210 143 111 1,085 689 396 128 57 – 7 – 3,981 2,176 763 91 1,196 108 18 504 339 56 109 907 655 252 69 9 18 – 1,008 312 – 676 1,897 123 717 158 63 784 302 353 81 91 162 2,385 164 47 93 689 509 184 7 318 694 44 254 91 37 318 119 165 – – 54 1,030 51 23 64 328 494 1,561 627 256 3,088 354 1,275 69 1,153 119 570 181 – 1,170 109 509 18 454 132,649 40,599 See footnotes at end of table. Page 11 14 Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level 19 20 – 137 – 2,318 1,440 318 179 786 131 26 271 55 85 130 329 212 118 108 48 – – – 1,532 630 224 64 241 85 16 352 192 40 120 405 273 132 – – – 6 – 3,386 1,831 813 186 732 85 15 440 226 108 105 822 537 285 52 33 – 9 – 1,368 770 405 31 299 – – 254 135 33 87 209 117 92 34 – 17 – 298 73 6 219 403 – 152 38 – 136 67 45 – – – 609 25 – 14 187 102 30 6 67 427 – 80 20 – 259 99 105 40 17 47 599 43 14 15 162 79 36 79 65 43 256 – 96 49 – 104 29 56 – – – 231 19 – 40 13 152 62 11 79 737 62 246 82 48 303 127 117 – – 66 595 25 12 13 127 66 262 74 – 483 38 241 – 191 – 151 – 17 347 25 170 6 99 17 145 86 – 256 46 58 8 132 – – 15,492 9,289 13,329 – 7 Slips or trips without fall – – 11 71 85 – – 150 17 105 – 19 – 333 49 132 5 139 5,096 14,270 10 – 25 – 14 223 – 121 64 – 57 14 37 – – 17 98 – – – 39 13 25 – – 37 – – – 19 3,970 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 118 71 245 49 51 146 59 67 232 – 12,187 7,937 3,196 536 3,807 348 50 1,815 867 459 489 1,374 765 609 225 78 97 – – 5,864 3,755 1,425 215 1,907 182 28 923 410 292 221 628 321 307 123 57 – 10 661 222 10 429 1,788 179 572 196 62 698 209 360 38 105 207 1,519 74 31 76 469 Total 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 ....................................... Motor homes ...................................... 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 .. Space propulsion units and parts ....... 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 ......... Process control instruments ............... Instruments to measure electricity ...... Medical instruments and supplies .......... Surgical and medical instruments ...... Surgical appliances and supplies ....... Dental equipment and supplies .......... Ophthalmic goods .................................. Photographic equipment and supplies ... Miscellaneous manufacturing industries .... Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ..... Silverware and plated ware ................ Musical instruments ................................ Toys and sporting goods ........................ Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............................................ Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. .... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies .... Costume jewelry and notions ................. Miscellaneous manufactures .................. Brooms and brushes .......................... Signs and advertising specialities ...... Hard surface floor coverings, n.e.c. ... Manufacturing industries, n.e.c. ........ Nondurable goods ........................................ Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 17 – 9 – 53 34 – 5,680 4,032 2,413 104 1,446 47 – 989 646 106 237 338 234 104 19 57 72 7 – 2,490 1,552 778 129 484 137 24 175 62 18 96 524 340 184 17 22 10 – – 620 423 174 – 219 – – 67 44 13 10 38 – 23 – 18 13 – 316 92 – 219 941 108 293 63 43 355 128 163 11 – 140 892 32 18 45 188 174 58 – 111 1,267 129 363 127 59 534 202 184 110 127 80 933 70 27 59 403 190 – – 170 332 15 104 – – 155 68 – 19 15 – 281 36 28 – 114 61 42 19 157 – 57 – – 44 11 – – – – 201 7 – – 103 132 336 132 – 688 64 268 13 247 62 126 98 – 462 42 208 6 152 62 275 131 – 257 83 78 – 64 – – 34,035 18,176 10,751 See footnotes at end of table. Page 12 – 94 81 19 – 18 101 – 52 7 41 7,170 – 70 – 51 – 13 3,398 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – 52 – – – – – – – – – – – 84 40 – – 18 – – 19 18 – – – – – – – – – – 35 20 – – – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 33 – – – – – – 212 – – – – 20 – 20 20 31 – – – – 14 – – – – 11 – – – – 14 324 18 – 102 – 49 11 207 All other events5 17 – – – – – – – – – 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 116 – 6,609 3,959 2,455 240 1,108 103 54 1,101 806 66 229 1,187 739 447 63 39 – – 207 95 – 108 1,157 73 548 63 294 423 198 109 – 17 96 590 30 – 28 165 69 96 53 – 281 27 69 19 156 12,825 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total 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 ................................................ 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 ...... Wet corn milling .................................. Dog and cat food ................................ Prepared feeds, n.e.c. ....................... Bakery products ..................................... Bread, cake, and related products ..... Cookies and crackers ......................... Sugar and confectionery products .......... Candy and other confectionery products ............................................ Fats and oils ........................................... Beverages .............................................. Wines, brandy, and brandy spirits ...... Bottled and canned soft drinks ........... Flavoring extracts and syrups, n.e.c. ................................................ Miscellaneous food and kindred products ................................................ Canned and cured fish and seafoods ........................................... Fresh or frozen prepared fish ............. Food preparations, n.e.c. .................. Tobacco products ....................................... Cigarettes ............................................... Textile mill products .................................... Broadwoven fabric mills, cotton .............. Broadwoven fabric mills, manmade ....... Narrow fabric mills .................................. Knitting mills ........................................... Hosiery, n.e.c. ................................... Knit outerwear mills ............................ Knit underwear mills ........................... Weft knit fabric mills ........................... Lace and warp knit fabric mills ........... Textile finishing, except wool .................. 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 20 201 2011 45,344 11,004 4,294 13,321 3,688 1,560 5,271 1,627 733 3,279 740 306 3,901 1,117 432 2,286 447 187 6,015 1,257 490 1,624 306 142 2013 2015 202 2022 3,485 3,224 5,998 1,745 1,108 1,020 1,467 532 539 355 543 179 191 243 314 128 328 357 461 141 129 132 368 50 364 404 911 248 82 82 267 54 2023 2024 2026 203 2033 205 735 3,182 5,220 1,758 47 224 656 1,467 473 – 26 50 110 357 132 12 75 225 508 157 8 53 244 290 102 19 91 544 848 306 – 2034 2037 2038 204 2041 2043 2045 2046 2047 2048 205 2051 2052 206 310 1,067 1,126 3,309 475 358 825 113 414 1,051 5,586 4,112 1,293 1,650 81 302 333 969 144 105 212 40 125 331 1,804 1,289 437 458 – 102 107 360 – 33 – 15 – 199 728 569 139 196 – 17 105 122 213 – 32 116 – – – 591 387 168 131 63 61 205 – 15 73 – – 72 227 142 85 96 – 172 177 254 19 36 71 25 – 68 722 549 156 262 – 64 96 265 104 32 51 17 – – 366 256 91 85 27 – – – – 274 214 57 59 2064 207 208 2084 2086 869 1,105 5,755 537 4,380 203 246 1,254 148 834 80 – 522 68 371 33 – 426 58 281 73 153 227 – 147 72 147 308 – 230 177 133 547 – 415 38 – 254 52 181 2087 254 – – – – – 209 5,718 1,968 695 709 500 196 1,082 220 2091 2092 2099 21 211 22 221 222 224 225 2252 2253 2254 2257 2258 226 315 1,236 1,575 609 344 5,582 271 350 318 1,280 503 244 32 186 182 1,278 84 488 483 169 83 1,886 96 101 131 323 68 63 – 68 97 510 32 247 236 73 25 706 60 32 58 152 – 32 – 35 58 128 22 117 105 43 20 412 12 39 35 77 37 6 – 10 – 115 19 92 121 43 29 645 24 29 33 69 – 25 – 12 17 198 15 40 37 25 9 235 26 – – 54 29 – – – – – 56 185 210 55 35 501 32 51 30 122 – 47 – 12 – 79 8 32 31 13 9 78 7 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 13 93 266 536 159 20 – 49 157 168 69 31 38 66 – – – 32 – 5 – 12 – – 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 10,541 1,997 687 5,514 1,011 300 2,898 1,374 499 3,096 863 351 1,100 236 61 772 538 1,596 477 383 328 759 238 457 418 338 159 237 275 356 105 76 99 122 – – – – – – – – 257 212 554 109 55 182 817 1,020 314 28 104 350 693 223 13 – 125 298 76 33 – 186 536 155 – – 117 126 55 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 23 80 325 466 207 56 206 226 961 100 78 286 16 117 332 1,535 1,155 322 367 – 148 99 459 66 26 139 10 73 117 766 553 200 206 – – 81 96 201 – 43 52 9 – – 226 146 64 122 84 70 133 – 7 – 10 – – 211 152 52 114 15 12 35 44 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 115 90 473 77 43 130 6 – 142 476 369 107 148 171 180 1,959 91 1,658 116 – 1,068 43 895 90 – 124 – 60 64 116 322 – 239 – 104 285 – 222 – – – – – – – – – – – 56 118 654 92 508 – – – – – – – Total 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 ................................................ 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 ...... Wet corn milling .................................. Dog and cat food ................................ Prepared feeds, n.e.c. ....................... Bakery products ..................................... Bread, cake, and related products ..... Cookies and crackers ......................... Sugar and confectionery products .......... Candy and other confectionery products ............................................ Fats and oils ........................................... Beverages .............................................. Wines, brandy, and brandy spirits ...... Bottled and canned soft drinks ........... Flavoring extracts and syrups, n.e.c. ................................................ Miscellaneous food and kindred products ................................................ Canned and cured fish and seafoods ........................................... Fresh or frozen prepared fish ............. Food preparations, n.e.c. .................. Tobacco products ....................................... Cigarettes ............................................... Textile mill products .................................... Broadwoven fabric mills, cotton .............. Broadwoven fabric mills, manmade ....... Narrow fabric mills .................................. Knitting mills ........................................... Hosiery, n.e.c. ................................... Knit outerwear mills ............................ Knit underwear mills ........................... Weft knit fabric mills ........................... Lace and warp knit fabric mills ........... Textile finishing, except wool .................. Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – – – – – – – – 83 69 14 24 100 26 – Total 150 66 39 – 20 By person All other assaults 106 26 – 44 40 31 – 25 12 27 27 24 – 27 27 25 – 12 – 19 12 21 – 21 21 6 All other events5 4,214 743 274 – 927 534 207 445 76 – – – – 582 76 205 337 190 115 1,475 83 97 93 333 135 82 10 53 – 294 38 111 211 89 47 647 48 68 49 165 75 32 – 19 – 107 23 58 42 27 10 499 17 14 – 203 149 16 – 11 – 50 18 65 197 14 10 274 – – – 42 13 – – 7 – 137 6 12 26 31 16 89 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 29 144 205 85 57 499 9 31 14 151 71 19 9 18 – 99 See footnotes at end of table. Page 14 – – – 8 – – – – – – 47 – 36 – 17 – 12 9 – – – – – 17 – – – – – – – – 11 – – – 11 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Finishing plants, cotton ....................... Finishing plants, n.e.c. ....................... Carpets and rugs .................................... Yarn and thread mills ............................. Yarn spinning mills ............................. Throwing and winding mills ................ Miscellaneous textile goods ................... Coated fabrics, not rubberized ........... Textile goods, n.e.c. .......................... Apparel and other textile products .............. Men’s and boys’ suits and coats ............ Men’s and boys’ furnishings ................... Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............................................... Men’s and boys’ work clothing ........... Women’s and misses’ outerwear ........... Women’s, junior’s, and misses’ dresses ............................................. Women’s and misses’ outerwear, n.e.c. ................................................ Hats, caps, and millinery ........................ Apparel and accessories, n.e.c. ........ Miscellaneous fabricated textile products ................................................ Curtains and draperies ....................... Housefurnishings, n.e.c. .................... Canvas and related products ............. Pleating and stitching ......................... Automotive and apparel trimmings ..... Fabricated textile products, n.e.c. ..... Paper and allied products ........................... Paper mills .............................................. Paperboard mills .................................... Paperboard containers and boxes ......... Corrugated and solid fiber boxes ....... Fiber cans, drums and similar products ............................................ Sanitary food containers ..................... Folding paperboard boxes .................. 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 .................................. 2261 2269 227 228 2281 2282 229 2295 2299 23 231 232 592 339 318 505 327 153 1,120 270 201 7,556 427 2,093 255 – 48 223 139 73 418 126 102 2,164 – 422 2325 2326 233 724 495 1,043 2335 – Struck by object Struck against object 54 – – Caught in or compressed or crushed 69 – 85 – 11 63 31 78 54 17 156 53 – 766 – 189 – – 508 – 86 122 74 322 48 44 181 13 10 112 18 14 – 48 – Fall on same level – – – – – 13 80 51 – 196 56 – 738 – 97 42 15 17 36 20 67 51 16 92 – 41 – – 122 – 18 – 11 684 20 254 – – – – 64 47 99 – – – – – – – – – – – 716 326 72 227 117 – 141 – – 239 2391 2392 2394 2395 2396 2399 26 262 263 265 2653 3,038 344 620 298 136 721 669 11,836 2,190 586 4,608 2,630 1,074 70 168 – 71 324 230 4,347 652 188 1,817 954 301 35 61 – – 71 48 1,328 200 60 519 251 203 16 40 – – 41 36 906 151 67 396 194 483 14 62 – – 206 126 1,844 267 53 779 419 2655 2656 2657 204 473 1,142 – – 509 – – 136 – – 145 – – 229 267 4,215 1,595 493 275 732 155 284 2671 2672 387 724 183 151 76 58 34 26 44 67 11 78 12 63 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2679 27 271 272 273 2731 786 288 272 379 498 773 21,295 6,417 912 1,453 660 358 121 94 143 179 320 6,594 1,522 317 497 223 91 31 15 37 46 117 1,967 485 89 180 89 79 16 20 21 37 27 1,637 474 98 166 72 180 70 41 82 91 146 2,656 491 124 120 62 Page 15 – 64 73 – 21 – – – 18 443 111 – 143 104 – – – 243 37 51 – – 84 47 988 195 89 392 262 – – 7 – 7 – 25 659 348 46 20 9 – – – – – – – – – 80 – 27 14 – – – – – 28 – 14 – – – – 274 45 18 116 82 – 15 75 – Slips or trips without fall – 2339 235 2389 See footnotes at end of table. 67 46 Fall to lower level 41 19 19 43 41 45 2,263 905 76 156 88 – 94 – 14 31 – – 10 – 29 510 226 61 24 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Finishing plants, cotton ....................... Finishing plants, n.e.c. ....................... Carpets and rugs .................................... Yarn and thread mills ............................. Yarn spinning mills ............................. Throwing and winding mills ................ Miscellaneous textile goods ................... Coated fabrics, not rubberized ........... Textile goods, n.e.c. .......................... Apparel and other textile products .............. Men’s and boys’ suits and coats ............ Men’s and boys’ furnishings ................... Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............................................... Men’s and boys’ work clothing ........... Women’s and misses’ outerwear ........... Women’s, junior’s, and misses’ dresses ............................................. Women’s and misses’ outerwear, n.e.c. ................................................ Hats, caps, and millinery ........................ Apparel and accessories, n.e.c. ........ Miscellaneous fabricated textile products ................................................ Curtains and draperies ....................... Housefurnishings, n.e.c. .................... Canvas and related products ............. Pleating and stitching ......................... Automotive and apparel trimmings ..... Fabricated textile products, n.e.c. ..... Paper and allied products ........................... Paper mills .............................................. Paperboard mills .................................... Paperboard containers and boxes ......... Corrugated and solid fiber boxes ....... Fiber cans, drums and similar products ............................................ Sanitary food containers ..................... Folding paperboard boxes .................. 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 .................................. In lifting Repetitive motion 47 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 101 – 117 89 59 – 310 53 – 1,859 – 596 – 104 – 16 1,053 – 303 88 – – 1,475 – 549 26 – – 228 – 49 236 175 217 56 118 140 177 142 186 12 15 – – 19 – 44 42 18 47 38 – 83 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – 154 – 53 – – – – – – – – – – – 42 – – – – – – – – By person Total – – – – – – – – – All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 75 – – – – – 137 52 16 762 – 121 – – – – – – – – – – – – 48 – 187 11 17 15 – – – – – – – – – – 139 60 – 105 – – 129 92 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 139 – – 692 120 204 – – 89 135 2,995 561 122 1,120 692 413 66 126 – – 52 73 1,396 182 43 582 316 423 81 43 – – 113 134 735 142 – 246 78 82 – – – – – – 299 40 – 120 51 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 267 – – 151 – – 126 – – – 1,122 565 304 93 262 70 117 25 46 170 76 69 76 98 252 6,069 1,671 177 386 178 73 36 29 39 48 129 3,608 899 94 244 89 55 26 42 25 53 28 1,760 386 137 94 38 See footnotes at end of table. Page 16 92 – 11 – – 38 28 481 123 37 170 121 – – – 19 19 147 – 30 46 13 22 22 – – 444 80 11 58 20 – 130 – – 28 – 7 11 54 – 781 511 8 28 11 8 12 – – – – – – 27 – – 12 13 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 18 – 9 – 312 30 105 – – 47 72 1,244 318 75 466 279 – – 69 8 375 – – – – – – – – 50 79 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 53 20 18 41 31 67 2,165 736 76 187 83 9 – – – – 40 33 – – – 29 21 – – – 11 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Book printing ...................................... Miscellaneous publishing ....................... Commercial printing ............................... Commercial printing, lithographic ....... Commercial printing, gravure ............. Commercial printing, n.e.c. ................ Manifold business forms ......................... 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 gases .................................. Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ................................................ Plastics materials and synthetics ........... Plastics materials and resins .............. Organic fibers, noncellulosic .............. Drugs ...................................................... Pharmaceutical preparations .............. Diagnostic substances ....................... 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 ............................ Miscellaneous chemical products ........... Chemical preparations, n.e.c. ............ Petroleum and coal products ...................... Asphalt paving and roofing materials ..... Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products .................................................... Tires and inner tubes .............................. 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 .. Laminated plastics plate and sheet .... Plastics pipe ....................................... Plastics bottles ................................... Plastics foam products ....................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 2732 274 275 2752 2754 2759 276 277 278 2782 2789 279 2796 28 281 2813 794 – 9,376 6,490 315 2,572 682 185 1,307 476 830 501 393 10,619 838 – 274 – 3,263 2,158 114 991 157 33 464 149 316 228 173 2,653 249 – 91 19 863 550 19 294 51 19 181 – 157 81 53 1,003 86 – 94 – 715 509 27 179 – 7 72 30 – – – 727 61 – 58 – 1,516 990 66 460 67 7 187 87 100 112 108 678 68 – 2819 282 2821 2824 283 2834 2835 284 2841 2842 2844 285 286 2869 287 289 2899 29 295 397 1,802 690 265 3,070 2,255 291 2,046 304 690 1,010 655 839 584 474 894 324 1,407 680 137 486 178 39 683 451 – 482 70 225 187 138 146 106 214 255 131 378 185 45 261 94 14 210 130 – 151 29 – 82 112 78 68 56 49 19 112 – 23 89 34 14 181 156 – 175 22 104 49 – 45 20 – 111 68 62 – 68 92 50 11 260 135 – 72 9 – 42 – 17 15 74 93 41 192 – 30 301 27,056 2,536 8,674 648 4,138 270 1,634 124 305 1,740 540 304 3052 900 277 3053 306 3061 3069 840 3,815 2,228 1,587 308 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 18,839 1,426 642 453 1,025 784 1,818 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 11 – 173 112 14 47 – – 19 – – – – 435 74 – 68 – 835 508 14 314 84 20 88 30 58 – – 1,221 75 – 13 – 144 78 – 63 19 – – – – – – 326 36 – 47 20 – 118 100 – 52 6 – 29 – 54 38 – 52 13 155 125 – 128 38 34 481 295 – 243 29 75 139 68 101 60 – 84 40 92 – 13 73 29 29 111 90 – 73 29 – 32 14 11 11 – – – 97 – 2,450 214 710 55 2,371 146 932 76 87 139 36 84 41 111 47 108 14 48 38 264 1,134 691 443 193 490 302 188 40 186 122 64 31 385 216 169 66 52 14 36 246 138 108 – 319 217 102 6,323 669 295 163 429 295 423 3,056 183 93 137 175 104 133 1,228 137 78 – 139 91 117 1,708 321 112 – – 71 114 541 89 – – – – 69 1,884 76 63 – – 111 191 496 88 – – – 20 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 17 – – 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 207 – 2,836 2,132 118 586 298 40 396 121 275 144 121 2,471 180 15 155 – 1,710 1,323 95 291 126 24 320 105 215 86 73 1,358 79 – 55 – 837 556 – 280 60 54 135 99 – – – 923 – – 39 – 228 125 12 90 – 6 42 – – – – 1,081 84 – 55 384 195 58 720 599 – 415 44 185 187 205 232 144 65 270 88 313 145 32 177 80 27 434 353 – 233 22 119 92 109 102 56 – 181 69 207 – – 321 41 38 250 189 – 132 24 – 68 – 57 57 58 61 – 19 – 58 193 86 11 240 153 – 282 58 83 107 40 124 88 – 80 17 160 – – 141 76 – 211 – – 208 16 28 12 – – – 46 – 7,781 1,019 4,171 449 2,147 186 1,360 47 468 62 491 228 242 80 57 268 126 131 27 223 1,393 694 699 103 811 351 460 111 189 127 62 53 150 74 77 4,836 343 171 158 195 165 508 2,670 180 88 102 – 133 328 1,529 43 15 – – 85 116 1,079 55 – – – – 109 Total Book printing ...................................... Miscellaneous publishing ....................... Commercial printing ............................... Commercial printing, lithographic ....... Commercial printing, gravure ............. Commercial printing, n.e.c. ................ Manifold business forms ......................... 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 gases .................................. Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ................................................ Plastics materials and synthetics ........... Plastics materials and resins .............. Organic fibers, noncellulosic .............. Drugs ...................................................... Pharmaceutical preparations .............. Diagnostic substances ....................... 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 ............................ Miscellaneous chemical products ........... Chemical preparations, n.e.c. ............ Petroleum and coal products ...................... Asphalt paving and roofing materials ..... Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products .................................................... Tires and inner tubes .............................. 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 .. Laminated plastics plate and sheet .... Plastics pipe ....................................... Plastics bottles ................................... Plastics foam products ....................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment See footnotes at end of table. Page 18 17 – 170 150 – 18 – – 15 – – – – 425 – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 46 13 – – Total 13 23 – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 17 – – All other events5 105 – 883 666 34 183 52 27 117 54 63 – – 1,014 112 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 46 171 85 52 304 282 – 145 42 – 49 90 84 65 – 80 – 141 – – – – 2,556 283 – – – 166 – – – – 92 53 35 33 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 75 278 199 79 290 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,823 59 – – 232 52 356 17 15 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – By person 19 18 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 36 10 13 12 6 16 17 15 – – – – – – 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Custom compound purchased resins ................................................ Plastics plumbing fixtures ................... Plastics products, n.e.c. .................... Leather and leather products ..................... Leather tanning and finishing ................. Footwear, except rubber ........................ Men’s footwear, except athletic .......... Transportation and public utilities7 ............ Railroad transportation7 .............................. 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 ............ Water transportation ................................... Water transportation services ................. Transportation by air .................................. Air transportation, scheduled .................. Air transportation, nonscheduled ............ Airports, flying fields, and services ......... Transportation services .............................. Passenger transportation arrangement .. Freight transportation arrangement ........ Miscellaneous transportation services ... Communications ......................................... Telephone communications ................... Cable and other pay television services ................................................ Communication services, n.e.c. ............ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ............ Electric services ..................................... Gas production and distribution .............. Combination utility services .................... Water supply .......................................... Sanitary services .................................... Struck against object Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 3087 3088 3089 31 311 314 3143 722 850 11,119 1,345 447 380 272 146 229 3,676 412 185 93 74 88 110 2,034 128 69 16 11 – – 62 556 80 – 41 – 38 951 182 83 – – 45 14 261 27 – – – 83 30 1,258 81 18 – – – – 324 34 – 17 17 40 41 411 412 413 414 415 42 207,037 5,919 12,481 8,490 401 859 596 2,076 70,571 46,234 1,045 1,468 1,010 – 190 – 185 17,849 24,947 471 664 422 13 91 – 93 10,586 11,643 404 421 300 – 62 – 52 3,815 6,092 73 157 117 – – – 16 2,216 13,663 1,166 594 340 – 53 – 156 5,025 20,685 – 1,397 797 35 78 – 389 7,365 7,645 160 655 410 11 42 – 157 2,086 421 422 44 449 45 451 452 458 47 472 473 478 48 481 63,764 6,123 6,416 4,916 71,705 66,818 687 4,200 5,147 553 3,205 1,359 18,679 13,493 15,706 2,013 1,937 1,586 16,056 14,810 130 1,116 1,416 54 995 355 3,055 2,022 9,512 993 881 723 8,235 7,657 – 517 821 32 592 195 1,580 1,022 3,380 387 430 361 4,426 3,988 – 393 304 12 227 64 960 627 1,704 511 331 294 2,459 2,276 – 172 156 – 99 44 265 219 4,593 411 478 295 3,054 2,689 – 323 280 – 187 72 1,855 1,384 6,787 571 743 599 6,091 5,495 86 510 506 67 315 124 2,826 2,038 1,870 181 193 144 2,653 2,549 – 66 157 34 71 42 1,006 760 484 489 49 491 492 493 494 495 3,349 248 16,102 4,508 1,962 1,894 900 6,615 672 95 3,408 852 254 277 168 1,822 369 67 1,708 454 126 98 113 886 200 – 884 246 95 81 41 417 26 – 435 101 19 34 – 276 368 – 1,211 409 109 200 17 476 404 – 1,757 529 230 239 63 581 154 – 730 200 73 116 71 244 406,807 116,203 63,251 30,447 15,385 20,425 59,561 13,039 50 501 502 503 125,554 62,092 9,368 2,512 7,970 35,939 20,439 2,864 842 3,265 19,144 11,454 1,561 699 1,820 7,877 4,261 630 – 713 6,503 3,112 289 – 474 7,362 3,496 650 264 414 12,159 5,591 885 140 530 3,461 1,632 307 – 93 504 505 506 7,773 4,914 5,119 1,741 2,631 1,353 819 1,565 659 520 330 486 214 624 144 298 127 292 888 268 514 205 111 – 507 5,315 1,450 719 326 317 365 422 73 Wholesale and retail trade ........................... Wholesale trade ........................................... Wholesale trade— durable goods .............. Motor vehicles, parts, and supplies ........ Furniture and homefurnishings ............... Lumber and construction materials ........ Professional and commercial equipment ............................................. Metals and minerals, except petroleum .. Electrical goods ...................................... Hardware, plumbing and heating equipment ............................................. Struck by object Caught in or compressed or crushed See footnotes at end of table. Page 19 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 199 379 2,719 339 164 90 86 90 166 1,460 133 51 18 17 116 52 1,050 269 39 102 58 50 52 687 32 15 – – 19 – 191 – – – – 62,304 1,047 3,637 3,020 39 174 167 225 20,485 35,186 – 2,190 1,861 35 120 – 77 11,055 4,494 87 134 46 – 33 – 52 765 6,716 226 309 190 – 27 – 36 1,500 18,540 694 2,932 1,801 250 142 118 615 8,339 18,528 1,564 1,204 802 27,882 26,445 210 1,228 1,127 75 702 350 3,088 2,199 10,026 876 653 367 17,373 16,582 106 685 432 26 305 101 1,453 1,021 686 79 38 – 1,261 1,165 – 84 181 51 102 – 1,487 1,320 1,385 115 202 178 2,533 2,335 – 166 257 25 173 58 954 768 7,774 565 504 399 2,905 2,678 – 169 633 174 355 104 1,339 752 526 49 3,831 1,000 544 473 171 1,644 232 – 2,029 341 356 242 109 981 138 – 541 206 120 94 – 95 148 – 726 319 57 71 65 210 382 – 1,195 172 186 110 57 670 Wholesale and retail trade ........................... 108,249 71,394 12,688 16,954 15,890 942 37,424 15,888 2,381 669 2,097 22,904 9,522 1,322 478 1,149 3,942 2,181 257 – 221 3,368 2,045 286 – 164 7,982 4,231 709 170 529 2,139 1,160 1,390 1,297 744 840 252 – 548 234 118 212 1,568 849 276 168 Total Custom compound purchased resins ................................................ Plastics plumbing fixtures ................... Plastics products, n.e.c. .................... Leather and leather products ..................... Leather tanning and finishing ................. Footwear, except rubber ........................ Men’s footwear, except athletic .......... Transportation and public utilities7 ............ Railroad transportation7 .............................. 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 ............ Water transportation ................................... Water transportation services ................. Transportation by air .................................. Air transportation, scheduled .................. Air transportation, nonscheduled ............ Airports, flying fields, and services ......... Transportation services .............................. Passenger transportation arrangement .. Freight transportation arrangement ........ Miscellaneous transportation services ... Communications ......................................... Telephone communications ................... Cable and other pay television services ................................................ Communication services, n.e.c. ............ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ............ Electric services ..................................... Gas production and distribution .............. Combination utility services .................... Water supply .......................................... Sanitary services .................................... Wholesale trade ........................................... Wholesale trade— durable goods .............. Motor vehicles, parts, and supplies ........ Furniture and homefurnishings ............... Lumber and construction materials ........ Professional and commercial equipment ............................................. Metals and minerals, except petroleum .. Electrical goods ...................................... Hardware, plumbing and heating equipment ............................................. See footnotes at end of table. Page 20 – – – – – – – Total By person – – – – All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – – – – – – 1,314 66 254 169 – 26 – 47 195 765 63 247 161 – 26 – 47 140 548 – – – – – – – – 25,265 1,427 1,091 701 – 91 – 214 6,930 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 150 – – – 383 373 – – 15 – – – 237 156 95 – – – 180 170 – – 13 – – – 67 46 – – – – 203 203 – – – – – – 171 109 6,260 605 1,094 884 8,853 8,263 76 515 573 53 292 226 2,826 2,092 – – 72 – 152 65 32 6 – 40 11 40 61 – 108 63 31 5 – – 484 – 2,469 728 328 294 257 828 4,095 3,687 408 38,762 228 170 – – – 432 169 – – – 244 92 – – – 188 77 – – – 13,259 6,248 970 180 637 944 213 348 – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,054 225 395 284 – – – – 701 15 – – – – 178 – – – – – – – – 80 28 29 14 – – 15 – 44 – – – – 60 88 926 145 14 49 – 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total 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 .................................. Variety stores ......................................... Miscellaneous general merchandise stores .................................................... Food stores ................................................ Grocery stores ........................................ Fruit and vegetable markets ................... 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 ................................. Automotive dealers, n.e.c. ..................... Apparel and accessory stores .................... Men’s and boys’ clothing stores ............. Women’s clothing 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 .. Eating and drinking places ......................... Miscellaneous retail .................................... Drug stores and proprietary stores ......... Liquor stores ........................................... Used merchandise stores ....................... Miscellaneous shopping goods 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 508 509 51 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 13,821 5,300 63,462 3,391 2,512 1,868 31,920 1,862 2,654 2,220 7,675 9,360 4,765 1,529 15,500 948 537 373 7,853 686 700 334 1,351 2,718 2,837 775 7,690 399 306 216 3,232 344 207 172 836 1,977 802 382 3,616 247 98 96 1,906 146 348 – 342 361 731 302 3,391 194 78 45 2,208 186 142 – 143 336 807 280 3,865 152 153 77 1,938 166 146 117 408 709 1,253 692 6,567 248 392 224 3,051 302 142 304 645 1,260 568 141 1,828 – 119 12 989 120 – – 142 213 52 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 533 281,253 21,339 16,363 859 1,833 1,646 638 47,818 43,485 2,094 80,263 7,093 5,541 465 556 396 135 13,870 12,835 408 44,107 4,455 3,589 171 350 234 112 8,589 7,982 184 22,570 1,342 976 125 133 92 – 3,454 3,180 184 8,882 775 675 – 41 – – 1,273 1,172 – 13,064 1,221 924 – 147 50 – 2,578 2,388 112 47,402 1,699 1,211 – 190 165 87 6,836 5,939 694 9,578 674 606 – 40 20 – 1,317 1,202 – 539 54 541 543 549 55 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 559 56 561 562 564 565 566 2,239 58,648 54,577 243 803 35,331 17,414 564 9,069 6,775 544 348 506 110 8,007 254 1,889 212 4,031 1,181 627 17,475 16,074 45 327 10,815 5,946 155 2,816 1,505 – 141 108 – 2,025 90 557 62 947 194 423 8,311 7,390 19 251 5,515 2,961 – 1,586 687 – 96 – – 1,137 – 269 35 583 84 90 5,403 5,140 18 – 2,988 1,730 – 433 655 – – – – 504 – 95 16 270 – 72 2,824 2,611 – – 970 377 – 451 108 – – – – 331 – 193 – 76 – 78 1,824 1,655 16 – 1,292 654 – 224 324 – – – – 787 – 283 47 250 167 203 8,549 7,631 – – 4,420 2,250 – 563 1,347 – – 94 – 1,668 71 231 – 906 418 48 1,830 1,710 – – 1,278 673 – 192 323 – – – – 244 – – – 171 – 569 57 571 572 573 58 59 591 592 593 594 228 14,181 9,938 1,397 2,846 70,018 25,911 4,892 673 1,177 6,884 126 3,760 2,929 186 645 19,391 5,835 796 – 312 1,776 96 2,125 1,669 104 352 10,850 3,124 510 – 73 1,158 – 927 807 64 56 6,150 1,803 196 – 207 432 – 376 313 – 53 1,759 574 – – – 157 – 684 466 69 150 3,193 1,483 285 – – 395 17 1,434 937 103 393 18,387 4,409 955 – 153 1,180 – 459 162 – 263 2,961 814 207 – – 241 See footnotes at end of table. Page 21 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total In lifting Repetitive motion 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 ........... 3,401 1,083 21,536 1,232 575 671 11,153 234 765 709 3,693 2,504 2,190 652 13,382 858 397 428 6,788 123 422 252 2,375 1,739 450 – 1,761 74 172 101 740 – 247 – 54 333 457 335 1,323 91 – 11 468 – 233 96 89 255 546 488 3,751 166 294 92 2,123 – – 284 358 305 – – – – – – – – – 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 .................................. Variety stores ......................................... Miscellaneous general merchandise stores .................................................... Food stores ................................................ Grocery stores ........................................ Fruit and vegetable markets ................... 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 ................................. Automotive dealers, n.e.c. ..................... Apparel and accessory stores .................... Men’s and boys’ clothing stores ............. Women’s clothing 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 .. Eating and drinking places ......................... Miscellaneous retail .................................... Drug stores and proprietary stores ......... Liquor stores ........................................... Used merchandise stores ....................... Miscellaneous shopping goods stores ... 70,825 6,988 5,337 131 659 641 220 14,482 13,060 547 48,490 4,114 3,116 109 363 368 157 9,412 8,366 484 8,746 428 371 – 41 – – 1,021 961 – 13,586 283 231 – – – – 1,021 987 – 7,909 770 537 – 34 124 – 526 434 – 714 – – – – – – – – – 3,663 80 – – 28 – – 608 588 – 3,443 60 – – 28 – – 510 489 – 876 16,088 15,384 93 – 8,500 3,567 153 2,769 1,625 210 81 – – 1,823 – 322 54 1,069 142 562 11,849 11,299 90 – 5,414 2,106 112 1,792 1,109 170 81 – – 1,368 – 228 36 791 95 – 3,689 3,532 – – 709 287 – 146 206 – – – – 329 – – – 122 176 – 1,431 1,254 – – 1,508 846 – 248 328 – – – – 120 – – – 79 – – 1,747 1,639 13 – 2,460 1,043 79 980 187 – – 138 – 74 – – – 25 – – – – – – 436 129 – 222 82 – – – – – – – – – – – 423 418 – – 269 – – – 181 – – – – 178 – 126 – 46 – – 410 405 – – 251 – – – 171 – – – – 174 – 126 – 42 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 310 5,522 5,210 – – 3,644 1,974 – 870 668 81 – – – 759 – 266 – 416 – 56 5,196 3,823 535 838 10,217 7,531 1,548 – 452 2,198 40 3,341 2,442 322 577 8,133 4,858 1,038 – 294 1,275 – 192 79 – 95 1,408 969 213 – 65 127 – 157 107 – – 8,532 534 – – – – – 532 241 217 74 695 1,105 121 – – 210 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,686 1,176 169 341 3,800 2,479 537 – 111 592 See footnotes at end of table. Page 22 79 – 58 All other assaults – – 263 – – – 97 79 – – – – – – 152 – – – 81 – – – – – – – 111 – – – – 79 – – – – 1,491 594 7,010 437 240 303 3,508 141 200 292 902 986 219 – – – – – – 98 98 – 25,503 2,074 1,555 125 110 200 85 5,541 5,073 158 Total 65 19 – 78 – – – – All other events5 By person 44 1,367 673 196 – – 126 48 – – 44 1,364 627 195 – – 125 46 – – – – 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, 2000 — 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 Nonstore retailers ................................... Fuel dealers ............................................ Retail stores, n.e.c. ................................ 596 598 599 5,614 2,893 3,779 1,255 649 931 561 333 413 426 191 310 218 – 137 271 182 308 759 593 653 192 – – Finance, insurance, and real estate ............ Depository institutions ................................ Central reserve depositories .................. Commercial banks .................................. Savings institutions ................................. Credit unions .......................................... Functions closely related to banking ...... Nondepository institutions .......................... Business credit institutions ..................... Mortgage bankers and brokers .............. Security and commodity brokers ................ Security brokers and dealers .................. Security and commodity exchanges ....... Security and commodity services ........... Insurance carriers ....................................... Life insurance ......................................... Medical service and health insurance .... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ..... Insurance agents, brokers, and service ..... Real estate ................................................. Real estate operators and lessors .......... Real estate agents and managers ......... Subdividers and developers ................... Holding and other investment offices ......... Investment offices .................................. Trusts ..................................................... 60 601 602 603 606 609 61 615 616 62 621 623 628 63 631 632 633 64 65 651 653 655 67 672 673 39,549 7,533 115 4,885 1,194 1,110 176 1,866 541 541 1,322 745 75 463 7,508 1,471 2,383 2,734 1,730 18,522 8,919 7,074 2,284 1,068 61 110 6,692 926 27 520 180 166 33 237 78 72 279 69 23 157 653 140 258 230 180 4,292 1,869 1,890 462 126 7 16 3,267 485 10 305 82 – – 103 65 – 98 33 16 19 235 81 84 67 119 2,179 1,021 870 288 – – – 2,104 268 11 183 – – – 101 9 – 32 23 – – 265 40 70 133 – 1,387 652 584 80 – – – 610 151 – 16 77 – – – – – 23 14 – – 65 5 38 20 – 338 97 216 – – – – 2,822 569 – 379 96 – – 99 26 – 41 12 15 – 403 91 89 214 67 1,547 764 653 119 97 – – 7,123 1,549 16 1,134 240 129 18 225 54 97 351 173 13 158 1,400 376 400 509 380 3,120 1,738 1,158 220 99 21 – 1,740 409 – 343 57 – – – 9 – 36 27 – – 317 89 127 67 – 914 522 317 75 – – – 70 701 72 388,300 29,054 28,627 8,969 65,931 6,837 6,561 2,240 35,922 3,914 3,753 1,074 18,095 1,992 1,959 609 7,728 534 534 406 17,292 1,247 1,203 210 60,861 6,317 6,314 1,300 13,176 1,084 1,083 348 721 722 723 726 729 73 732 733 734 6,403 379 1,112 611 439 56,902 575 2,940 15,636 1,669 76 377 – 71 11,820 – 534 2,571 681 – 291 – 19 6,493 – – 872 496 – 71 – – 2,639 – – 962 352 – – – – 2,026 – 218 573 179 – – – – 3,759 – – 1,366 803 129 161 – 77 8,363 182 310 2,232 153 – – – – 1,930 – – 722 735 736 6,291 7,896 1,576 1,865 1,213 1,186 – 364 – 251 502 369 872 975 – 186 737 738 75 751 752 753 754 4,561 17,503 18,535 3,735 1,263 10,161 3,376 427 4,365 5,701 664 237 4,002 797 263 2,670 3,220 317 110 2,404 388 72 822 1,263 230 96 722 215 72 720 417 53 – 248 112 131 1,292 1,056 308 – 463 227 647 3,133 1,871 476 268 581 545 51 789 317 125 – – 102 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 ....................................... Credit reporting and collection ................ Mailing, reproduction, stenographic ....... Services to buildings .............................. Miscellaneous equipment rental and leasing .................................................. Personnel supply services ...................... Computer and data processing services ................................................ Miscellaneous business services ........... Auto repair, services, and parking .............. Automotive rentals, no drivers ................ Automobile parking ................................. Automotive repair shops ......................... Automotive services, except repair ........ 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, 2000 — 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 Nonstore retailers ................................... Fuel dealers ............................................ Retail stores, n.e.c. ................................ 1,837 515 783 1,157 288 657 374 – 184 83 151 149 221 404 104 Finance, insurance, and real estate ............ Depository institutions ................................ Central reserve depositories .................. Commercial banks .................................. Savings institutions ................................. Credit unions .......................................... Functions closely related to banking ...... Nondepository institutions .......................... Business credit institutions ..................... Mortgage bankers and brokers .............. Security and commodity brokers ................ Security brokers and dealers .................. Security and commodity exchanges ....... Security and commodity services ........... Insurance carriers ....................................... Life insurance ......................................... Medical service and health insurance .... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ..... Insurance agents, brokers, and service ..... Real estate ................................................. Real estate operators and lessors .......... Real estate agents and managers ......... Subdividers and developers ................... Holding and other investment offices ......... Investment offices .................................. Trusts ..................................................... 8,340 1,287 39 805 245 130 – 257 111 69 199 136 13 – 1,234 290 550 231 586 4,238 2,253 1,457 524 538 14 – 4,644 901 31 538 167 107 16 126 30 – 152 109 10 – 831 250 275 145 272 2,055 1,148 654 249 307 – – 4,564 1,254 9 802 186 236 – 480 201 98 144 98 – – 1,922 251 650 618 200 491 158 120 194 74 7 – 1,760 265 – 136 – 111 11 64 – – 150 148 – – 443 23 107 266 – 788 327 383 78 – – – 1,724 249 – 199 – – – 143 – – 29 22 – – 525 146 50 298 87 662 298 175 188 – – – Services ......................................................... 124,974 Hotels and other lodging places ................. 6,420 Hotels and motels ................................... 6,403 Personal services ....................................... 2,253 Laundry, cleaning, and garment services ................................................ 1,678 Photographic studios, portrait ................. – Beauty shops .......................................... 163 Funeral service and crematories ............ 277 Miscellaneous personal services ............ 75 Business services ....................................... 13,496 Credit reporting and collection ................ 96 Mailing, reproduction, stenographic ....... 1,313 Services to buildings .............................. 3,627 Miscellaneous equipment rental and leasing .................................................. 1,334 Personnel supply services ...................... 2,411 Computer and data processing services ................................................ 1,682 Miscellaneous business services ........... 2,719 Auto repair, services, and parking .............. 3,495 Automotive rentals, no drivers ................ 784 Automobile parking ................................. 103 Automotive repair shops ......................... 2,230 Automotive services, except repair ........ 378 65,337 3,259 3,244 1,146 12,566 563 563 546 16,548 1,787 1,781 638 18,960 368 367 403 768 – 111 – 69 7,649 – 415 2,152 326 – 209 – – 2,547 – 217 140 525 – 68 – – 1,804 – – 558 308 – – – 55 5,804 – – 2,132 – – – – – – – – – – 17 116 – – – 38 958 – – 222 866 1,184 – 435 – 535 1,035 295 – – 1,121 1,757 1,664 353 – 1,120 144 632 783 527 86 – 309 125 137 448 731 101 – 361 239 139 1,785 2,184 685 335 547 617 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 24 51 Total By person – – 65 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 64 – 64 – – – – 459 45 45 17 – – – – All other events5 45 – 268 – – 263 38 – – 526 297 345 558 238 – 121 – 90 – 114 – 110 – – – – 43 – 12 14 – 152 107 – – – – – 350 236 – 119 – 90 – – – – – – – – 25 – 10 14 – 83 63 20 – – – – 208 – – – – – – 113 – 110 – – – – 18 – – – – 69 – – – – – – 4,161 788 14 445 129 167 33 211 46 – 88 58 8 – 568 63 140 287 187 2,254 882 812 424 65 6 – 13,973 293 293 68 12,816 140 140 55 1,157 153 153 12 43,562 4,092 4,014 946 12 38 927 – – 222 – – – – – – – – 731 – 101 – – 6,303 – 335 2,033 – – – – – – 560 763 – 646 – – – – – – 621 – – – – – – – – – – – – 714 1,460 2,538 482 150 1,571 335 30 83 65 All other assaults 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Miscellaneous repair services .................... Electrical repair shops ............................ Reupholstery and furniture repair ........... Miscellaneous repair shops .................... Motion pictures ........................................... Motion picture theaters ........................... Video tape rental .................................... Amusement and recreation services .......... Dance studios, schools, and halls .......... Bowling centers ...................................... 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 ....................... Libraries .................................................. Schools and educational services, n.e.c. .................................................... 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 ..................... Membership 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 76 762 764 769 78 783 784 79 791 793 6,305 2,075 314 3,914 3,347 663 329 20,740 – 708 1,932 470 109 1,351 595 – – 5,252 6 212 885 138 61 684 181 – – 3,270 – – 608 241 – 355 115 – – 1,368 – – 219 53 – 137 181 – – 368 – – 516 269 – 246 363 240 – 840 – – 529 282 – 234 452 149 – 3,101 – 261 59 208 – – 1,159 – – 799 80 801 802 804 805 806 807 808 809 81 82 821 822 823 15,641 164,673 7,116 1,303 1,181 61,150 76,691 2,168 10,949 4,024 2,102 10,350 3,695 5,695 86 3,625 18,677 939 – – 6,099 10,266 231 552 419 211 1,784 594 1,017 – 2,442 9,839 519 – – 3,070 5,659 92 253 163 149 984 384 526 13 771 5,851 308 – – 1,965 2,936 114 250 199 52 574 170 335 – 223 2,253 66 – – 808 1,272 20 – 44 – 131 – 91 – 676 3,891 238 – 68 1,225 1,582 101 501 177 56 955 306 589 16 2,276 23,893 1,324 – 168 8,282 10,935 335 1,668 964 518 1,893 671 1,042 – 954 4,676 212 – – 1,902 2,150 46 213 135 50 491 177 255 – 829 83 832 833 835 836 839 84 841 86 864 866 869 87 871 872 723 43,114 11,763 5,936 5,796 17,320 2,299 1,077 565 6,448 4,077 830 515 16,607 5,800 1,913 118 6,076 1,254 1,127 1,051 2,376 268 230 131 1,392 678 163 102 3,170 1,522 166 – 3,443 678 539 638 1,392 196 90 60 796 348 58 57 1,581 890 145 – 1,671 281 347 251 759 – 63 16 380 189 102 20 901 369 – – 575 121 215 – 104 – 51 46 98 53 – 15 464 165 – – 2,502 927 375 415 620 165 118 76 419 275 78 30 1,355 483 227 160 8,261 2,210 1,020 1,443 3,163 427 151 114 1,275 843 224 99 2,921 909 148 – 2,032 586 153 855 390 – 20 17 262 212 – 18 510 130 226 See footnotes at end of table. Page 25 88 – – 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 1,524 478 52 993 755 – – 4,088 9 – 838 249 – 557 527 – – 2,714 6 – 181 39 – 130 158 – – 614 – – 401 118 – 250 95 – – 1,039 – – 362 140 16 206 121 – – 724 – – 3,322 73,921 1,521 – 455 32,937 32,950 250 4,668 987 390 2,426 815 1,393 – 2,298 37,502 788 – 260 18,079 15,296 111 2,340 524 223 1,429 526 812 – 461 4,753 1,005 – – 660 2,325 306 201 111 504 302 115 183 – 894 6,937 523 – – 1,683 4,049 165 280 118 89 459 70 366 – 660 3,910 225 – – 247 864 526 1,484 465 50 338 128 138 – 166 11,235 2,913 1,407 1,053 5,347 515 221 82 1,392 996 144 89 3,354 1,290 357 – 5,486 1,197 877 475 2,602 335 119 39 889 600 104 43 1,892 583 236 – 485 92 103 – 237 – 40 19 192 66 – 38 1,149 176 547 – 1,196 304 199 193 458 – 86 – 325 184 105 18 956 420 – – 3,331 1,349 401 – 1,129 319 34 28 213 109 48 17 1,108 229 – Total Miscellaneous repair services .................... Electrical repair shops ............................ Reupholstery and furniture repair ........... Miscellaneous repair shops .................... Motion pictures ........................................... Motion picture theaters ........................... Video tape rental .................................... Amusement and recreation services .......... Dance studios, schools, and halls .......... Bowling centers ...................................... 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 ....................... Libraries .................................................. Schools and educational services, n.e.c. .................................................... 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 ..................... Membership 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 14 – – – – – – 19 – – 19 61 – – – – 26 – – – – 26 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 46 – – Total – – – By person 13 – – – 334 – – – – – – – – – 119 – – 119 7,713 229 – 207 3,702 2,930 38 319 287 – 381 293 61 – – 3,564 814 323 – 2,071 219 16 – 260 157 – 39 308 – – All other assaults – – – All other events5 13 – – – 214 – – 736 244 70 422 587 – – 3,569 18 – 83 7,438 228 – 201 3,633 2,831 – 231 287 – 342 293 37 – 36 275 – – – – 100 – 88 – – 38 – 24 – 2,634 16,241 901 644 100 4,390 8,613 158 1,064 362 232 1,295 518 647 – – 3,342 783 301 – 2,045 92 – – 131 74 – – 272 – – – 222 – – – – 128 16 – 129 83 – 36 – – – – 4,412 1,310 829 451 1,530 291 159 77 714 556 – 65 1,731 581 133 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, 2000 — 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 3,171 5,724 549 934 See footnotes at end of table. Page 27 Struck by object 178 368 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 73 448 243 54 Fall to lower level 169 476 Fall on same level 870 993 Slips or trips without fall 63 91 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, 2000 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Research and testing services ............... Management and public relations .......... 651 1,056 In lifting Repetitive motion 474 599 178 247 1 Days-away-from-work cases include those which result in days away from work with or without restricted work activity. 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 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 170 318 242 576 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 15 – Total 12 243 By person – 229 All other assaults 12 – All other events5 251 765 Labor Statistics. 5 Includes nonclassifiable responses. 6 Excludes farms with fewer than 11 employees. 7 Data conforming to OSHA definitions for mining operators in coal, metal, and nonmetal mining and for employers in railroad transportation are provided to BLS by the Mine Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor, and by the Federal Railroad Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation. Independent mining contractors are excluded from the coal, metal, and nonmetal industries. NOTE: Dashes indicate data that are not available. Because of rounding, data may not sum to totals. n.e.c. = not elsewhere classified. SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor Page 28
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz