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,1999 Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects SIC code3 Industry2 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 1,702,470 459,605 229,158 116,517 76,968 Total cases Total Private industry6 ................................... Agriculture, forestry, and fishing6 .............. Struck by object Fall to lower level Fall on same level 93,881 190,701 Slips or trips without fall 54,761 34,941 11,465 5,108 2,769 2,218 2,649 2,885 1,009 Agricultural production6 ................................ 01-02 13,427 4,527 1,918 1,076 932 1,011 1,265 483 Agricultural production— crops6 ................. Cash grains6 ........................................... Field crops, except cash grains6 ............ Vegetables and melons6 ........................ Fruits and tree nuts6 ............................... Horticultural specialties6 ......................... General farms, primarily crop6 ................ Agricultural production— livestock 6 ........... Livestock, except dairy and poultry6 ....... Dairy farms6 ............................................ Animal specialties6 ................................. Agricultural services ................................... Crop services ......................................... Veterinary services ................................. Animal services, except veterinary ......... Farm labor and management services ... Landscape and horticultural services ..... Forestry ...................................................... Forestry services .................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping .................... 01 011 013 016 017 018 019 02 021 024 027 07 072 074 075 076 078 08 085 09 8,690 266 931 1,292 2,677 2,738 784 4,737 1,768 1,476 289 20,749 2,131 2,640 1,085 2,340 12,264 489 278 – 2,938 – 369 474 840 941 221 1,589 606 436 109 6,576 1,050 176 141 724 4,394 228 167 – 1,079 – 155 184 276 364 – 839 248 316 67 2,964 479 – – 235 2,040 155 – – 697 – 99 97 133 352 – 379 206 – 34 1,642 123 – – 200 1,146 – – – 608 – 99 75 177 102 145 324 140 72 – 1,216 356 – – 103 749 19 – – 662 – 77 – 291 121 – 349 217 59 11 1,613 156 152 – 347 902 – – – 776 – 70 152 215 288 – 489 149 176 – 1,570 142 170 – 252 923 – – 19 332 – 59 – 113 115 – 151 55 50 – 506 – – – 98 275 – – – 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 ................................. Crude petroleum and natural gas ........... Oil and gas field services ....................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels7 ........... Dimension stone7 ................................... Crushed and broken stone7 .................... Sand and gravel7 .................................... Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals6 .............................................. Chemical and fertilizer minerals7 ............ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals7 ..... 10 101 102 103 104 106 109 12 122 123 13 131 138 14 141 142 144 11,318 643 193 125 43 172 24 86 4,385 4,312 73 3,663 966 2,607 2,627 213 1,167 750 4,573 224 47 51 15 63 8 40 1,945 1,919 26 1,350 234 1,114 1,054 109 446 319 2,520 102 18 18 9 31 5 21 1,088 1,077 11 823 145 676 507 70 214 155 946 77 22 21 – 19 – 10 472 459 13 122 53 – 275 10 127 85 1,066 44 6 12 – 13 – 9 365 363 – 389 – 359 268 29 102 79 1,081 72 17 18 5 21 – 7 324 315 9 318 63 240 367 15 191 103 897 62 22 15 – 11 – 8 332 326 6 304 82 211 199 19 86 50 145 147 149 193 150 154 74 52 54 30 24 14 19 12 22 25 15 18 18 16 24 19 15 10 Construction ................................................. General building contractors ...................... Residential building construction ............ Operative builders .................................. Nonresidential building construction ....... Heavy construction, except building ........... 15 152 153 154 16 193,765 38,968 20,569 278 18,121 23,379 67,628 15,239 7,839 81 7,320 8,326 34,835 9,102 4,381 56 4,665 4,505 15,387 2,821 1,618 14 1,189 1,627 9,272 1,611 766 11 834 1,686 22,381 5,549 3,479 – 2,048 1,801 13,774 2,567 1,387 57 1,123 1,552 See footnotes at end of table. Page 1 98 – – – – – – – – – – 97 51 – – – – – – – – 6,067 1,201 417 17 767 712 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,1999 — 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 ................................... 459,441 264,836 73,195 76,223 73,246 Total Agriculture, forestry, and fishing6 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 3,486 Total By person 23,225 16,644 43 All other assaults All other events5 6,581 194,705 .............. 5,627 3,388 799 1,874 1,502 – 2,895 Agricultural production6 ................................ 2,098 1,347 267 782 691 – 646 Agricultural production— crops6 ................. Cash grains6 ........................................... Field crops, except cash grains6 ............ Vegetables and melons6 ........................ Fruits and tree nuts6 ............................... Horticultural specialties6 ......................... General farms, primarily crop6 ................ Agricultural production— livestock 6 ........... Livestock, except dairy and poultry6 ....... Dairy farms6 ............................................ Animal specialties6 ................................. Agricultural services ................................... Crop services ......................................... Veterinary services ................................. Animal services, except veterinary ......... Farm labor and management services ... Landscape and horticultural services ..... Forestry ...................................................... Forestry services .................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping .................... 1,568 – 85 173 512 627 – 529 192 103 – 3,455 304 253 – 231 2,586 41 – – 1,052 – 54 106 393 394 – 295 118 – – 2,007 232 146 – 223 1,378 16 – – 139 – 16 – – 89 – 128 76 – – 465 84 – – – 240 55 – – 548 – 58 92 215 101 – 233 50 103 18 1,019 73 – – – 783 – – – 525 – 87 79 186 93 – 166 70 48 – 786 103 – – – 506 18 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 617 150 395 66 2,249 – 1,540 578 – 104 – – – 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 ................................. Crude petroleum and natural gas ........... Oil and gas field services ....................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels7 ........... Dimension stone7 ................................... Crushed and broken stone7 .................... Sand and gravel7 .................................... Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals6 .............................................. Chemical and fertilizer minerals7 ............ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals7 ..... 3,249 227 92 31 19 58 7 20 1,479 1,450 29 720 126 587 823 64 356 217 1,193 64 24 10 – 17 – 6 580 568 12 253 71 182 296 32 120 73 142 – – – – – – – 8 8 – 134 103 – – – – – 485 32 11 – – 10 – 6 106 106 – 224 – 167 123 – 60 40 168 – – – – – – – 12 12 – 146 108 – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 592 24 – 7 – 8 – 5 176 174 – 340 154 170 52 – 23 20 74 54 58 27 14 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Construction ................................................. General building contractors ...................... Residential building construction ............ Operative builders .................................. Nonresidential building construction ....... Heavy construction, except building ........... 40,181 7,746 4,006 67 3,673 4,602 23,578 4,753 2,635 54 2,064 2,852 829 – – – – 98 486 – – – 19 49 328 – – – – 35 158 – – – – 14 3,516 641 307 – 328 249 See footnotes at end of table. Page 2 10 7 7,226 739 222 – 515 1,024 6,499 645 310 – 331 1,951 13 – – – – – – – – – – – – 33 2,852 4,201 – 620 1,634 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 595 137 387 66 2,232 – 1,540 578 – 93 – – – 1,161 – 99 240 298 355 167 472 205 91 – 2,499 178 – – 480 1,542 47 – – 25,178 4,577 2,569 – 1,985 3,015 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 Highway and street construction ............ Heavy construction, except highway ...... 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 Struck by object Struck against object Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 161 162 17 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 7,452 15,928 131,418 29,142 4,463 21,512 20,406 11,359 11,638 10,596 1,223 2,602 5,724 44,063 8,267 1,221 7,203 6,115 5,356 3,184 3,684 352 1,453 3,052 21,228 3,728 408 2,994 2,997 3,051 1,551 2,046 – 560 1,067 10,939 2,450 552 1,915 1,719 1,103 930 675 – 451 1,235 5,975 791 181 1,660 390 339 460 303 – 490 1,311 15,031 2,509 1,302 2,169 3,737 1,022 1,635 875 – 424 1,129 9,655 1,910 355 1,358 1,545 774 666 748 – 260 453 4,153 1,047 – 929 848 195 267 248 – 179 21,078 8,681 4,333 1,564 1,676 1,730 2,290 549 403,568 134,923 56,948 31,293 34,767 13,217 32,121 10,295 24 241 242 2421 263,709 32,577 3,550 8,092 6,252 91,716 14,473 1,436 3,891 2,984 40,864 7,490 1,168 1,881 1,462 21,284 3,413 168 645 486 20,393 2,704 – 1,093 789 8,334 1,385 96 189 159 18,752 2,210 484 453 404 6,210 700 – 211 196 2426 1,615 795 377 154 238 43 15 243 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 259 11,451 4,259 3,486 763 373 2,571 3,417 2,708 3,820 2,347 1,473 2,247 429 319 1,498 13,588 6,521 2,753 1,982 416 1,118 1,693 848 845 1,662 2,879 1,533 1,346 833 4,748 1,578 1,626 311 103 1,130 1,837 1,523 1,485 882 602 1,076 170 127 779 4,875 2,435 1,230 526 152 407 578 279 299 436 1,142 599 543 285 2,481 752 819 128 – 745 840 789 739 493 246 382 61 52 269 2,025 1,044 501 284 58 154 212 129 83 202 458 223 235 109 1,012 411 255 81 – 239 730 503 461 239 222 396 86 12 299 1,240 589 284 104 60 121 241 65 176 102 252 154 99 54 842 284 324 97 – 104 242 214 201 103 98 253 – 56 175 1,303 666 369 104 29 111 68 41 28 114 354 173 180 102 694 287 136 77 – 171 – – 414 262 152 96 17 19 60 772 462 181 205 18 45 72 34 38 84 88 37 51 66 266 107 18 16 14 111 – – 80 41 39 55 35 – – 209 92 37 – 10 14 39 – 34 18 31 – 23 28 2591 2599 428 405 141 145 78 31 15 39 – – – 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 ... Miscellaneous furniture and fixtures ....... Drapery hardware and blinds and shades .............................................. Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. .............. Total Caught in or compressed or crushed Total cases See footnotes at end of table. Page 3 – 318 87 72 25 – 102 358 338 375 277 98 48 – 12 – 164 82 35 – – 28 11 – – 19 36 – 12 16 – 16 68 – 39 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,1999 — 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 1,331 3,270 27,833 7,012 643 4,295 4,376 2,520 2,274 2,114 395 901 1,951 15,973 3,900 442 2,418 2,924 1,575 1,399 1,108 – 121 128 2,626 839 101 460 695 114 171 71 – 360 663 5,463 2,316 156 703 410 – 886 376 – 879 1,072 3,903 906 154 1,285 164 130 210 376 – 43 55 713 236 – – – – – – – 4,205 2,144 176 568 629 414 Manufacturing ............................................... 101,958 55,468 34,057 20,892 8,398 771 755 454 301 46,181 65,581 7,284 157 1,773 1,412 35,993 3,928 – 788 620 22,879 1,291 – 272 168 13,510 585 – 181 114 4,882 1,233 657 170 166 434 33 – – – 360 – – – – 229 16 – – – 131 – – – – 31,051 3,358 610 933 641 297 125 91 67 – – – – – 271 3,220 1,236 951 197 89 747 798 507 897 513 384 438 62 63 314 4,013 1,830 744 472 124 425 609 335 274 567 795 426 369 211 1,822 674 661 89 – 367 487 378 481 324 156 313 60 35 218 2,339 1,089 404 248 88 306 326 192 133 252 550 317 233 123 752 394 201 38 – 72 – – 91 89 – 120 – 16 98 1,623 843 203 565 9 53 213 93 119 271 192 91 101 105 300 100 139 22 15 – – – 24 24 – 43 – – 20 478 115 25 – 64 – – 16 – 77 252 163 89 11 181 66 59 18 15 – – – 63 43 – 116 83 10 – 163 81 34 – – 30 – 15 – 24 24 16 9 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 961 400 285 58 – 188 232 191 385 209 176 238 50 35 153 1,273 571 259 157 29 110 123 63 60 164 313 171 143 101 104 107 68 54 – – – – – – – – – – – – 62 40 Highway and street construction ............ Heavy construction, except highway ...... 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 ............................................ 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 ... Miscellaneous furniture and fixtures ....... Drapery hardware and blinds and shades .............................................. Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. .............. – 55 See footnotes at end of table. Page 4 9 By person All other assaults 24 – 391 – – 207 – – – – – 23 – 284 – – 143 – – – – – – – 107 – – 64 – – – – – – – – Total 13 10 All other events5 918 2,097 17,586 4,064 473 2,865 2,488 1,149 2,322 2,094 327 1,805 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Stone, clay, and glass products ................. Flat glass ................................................ Glass and glassware, pressed or blown .................................................... Glass containers ................................. Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ........ Products of purchased glass .................. Cement, hydraulic .................................. Structural clay products .......................... Brick and structural clay tile ................ Pottery and related products .................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures .................. Vitreous china table and kitchenware ...................................... Porcelain electrical supplies ............... Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ................................................ Concrete block and brick .................... Concrete products, n.e.c. .................. Ready-mixed concrete ....................... Gypsum products ............................... Cut stone and stone products ................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ................................................ Minerals, ground or treated ................ Mineral wool ....................................... Primary metal industries ............................. Blast furnace and basic steel products ... Blast furnaces and steel mills ............. Steel wire and related products .......... Cold finishing of steel shapes ............. Steel pipe and tubes ........................... Iron and steel foundries .......................... Gray and ductile iron foundries .......... Steel investment foundries ................. Steel foundries, n.e.c. ........................ Primary nonferrous metals ..................... Primary copper ................................... Primary aluminum .............................. Primary nonferrous metals, n.e.c. ..... Secondary nonferrous metals ................ Nonferrous rolling and drawing .............. Copper rolling and drawing ................ Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil .......... Aluminum extruded products .............. Nonferrous 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 ....... 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 32 321 17,379 239 5,475 88 2,205 – 1,547 10 1,230 54 1,182 – 1,555 8 432 – 322 3221 3229 323 324 325 3251 326 3261 1,771 1,032 739 1,212 229 752 458 1,247 317 681 432 249 439 – 179 113 275 76 172 89 83 168 – 93 69 109 – 291 198 93 149 – 52 – 75 – 162 119 43 80 – 33 – 66 11 56 42 15 61 58 47 11 38 – – 160 101 59 93 – 49 – 113 – 3262 3264 80 386 9 83 – – – – – – – – 6 52 327 3271 3272 3273 3275 328 9,990 893 3,709 4,934 338 356 3,214 448 1,299 1,317 111 173 1,369 178 598 565 – 141 801 110 323 344 – – 741 103 305 237 – – 791 – 335 399 – – 998 20 561 379 – – 258 – 93 151 – – 329 3295 3296 33 331 3312 3315 3316 3317 332 3321 3324 3325 333 3331 3334 3339 334 335 3351 3353 3354 1,583 360 333 22,380 6,120 3,392 445 937 1,228 5,215 3,183 559 1,402 819 60 462 297 716 4,015 729 414 769 385 85 121 8,201 2,274 1,093 179 401 562 2,050 1,309 177 546 183 18 101 64 224 1,438 271 156 310 116 44 41 3,467 895 446 73 180 185 1,000 606 69 310 81 7 38 36 87 606 102 52 144 137 30 37 1,644 545 286 50 68 130 248 155 27 66 44 8 32 – 53 263 45 11 55 79 43 2,158 624 252 50 124 189 423 224 47 148 48 – 25 19 59 459 100 83 75 153 114 – 732 327 224 – – 66 135 80 16 39 63 – 31 31 38 88 11 11 15 109 62 25 1,607 575 317 35 118 99 192 98 24 66 50 10 29 11 35 275 66 34 37 – – – 674 285 193 27 – 19 90 54 – 32 43 – 20 18 18 124 32 16 13 3357 336 3363 1,388 4,167 1,786 441 1,615 665 184 559 251 89 416 133 143 474 187 20 42 32 103 224 86 35 76 54 3364 3365 339 3398 34 341 274 1,499 1,329 1,152 48,019 849 116 699 417 377 19,234 464 – 191 238 217 8,505 144 40 212 75 67 3,728 183 41 239 71 68 4,805 115 – – – – 1,153 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 5 – 30 – 14 – 75 255 238 3,257 – – – – 22 14 – – 15 – – – 969 – 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 3,843 35 2,184 19 626 68 868 – 724 – – – – – – – – 2,646 – 353 147 206 242 94 231 138 507 146 189 74 115 166 – 139 86 318 119 84 43 41 100 – 35 – 129 – 72 51 21 87 28 19 10 31 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 277 152 125 121 – 162 117 154 – 36 172 – 109 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,903 235 669 870 – – 1,036 121 343 505 – – 112 – 57 – – – 416 – 143 207 – – 579 – 59 466 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,698 76 488 1,095 – – 434 31 106 5,454 1,298 696 79 217 262 1,291 745 159 363 186 14 104 68 122 1,171 197 112 228 254 – 50 2,693 486 191 35 123 105 636 415 76 130 75 – 30 44 63 505 73 58 120 47 20 1,039 171 100 40 – 18 364 243 71 49 33 – 11 22 – 188 17 17 14 235 – – 1,777 478 378 28 – 50 397 209 65 121 61 – 41 16 193 186 28 22 31 17 – – 422 88 58 – – 15 115 66 – 42 20 – 20 – – 80 23 – 6 – – – – – – – – – 184 50 17 2,381 601 311 49 91 137 546 370 35 121 174 7 105 62 72 457 80 42 114 474 1,036 375 186 703 247 120 259 154 64 417 233 8 50 38 49 377 350 282 12,250 148 – 267 226 201 6,795 86 13 67 43 84 46 Total Stone, clay, and glass products ................. Flat glass ................................................ Glass and glassware, pressed or blown .................................................... Glass containers ................................. Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ........ Products of purchased glass .................. Cement, hydraulic .................................. Structural clay products .......................... Brick and structural clay tile ................ Pottery and related products .................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures .................. Vitreous china table and kitchenware ...................................... Porcelain electrical supplies ............... Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ................................................ Concrete block and brick .................... Concrete products, n.e.c. .................. Ready-mixed concrete ....................... Gypsum products ............................... Cut stone and stone products ................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ................................................ Minerals, ground or treated ................ Mineral wool ....................................... Primary metal industries ............................. Blast furnace and basic steel products ... Blast furnaces and steel mills ............. Steel wire and related products .......... Cold finishing of steel shapes ............. Steel pipe and tubes ........................... Iron and steel foundries .......................... Gray and ductile iron foundries .......... Steel investment foundries ................. Steel foundries, n.e.c. ........................ Primary nonferrous metals ..................... Primary copper ................................... Primary aluminum .............................. Primary nonferrous metals, n.e.c. ..... Secondary nonferrous metals ................ Nonferrous rolling and drawing .............. Copper rolling and drawing ................ Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil .......... Aluminum extruded products .............. Nonferrous 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 ....... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 10 – – – 2,986 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 6 – – – – 32 29 – 2,618 – – – 68 – 583 – Total 18 By person All other assaults All other events5 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 123 445 145 – – – – 183 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 181 86 84 4,723 80 77 16 16 – – – 31 – – – 6 – – – – 8 16 13 63 – 18 – 45 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total 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) .. Sheet metalwork ................................. Architectural metal work ..................... Prefabricated metal buildings ............. 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. ......... 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 ......... Construction and related machinery ....... Construction machinery ...................... Mining machinery ............................... Oil and gas field machinery ................ Elevators and moving stairways ......... Conveyors and conveying equipment ......................................... Industrial trucks and tractors .............. Metalworking machinery ......................... Machine tools, metal cutting types ..... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 3411 342 3421 3423 3429 343 3431 3432 3433 344 3441 3442 3443 3444 3446 3448 345 3451 3452 346 3462 3463 3465 3469 347 3471 3479 348 461 2,977 333 1,094 1,333 1,550 345 568 638 19,668 3,927 2,021 4,743 4,825 1,027 1,955 2,326 990 1,336 8,431 1,283 283 3,827 2,927 3,382 1,801 1,580 583 223 905 145 332 374 561 127 146 288 8,349 1,861 802 1,916 1,920 488 841 682 336 345 3,423 674 86 1,449 1,174 1,362 680 683 161 – 317 47 128 134 282 67 94 121 4,106 963 319 1,052 661 301 420 138 48 90 1,431 354 24 585 452 863 444 419 78 96 187 40 40 83 73 – – 42 1,466 241 227 305 464 – 134 231 149 82 753 71 – 356 293 191 87 103 36 57 275 41 106 110 144 – – 94 1,909 513 215 340 481 – 194 163 56 107 857 150 32 350 316 236 117 120 22 3483 181 36 15 10 349 3491 3492 3494 3495 8,255 450 618 475 291 3,326 165 207 182 185 1,146 60 46 64 52 3496 3498 3499 35 351 3511 3519 352 3523 353 3531 3532 3533 3534 1,565 1,524 3,145 42,829 1,827 337 1,491 2,425 1,339 7,180 3,477 345 570 253 635 695 1,184 16,116 623 115 508 785 485 2,400 955 79 212 113 3535 3537 354 3541 884 1,218 6,505 634 261 582 2,787 273 See footnotes at end of table. Page 7 Fall to lower level – Fall on same level – – – 476 136 80 100 75 – – – 18 – 302 17 28 78 162 131 48 83 20 – 365 17 82 242 86 – 49 14 1,294 218 190 324 215 – 80 207 122 86 698 38 17 468 169 221 122 99 50 11 13 16 609 33 70 40 20 1,083 47 58 49 83 129 – 20 – – 321 31 36 13 – 215 250 413 7,347 223 59 165 458 303 1,147 417 – 86 – 106 101 232 3,509 192 36 156 87 31 532 262 – – – 267 260 305 3,471 96 15 82 158 103 487 188 18 81 – 9 – – 1,106 39 – 35 97 96 235 174 – – – 51 – 101 2,905 79 5 74 95 63 498 302 66 55 – 176 313 1,175 115 – 126 579 68 37 81 771 64 41 – – 16 15 – 15 195 52 35 36 375 11 Slips or trips without fall 18 44 8 11 17 39 – – 10 331 96 36 57 – – – 103 – 76 195 – – 130 45 58 – – 21 – 156 6 21 – – 31 – 90 889 83 11 72 – 22 227 126 14 – – 57 – 96 30 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 86 862 85 418 289 453 111 172 170 4,740 901 521 969 1,378 244 696 903 331 572 1,920 241 87 850 716 777 392 385 150 – 365 49 151 136 300 60 123 117 2,713 495 316 583 873 120 301 554 173 381 1,148 117 59 535 426 497 263 234 90 – 330 24 107 180 135 – 61 47 883 89 104 158 169 – 79 108 42 66 547 41 35 287 185 250 177 73 100 48 25 23 2,296 146 198 114 66 1,043 58 131 40 48 586 36 49 88 – 383 28 15 38 – 518 389 798 11,559 509 82 427 574 423 2,129 1,014 110 117 – 254 129 323 6,444 245 43 203 355 272 1,017 439 43 39 – 96 – 247 3,014 251 77 174 80 50 430 226 – – – 59 – 136 2,524 62 16 47 322 61 396 180 – – – 342 312 1,749 167 162 174 1,026 108 61 38 285 33 35 110 398 18 Total 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) .. Sheet metalwork ................................. Architectural metal work ..................... Prefabricated metal buildings ............. 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. ......... 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 ......... Construction and related machinery ....... Construction machinery ...................... Mining machinery ............................... Oil and gas field machinery ................ Elevators and moving stairways ......... Conveyors and conveying equipment ......................................... Industrial trucks and tractors .............. Metalworking machinery ......................... Machine tools, metal cutting types ..... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment See footnotes at end of table. Page 8 – – 79 14 30 33 – – – 10 1,348 310 107 699 108 90 – 67 48 19 357 41 – 140 166 319 211 108 9 – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 63 310 36 88 152 208 51 77 80 1,924 214 145 493 856 – 108 170 65 105 794 135 15 343 290 238 144 93 52 32 – – – 186 – – – 56 – – 38 – 37 170 78 – 76 12 – – – 9 12 – – – 110 87 – – – – – – – – 18 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 78 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 23 – – 510 17 – 16 – 16 116 71 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 27 30 – – – – – – – – Total All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 39 8 13 13 47 – 15 – 14 948 21 68 35 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 130 163 513 4,114 164 26 138 417 116 728 412 46 101 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 77 86 557 49 59 – – – – All other events5 By person 33 23 10 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Machine tools, metal forming types .... Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ... Machine tool accessories ................... Power-driven handtools ...................... Welding apparatus ............................. Metalworking machinery, n.e.c. ......... Special industry machinery .................... Textile machinery ............................... Woodworking machinery .................... Paper industries machinery ................ Printing trades machinery ................... Food products machinery ................... Special industry machinery, n.e.c. ..... General industrial machinery .................. Pumps and pumping equipment ......... Ball and roller bearings ....................... 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 storage devices ................. Computer peripheral equipment, n.e.c. ................................................ Office machines, n.e.c. ...................... Refrigeration and service machinery ...... Automatic vending machines ............. Refrigeration and heating equipment ......................................... Measuring and dispensing pumps ...... Service industry machinery, n.e.c. .... Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ................... Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves ..... Fluid power cylinders and actuators ... Fluid power pumps and motors .......... 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 ............................................ Household laundry equipment ............ Household appliances, n.e.c. ............ Electric lighting and wiring equipment .... Electric lamps ..................................... Current-carrying wiring devices .......... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 3542 3544 3545 3546 3548 3549 355 3552 3553 3554 3555 3556 3559 356 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 655 3,039 777 224 818 182 4,036 244 204 346 302 1,057 1,883 5,921 711 730 393 1,190 412 375 660 284 1,408 291 56 336 59 1,618 77 92 154 123 451 721 2,252 365 213 129 546 173 126 226 85 646 123 30 137 26 794 33 47 88 – 291 326 982 117 66 55 286 – 85 153 89 230 63 11 70 15 448 29 – 22 105 – 199 495 116 12 27 62 113 – 58 69 430 68 11 105 11 179 15 10 28 – – 88 547 52 118 17 174 – 18 – 3568 3569 357 3571 3572 527 922 2,029 720 199 161 313 359 105 36 58 121 167 52 27 23 81 97 35 8 68 80 68 10 3577 3579 358 3581 590 340 4,600 275 92 85 1,634 90 3585 3586 3589 359 3592 3593 3594 3599 36 361 3612 362 3621 3625 363 3631 3,004 111 1,057 8,306 479 495 565 6,649 20,709 1,445 1,058 2,229 1,369 613 2,455 207 3632 3633 3639 364 3641 3643 657 420 258 3,243 280 1,126 – – – 12 7 82 – – 7 – – 47 78 – – 10 – – – – – 11 74 36 – – – 14 439 11 981 – 431 3,657 116 157 176 3,173 5,912 504 365 730 467 184 733 83 377 – 230 1,646 42 83 48 1,445 2,419 241 181 311 205 93 327 30 226 17 55 757 39 37 42 635 1,536 91 59 187 101 56 225 39 320 – 99 725 30 21 25 645 1,467 125 87 188 141 25 149 12 146 110 96 1,164 112 332 67 51 46 501 49 143 49 24 26 219 29 63 25 30 21 354 30 87 Page 9 66 33 – 15 321 – Fall on same level – – 53 755 70 See footnotes at end of table. Fall to lower level 46 157 77 16 57 10 299 30 12 22 – – 134 473 15 136 – 48 96 18 80 52 40 402 48 13 236 7 – 8 209 612 31 – 90 27 46 46 6 268 11 66 458 38 15 27 378 1,786 61 50 159 120 24 147 13 21 – – 139 – 84 44 34 13 185 13 76 – – – 13 – – – 70 – – – – – – 85 – – 13 – 16 12 – 13 58 226 89 13 – 71 5 Slips or trips without fall 8 24 53 25 11 – 12 84 – 64 7 13 169 12 17 – 137 370 28 – 37 23 10 43 – – 12 – 47 – 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 159 773 203 100 248 54 1,007 81 67 80 – 230 506 1,619 126 205 135 342 57 112 235 82 466 118 70 113 42 526 48 44 32 – – 289 822 58 129 97 119 45 57 107 – 105 54 14 57 9 265 10 – 12 – – 190 408 – 89 – – – 34 – – 285 37 12 – – 233 13 – 20 – – 116 413 82 17 38 91 – 14 50 174 233 616 200 54 94 117 376 117 33 106 46 393 127 40 – 111 79 24 13 175 115 1,207 55 145 54 708 31 172 31 452 18 20 22 212 – 823 11 256 2,149 149 166 240 1,571 4,887 422 322 570 313 188 602 53 507 – 149 1,370 77 79 180 1,015 2,779 202 135 285 136 105 271 28 347 10 77 450 58 39 52 268 3,089 133 83 361 256 76 420 18 178 – – 408 46 46 22 287 1,171 78 – 81 48 17 76 7 197 121 61 630 43 244 62 47 23 387 32 150 145 44 41 442 72 88 15 7 9 104 – 43 Total Machine tools, metal forming types .... Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ... Machine tool accessories ................... Power-driven handtools ...................... Welding apparatus ............................. Metalworking machinery, n.e.c. ......... Special industry machinery .................... Textile machinery ............................... Woodworking machinery .................... Paper industries machinery ................ Printing trades machinery ................... Food products machinery ................... Special industry machinery, n.e.c. ..... General industrial machinery .................. Pumps and pumping equipment ......... Ball and roller bearings ....................... 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 storage devices ................. Computer peripheral equipment, n.e.c. ................................................ Office machines, n.e.c. ...................... Refrigeration and service machinery ...... Automatic vending machines ............. Refrigeration and heating equipment ......................................... Measuring and dispensing pumps ...... Service industry machinery, n.e.c. .... Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ................... Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves ..... Fluid power cylinders and actuators ... Fluid power pumps and motors .......... 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 ............................................ Household laundry equipment ............ Household appliances, n.e.c. ............ Electric lighting and wiring equipment .... Electric lamps ..................................... Current-carrying wiring devices .......... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment See footnotes at end of table. Page 10 – – – – – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 46 121 198 95 29 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 68 – – – 42 – – – 8 – 29 16 79 – 40 – 35 87 – – – 80 283 13 – 15 – 9 38 – – 11 – 81 – – 5 9 – – – – – – – – – All other events5 97 194 61 20 79 33 413 29 16 37 – – 124 521 71 58 40 67 – 49 – 44 – – – – – – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – By person 5 – 28 449 52 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 244 12 137 665 46 47 34 535 2,533 167 146 184 113 59 345 23 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 78 74 30 448 – 235 11 – – – – 16 – – – – 10 12 – – – – 55 38 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Residential lighting fixtures ................. Commercial lighting fixtures ............... Vehicular lighting equipment .............. Household audio and video equipment and audio recordings ............................ Household audio and video equipment ......................................... Communications equipment ................... Telephone and telegraph apparatus .. 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 resistors ............................. Electronic components, n.e.c. ........... Miscellaneous electrical equipment and supplies ................................................ Storage batteries ................................ Primary batteries, dry and wet ............ Engine electrical equipment ............... Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c. ................................................ Transportation equipment .......................... Motor vehicles and equipment ............... Motor vehicles and car bodies ............ Truck and bus bodies ......................... Motor vehicle parts and accessories .. Truck trailers ....................................... Aircraft and parts .................................... Aircraft ................................................ Aircraft engines and engine parts ....... Aircraft parts and equipment, n.e.c. .. Ship and boat building and repairing ...... Ship building and repairing ................. Boat building and repairing ................. Railroad equipment ................................ Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts ............ Guided missiles, space vehicles, parts .. Guided missiles and space vehicles .. Space vehicle equipment, n.e.c. ....... 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 ......... Environmental controls ....................... Process control instruments ............... 3645 3646 3647 263 470 383 365 Struck by object 76 – 30 – Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level – – – – – – – – Slips or trips without fall 39 82 20 21 41 1,186 330 94 118 114 15 89 9 3651 366 3661 903 1,741 – 245 399 – 82 199 – 81 97 16 77 76 15 13 87 7 63 – 68 193 – 3663 3669 1,071 246 281 44 141 19 67 14 – – 95 – – 39 20 367 3671 3672 6,032 645 1,800 1,410 221 445 485 118 145 441 – 120 335 – 119 184 – 36 783 – 266 127 – 39 3674 3675 3676 3679 1,527 161 93 1,403 232 48 18 377 62 9 42 – 115 101 10 – 127 185 10 9 195 369 3691 3692 3694 2,378 438 226 1,324 642 108 53 302 261 47 15 122 159 37 8 89 128 24 30 52 3699 37 371 3711 3713 3714 3715 372 3721 3724 3728 373 3731 3732 374 375 376 3761 3769 295 51,654 32,807 13,341 2,302 15,037 1,523 8,642 4,678 1,287 2,677 6,443 4,367 2,076 790 585 551 366 – 144 13,312 8,475 2,427 863 4,372 592 1,640 580 357 704 2,033 1,381 652 284 139 101 – – 59 5,629 3,634 1,119 347 1,810 257 560 216 112 231 880 590 289 147 71 47 – 10 17 3,626 2,019 687 194 933 157 587 243 61 283 687 505 182 76 31 24 16 – – 2,352 1,746 279 237 1,089 104 271 71 112 87 191 90 101 31 29 7 – – – 1,483 752 327 80 270 67 287 98 73 116 345 268 77 14 – 20 13 – – 3,453 1,806 740 110 804 105 711 344 130 238 613 337 276 80 42 59 – 10 379 3792 3795 3799 38 381 382 3822 3823 1,836 759 38 1,038 7,563 962 2,604 619 593 639 292 14 333 1,675 226 613 150 172 292 132 – 156 814 124 326 70 102 202 120 – 81 394 39 132 49 – 76 10 8 58 308 38 69 30 18 58 – – – 336 49 123 20 – 141 55 – 82 680 120 226 48 46 See footnotes at end of table. Page 11 55 32 – 9 106 28 12 – – – – 81 21 9 – – 169 30 31 73 – 57 – – 19 17 8 – – – 1,525 914 478 – 365 14 273 196 17 59 207 149 58 37 15 7 – – 72 – – 47 294 50 71 6 – 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Residential lighting fixtures ................. Commercial lighting fixtures ............... Vehicular lighting equipment .............. Household audio and video equipment and audio recordings ............................ Household audio and video equipment ......................................... Communications equipment ................... Telephone and telegraph apparatus .. 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 resistors ............................. Electronic components, n.e.c. ........... Miscellaneous electrical equipment and supplies ................................................ Storage batteries ................................ Primary batteries, dry and wet ............ Engine electrical equipment ............... Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c. ................................................ Transportation equipment .......................... Motor vehicles and equipment ............... Motor vehicles and car bodies ............ Truck and bus bodies ......................... Motor vehicle parts and accessories .. Truck trailers ....................................... Aircraft and parts .................................... Aircraft ................................................ Aircraft engines and engine parts ....... Aircraft parts and equipment, n.e.c. .. Ship and boat building and repairing ...... Ship building and repairing ................. Boat building and repairing ................. Railroad equipment ................................ Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts ............ Guided missiles, space vehicles, parts .. Guided missiles and space vehicles .. Space vehicle equipment, n.e.c. ....... 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 ......... Environmental controls ....................... Process control instruments ............... 63 – 108 In lifting 43 Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment All other events5 Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 225 – – – 133 170 16 – – – 103 51 61 328 199 117 44 25 – – 273 411 – 164 296 – 99 287 – 41 95 10 20 21 15 – – – – – 263 53 180 – 153 59 – – – – 1,357 185 435 826 80 286 895 108 192 512 – 152 – – – – – – – – – – – – 694 – 194 294 47 33 229 191 – 14 141 242 12 22 254 179 – – 97 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 278 19 – 139 567 128 48 316 311 65 16 191 433 66 29 305 183 45 22 95 – – – – 301 22 34 198 52 12,621 8,242 2,866 786 4,096 375 2,096 1,027 379 690 1,302 899 404 237 126 172 – – – 6,679 4,407 1,312 389 2,424 210 1,083 550 153 379 621 417 204 114 81 109 – – – 7,246 5,408 2,908 95 2,270 78 1,266 752 115 399 243 180 63 28 110 41 – – 18 2,655 1,550 404 116 888 123 454 274 79 101 423 276 147 42 32 30 20 – – 765 510 230 17 224 – 111 – 39 28 59 54 – – 26 13 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 8,447 5,040 2,889 206 1,715 148 1,792 1,361 98 333 1,202 813 389 60 83 108 – – 446 183 12 251 1,910 204 695 154 193 264 103 9 152 1,091 116 442 106 92 150 68 – 82 1,183 87 454 103 85 125 – – 117 487 89 138 48 – 38 16 – – – – – – – – – 162 89 6 66 878 120 252 84 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 12 14 Fires and explosions – – 116 – – – Assaults and violent acts 8 78 – – – – 60 33 17 9 32 12 – 15 – – 96 12 22 6 – – 10 15 14 9 – 46 – 19 – – – – – – 9 – – – – – – – – – 15 15 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 14 9 – – – – – 101 88 52 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 76 66 52 19 – – – – 14 – – – – 40 – 34 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Fluid meters and counting devices ..... Instruments to measure electricity ...... Optical instruments and lenses .......... Measuring and controlling devices, n.e.c. ................................................ Medical instruments and supplies .......... Surgical and medical instruments ...... Surgical appliances and supplies ....... Dental equipment and supplies .......... Electromedical equipment .................. Ophthalmic goods .................................. Miscellaneous manufacturing industries .... Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ..... Jewelry, precious metal ...................... Silverware and plated ware ................ Toys and sporting goods ........................ Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............................................ Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. .... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies .... Pens and mechanical pencils ............. Costume jewelry and notions ................. Costume jewelry ................................. Fasteners, buttons, needles, and pins ................................................... Miscellaneous manufactures .................. Brooms and brushes .......................... Signs and advertising specialities ...... Manufacturing industries, n.e.c. ........ Nondurable goods ........................................ Food and kindred products ......................... Meat products ......................................... Meat packing plants ........................... Sausages and other prepared meats ................................................ Poultry slaughtering and processing .. Dairy products ........................................ Cheese, natural and processed ......... Dry, condensed, evaporated products ............................................ Ice cream and frozen desserts ........... Fluid milk ............................................ Preserved fruits and vegetables ............. Canned fruits and vegetables ............. Pickles, sauces, and salad dressings .......................................... Frozen fruits and vegetables .............. Frozen specialities, n.e.c. .................. Grain mill products ................................. Flour and other grain mill products ..... Cereal breakfast foods ....................... Prepared flour mixes and doughs ...... Wet corn milling .................................. Dog and cat food ................................ Prepared feeds, n.e.c. ....................... Struck by object 3824 3825 3827 111 454 218 22 66 83 9 28 40 3829 384 3841 3842 3843 3845 385 39 391 3911 3914 394 307 2,728 992 1,078 254 245 443 7,011 359 227 – 2,134 – 628 291 218 – 28 63 2,444 104 65 19 661 – 294 164 60 – – – 963 24 12 – 311 3944 3949 395 3951 396 3961 483 1,597 509 92 256 145 160 487 119 35 103 64 3965 399 3991 3993 3999 112 3,491 309 1,425 1,551 20 201 2011 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed Fall to lower level Fall on same level – – – – 10 12 10 64 41 19 Slips or trips without fall 11 11 – – – 158 60 80 – 12 – 648 13 7 – 128 – 133 48 70 – 6 – 596 63 – 10 192 – 93 205 34 9 27 – 30 98 34 17 40 29 26 166 51 9 23 10 – 39 1,357 98 606 580 7 509 38 241 198 12 411 39 127 212 12 247 15 97 127 – 112 – 101 – – 248 19 78 145 139,859 47,140 12,380 5,753 43,206 13,776 4,319 2,104 16,084 5,444 2,075 1,174 10,009 3,130 865 425 14,374 4,235 1,125 352 4,883 1,874 453 180 13,368 5,312 1,393 494 4,085 1,677 314 91 2013 2015 202 2022 3,020 3,606 6,231 1,633 947 1,267 1,555 271 407 494 635 109 167 273 361 81 347 426 497 67 95 179 271 41 447 452 630 91 132 91 269 58 2023 2024 2026 203 2033 449 952 3,087 5,390 1,852 124 280 847 1,694 563 – 72 427 559 215 85 149 397 129 70 100 250 584 167 25 193 267 70 20 126 387 789 283 17 34 153 227 55 2035 2037 2038 204 2041 2043 2045 2046 2047 2048 327 1,469 1,160 3,106 481 365 806 – 252 937 67 450 399 1,029 130 115 311 20 61 327 – 116 128 309 41 26 – – 23 136 13 161 68 304 41 48 – 7 22 105 16 161 187 280 – 41 90 – 17 65 14 136 22 159 – 21 – – 11 69 – 245 156 311 – 25 – 13 25 134 See footnotes at end of table. Page 13 – 72 31 29 – 9 – 182 18 14 – 34 29 14 5 – – – – 252 54 124 – 32 – 527 38 – – 153 41 111 48 13 17 12 – – 98 26 33 – 27 – 148 – – – 24 11 13 – – 36 – 12 81 17 – 29 – 91 61 126 – 24 – – 6 – 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 46 75 25 30 46 21 21 123 45 – 696 204 311 53 84 63 1,760 68 – 14 613 – 363 132 114 – 70 – 1,060 48 15 12 358 – 434 169 164 60 28 114 783 58 – 12 283 – 165 49 73 18 11 – 346 28 – – 131 116 484 179 8 41 – 64 281 114 5 35 18 81 177 53 9 35 – 33 98 25 – 771 75 307 326 17 442 59 185 147 14 320 52 77 183 16 142 – – 88 36,378 11,681 2,320 1,244 19,475 6,243 1,112 461 11,178 3,198 1,516 773 7,382 3,026 760 296 3,516 1,369 288 132 627 450 1,821 596 403 248 999 329 299 444 211 70 161 304 646 333 64 92 144 20 163 285 757 867 281 111 211 331 537 172 18 37 79 247 63 55 60 195 495 229 – 69 197 212 823 115 78 294 – 78 215 53 103 139 370 81 38 – 10 36 110 13 53 97 109 39 28 – – 10 – – 122 80 219 – 10 – 11 22 74 – Total Fluid meters and counting devices ..... Instruments to measure electricity ...... Optical instruments and lenses .......... Measuring and controlling devices, n.e.c. ................................................ Medical instruments and supplies .......... Surgical and medical instruments ...... Surgical appliances and supplies ....... Dental equipment and supplies .......... Electromedical equipment .................. Ophthalmic goods .................................. Miscellaneous manufacturing industries .... Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ..... Jewelry, precious metal ...................... Silverware and plated ware ................ Toys and sporting goods ........................ Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............................................ Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. .... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies .... Pens and mechanical pencils ............. Costume jewelry and notions ................. Costume jewelry ................................. Fasteners, buttons, needles, and pins ................................................... Miscellaneous manufactures .................. Brooms and brushes .......................... Signs and advertising specialities ...... Manufacturing industries, n.e.c. ........ Nondurable goods ........................................ Food and kindred products ......................... Meat products ......................................... Meat packing plants ........................... Sausages and other prepared meats ................................................ Poultry slaughtering and processing .. Dairy products ........................................ Cheese, natural and processed ......... Dry, condensed, evaporated products ............................................ Ice cream and frozen desserts ........... Fluid milk ............................................ Preserved fruits and vegetables ............. Canned fruits and vegetables ............. Pickles, sauces, and salad dressings .......................................... Frozen fruits and vegetables .............. Frozen specialities, n.e.c. .................. Grain mill products ................................. Flour and other grain mill products ..... Cereal breakfast foods ....................... Prepared flour mixes and doughs ...... Wet corn milling .................................. Dog and cat food ................................ Prepared feeds, n.e.c. ....................... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment See footnotes at end of table. Page 14 – 7 12 – 16 – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions All other events5 Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 67 20 – 8 – 103 – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 339 154 107 – 19 – 698 31 14 15 222 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 29 192 65 19 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 368 – 141 179 395 168 60 32 225 97 22 – 170 71 38 – 13 15 8 10 – – – – 32 12 9 – – 92 20 58 13 15 104 119 41 44 12 70 19 9 – – 21 – 338 58 – – – – – – – 12 – 9 – 9 – – – 9 – – – 15 9 15 9 – – – – – – 235 310 681 155 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 42 86 371 675 264 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 99 128 118 248 47 53 – 5 12 – 9 11 – – – – 6 – 9 – 15,130 5,001 951 406 5 11 – – – – 6 – 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Bakery products ..................................... Bread, cake, and related products ..... Cookies and crackers ......................... Frozen bakery products, except bread ................................................ Sugar and confectionery products .......... Raw cane sugar ................................. Candy and other confectionery products ............................................ Chewing gum ..................................... Fats and oils ........................................... Beverages .............................................. Malt beverages ................................... Wines, brandy, and brandy spirits ...... Bottled and canned soft drinks ........... Flavoring extracts and syrups, n.e.c. ................................................ Miscellaneous food and kindred products ................................................ Canned and cured fish and seafoods ........................................... Fresh or frozen prepared fish ............. Roasted coffee ................................... Potato chips and similar snacks ......... 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 ........................... Textile finishing, except wool .................. Finishing plants, cotton ....................... Carpets and rugs .................................... Yarn and thread mills ............................. Yarn spinning mills ............................. Throwing and winding mills ................ Miscellaneous textile goods ................... Coated fabrics, not rubberized ........... Tire cord and fabrics ........................... Nonwoven fabrics ............................... 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’ shirts ........................ Men’s and boys’ underwear and nightwear .......................................... Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............................................... Men’s and boys’ work clothing ........... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 402 302 98 590 429 144 Fall to lower level 6,270 4,428 1,569 1,682 1,265 378 588 442 129 2053 206 2061 273 1,564 94 – 454 32 17 120 11 2064 2067 207 208 2082 2084 2086 779 107 749 6,040 446 747 4,265 265 29 210 1,268 133 125 852 37 14 122 489 31 68 344 2087 308 82 209 5,410 1,566 546 357 560 239 614 183 2091 2092 2095 2096 2099 21 211 22 221 222 224 225 2252 2253 2254 2257 226 2261 227 228 2281 2282 229 2295 2296 2297 2299 23 231 232 2321 225 1,639 232 912 2,003 574 391 6,519 281 714 423 1,147 298 272 83 247 1,210 556 602 632 449 125 1,428 442 159 290 365 8,709 489 2,267 481 76 531 98 203 598 174 105 2,328 128 230 199 278 34 81 19 78 391 132 218 255 194 – 620 125 59 146 210 2,493 90 591 112 49 190 – 72 185 68 38 719 – 59 63 72 19 33 12 – 191 54 58 101 78 18 151 35 28 – 36 942 35 187 59 11 110 – 54 171 36 27 562 38 69 53 97 6 23 – – 107 41 38 47 45 – 113 – – – 72 784 33 135 – 14 172 – 71 211 63 34 893 41 99 71 81 7 25 – – 85 35 98 105 70 16 305 55 26 83 96 658 23 194 – 9 114 18 27 – 11 9 192 – – – 84 15 6 – – 37 14 15 – – – 29 – – – 10 228 14 29 – 21 205 – 114 226 84 64 623 35 79 36 165 41 27 24 – 84 – 58 44 24 20 104 39 13 – 29 695 52 148 – 11 79 30 – – – 178 – – 11 60 42 – – – – – 10 15 8 – 19 – – – – 89 10 26 – 2322 195 – – – – 2325 2326 735 389 – 149 104 See footnotes at end of table. Page 15 – – 80 10 36 6 – 51 7 – 317 26 – 222 182 8 – 332 58 – 210 – 225 21 – 182 – – – 20 42 13 17 229 7 36 15 64 38 11 6 – – 847 486 301 Slips or trips without fall 205 2051 2052 – 200 171 26 Fall on same level 59 123 10 62 8 71 535 42 113 352 260 178 82 – 49 – 13 7 – 193 13 – 121 – 18 56 19 – 8 – 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 1,790 1,279 417 980 695 203 391 205 158 94 372 6 82 227 – 203 32 198 2,125 116 219 1,631 146 25 158 1,068 65 87 813 91 72 1,365 792 385 318 39 229 – 287 558 157 114 1,860 48 174 98 305 88 93 21 – 488 302 155 149 134 – 413 204 47 71 51 1,857 95 519 68 26 164 – 119 350 50 40 928 – 71 52 207 61 66 15 – 128 68 112 68 57 – 256 147 12 – 23 1,012 61 287 – 22 119 – 111 133 20 16 409 44 – 16 106 29 31 9 – 11 11 44 80 43 – 73 – 22 – 13 1,801 150 578 172 16 128 – 16 136 9 7 249 – – 36 31 15 – – – 80 34 12 – – – 59 – – – 27 439 30 114 – Total Bakery products ..................................... Bread, cake, and related products ..... Cookies and crackers ......................... Frozen bakery products, except bread ................................................ Sugar and confectionery products .......... Raw cane sugar ................................. Candy and other confectionery products ............................................ Chewing gum ..................................... Fats and oils ........................................... Beverages .............................................. Malt beverages ................................... Wines, brandy, and brandy spirits ...... Bottled and canned soft drinks ........... Flavoring extracts and syrups, n.e.c. ................................................ Miscellaneous food and kindred products ................................................ Canned and cured fish and seafoods ........................................... Fresh or frozen prepared fish ............. Roasted coffee ................................... Potato chips and similar snacks ......... 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 ........................... Textile finishing, except wool .................. Finishing plants, cotton ....................... Carpets and rugs .................................... Yarn and thread mills ............................. Yarn spinning mills ............................. Throwing and winding mills ................ Miscellaneous textile goods ................... Coated fabrics, not rubberized ........... Tire cord and fabrics ........................... Nonwoven fabrics ............................... 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’ shirts ........................ Men’s and boys’ underwear and nightwear .......................................... Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............................................... Men’s and boys’ work clothing ........... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 91 198 97 – – 143 104 31 By person Total 32 32 16 16 16 16 All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – 736 542 150 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 234 29 – – – – – – – – – – – – 116 7 90 836 55 149 539 – – 62 – – 257 15 49 186 35 13 92 206 35 – 78 – – – 318 11 – 268 – – – – – – – – – – 63 – – – – 550 – – – – – – – 24 – – – – 104 – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 26 144 – 93 200 97 73 603 11 130 – 105 31 23 8 – 84 – 80 71 31 16 88 – 10 – 18 960 48 226 – 17 – – – – – 16 21 – – – – – – – – 241 105 See footnotes at end of table. Page 16 – – Fires and explosions – 145 – 82 – 88 66 176 150 – Assaults and violent acts 49 184 – 87 – 30 – 17 – 62 – – – 7 – – – – – – 10 – – – 11 7 – – 66 – – 44 – – 51 13 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 37 42 6 15 16 25 6 51 53 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Women’s and misses’ outerwear ........... Women’s, junior’s, and misses’ dresses ............................................. Women’s and misses’ suits and coats ................................................. Women’s and misses’ outerwear, n.e.c. ................................................ Hats, caps, and millinery ........................ Girls’ and children’s outerwear ............... Girls’ and children’s outerwear, n.e.c. ................................................ Miscellaneous apparel and accessories .......................................... Apparel and accessories, n.e.c. ........ Miscellaneous fabricated textile products ................................................ Curtains and draperies ....................... Housefurnishings, n.e.c. .................... Canvas and related products ............. 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 ............................................ 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 .................................. Book printing ...................................... Miscellaneous publishing ....................... Commercial printing ............................... Commercial printing, lithographic ....... Commercial printing, n.e.c. ................ Manifold business forms ......................... Greeting cards ........................................ Blankbooks and bookbinding ................. Blankbooks and looseleaf binders ...... Bookbinding and related work ............ 233 2335 1,287 – 462 – Struck by object 258 – Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 125 75 – – Fall to lower level Fall on same level 62 – 122 – Slips or trips without fall – – 2337 167 59 20 32 8 13 10 – 2339 235 236 961 303 324 73 – 172 38 13 86 12 13 63 24 45 15 – 98 13 12 – – – 10 13 – 6 10 – 15 – – – 2369 101 27 238 2389 439 210 159 – 239 2391 2392 2394 2396 2399 26 262 263 265 2653 3,366 348 627 434 982 435 12,338 2,037 1,025 4,382 2,992 1,015 125 261 123 319 112 4,824 597 362 1,892 1,202 328 26 145 43 75 26 1,519 188 147 639 428 2655 2657 368 629 182 316 68 77 267 4,790 1,950 2671 2672 403 669 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2679 27 271 272 273 2731 2732 274 275 2752 2759 276 277 278 2782 2789 821 268 569 562 524 862 22,210 6,833 661 1,806 921 885 735 9,578 6,521 2,682 609 223 1,328 504 823 64 – 53 – – 40 – 363 57 46 – 180 43 862 109 62 327 196 296 40 60 – 60 41 2,078 234 101 795 480 73 84 136 532 364 942 167 230 33 75 28 52 99 81 329 111 213 240 266 365 7,173 1,627 136 409 176 233 124 3,734 2,562 1,052 234 54 697 168 528 107 37 – 63 58 110 2,108 528 43 100 64 35 51 1,199 879 295 – 12 78 53 – 72 132 70 125 110 160 151 2,923 535 33 154 39 116 48 1,486 1,017 418 123 18 466 73 393 See footnotes at end of table. Page 17 – – – 50 39 87 1,801 475 50 139 72 67 24 846 489 315 83 23 128 38 – 11 – – 61 7 33 – – 10 425 100 – 197 181 – 312 17 68 67 97 53 868 152 89 357 270 – 17 – – – – – 324 76 18 98 78 – – 14 15 91 254 126 14 26 25 28 24 – 21 – – 40 – – 14 – 14 802 358 9 118 112 – 12 235 166 60 – 14 – 15 – 19 26 41 2,042 969 81 115 45 70 119 658 490 142 30 9 – – – – – – 26 – 23 566 216 22 41 18 23 43 197 153 33 – – – – – 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Women’s and misses’ outerwear ........... Women’s, junior’s, and misses’ dresses ............................................. Women’s and misses’ suits and coats ................................................. Women’s and misses’ outerwear, n.e.c. ................................................ Hats, caps, and millinery ........................ Girls’ and children’s outerwear ............... Girls’ and children’s outerwear, n.e.c. ................................................ Miscellaneous apparel and accessories .......................................... Apparel and accessories, n.e.c. ........ Miscellaneous fabricated textile products ................................................ Curtains and draperies ....................... Housefurnishings, n.e.c. .................... Canvas and related products ............. 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 ............................................ 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 .................................. Book printing ...................................... Miscellaneous publishing ....................... Commercial printing ............................... Commercial printing, lithographic ....... Commercial printing, n.e.c. ................ Manifold business forms ......................... Greeting cards ........................................ Blankbooks and bookbinding ................. Blankbooks and looseleaf binders ...... Bookbinding and related work ............ 242 18 In lifting Repetitive motion 123 206 – Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 – – – – – – 172 – – – – – – 17 53 35 15 – – – – – – 17 155 56 – 71 28 – 185 82 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 138 59 14 32 – 7 – – – – – 11 106 – – – – – – – – – – 601 52 58 43 137 105 766 146 – 242 93 249 – 25 – 192 22 386 108 73 81 55 – – 75 – 653 103 93 154 159 81 3,252 586 314 1,031 723 75 138 43 – 315 71 54 45 77 46 1,553 200 181 445 348 – 5 12 52 68 18 1,294 712 362 117 108 249 73 142 236 55 140 133 102 243 6,245 1,871 233 580 251 329 273 2,693 1,832 702 173 74 256 105 151 156 – – 60 77 93 3,624 942 126 455 186 269 140 1,585 1,127 407 91 49 163 47 116 – 13 31 27 34 12 20 – 93 38 83 44 1,633 392 53 329 184 145 55 545 339 188 58 38 120 61 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 18 – – – 60 – 10 – – – – – – – 35 7 – – 18 15 7 – – – – 20 – – – 18 – 272 41 – 70 57 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 17 18 119 – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 38 – – 26 17 – – 9 447 77 26 37 – – 26 234 131 98 – – – – – 32 794 449 14 44 43 – 14 185 117 61 – – – – – – – – – – 16 – – 35 52 – – – – – – 106 36 – 49 32 91 2,423 841 82 132 61 71 69 1,059 706 336 53 30 148 132 – – – – – – 31 25 – – – – – – 48 454 61 26 31 25 – – – – – – – – 77 35 361 24 69 18 38 39 1,187 224 94 409 328 16 – 16 – – – – – – 18 18 16 52 – 16 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Printing trade services ............................ Typesetting ......................................... Platemaking services ......................... Chemicals and allied products ................... Industrial inorganic chemicals ................ Inorganic pigments ............................. Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ................................................ Plastics materials and synthetics ........... Plastics materials and resins .............. Synthetic rubber ................................. Organic fibers, noncellulosic .............. Drugs ...................................................... Pharmaceutical preparations .............. Soap, cleaners, and toilet goods ............ Soap and other detergents ................. Polishes and sanitation goods ............ Toilet preparations .............................. Paints and allied products ...................... Industrial organic chemicals ................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. ... Agricultural chemicals ............................ Agricultural chemicals, n.e.c. ............. Miscellaneous chemical products ........... Adhesives and sealants ..................... Printing ink .......................................... Chemical preparations, n.e.c. ............ Petroleum and coal products ...................... Petroleum refining .................................. Asphalt paving and roofing materials ..... Asphalt paving mixtures and blocks ... Asphalt felts and coatings .................. Miscellaneous petroleum and coal products ................................................ Lubricating oils and greases ............... 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 61 1,271 286 – 2819 282 2821 2822 2824 283 2834 284 2841 2842 2844 285 286 2869 287 2879 289 2891 2893 2899 29 291 295 2951 2952 611 1,379 709 218 383 2,505 2,100 1,942 529 293 1,044 931 1,183 699 603 131 1,878 420 352 904 1,446 610 497 317 179 114 343 174 – 109 618 534 449 88 68 288 255 202 163 122 28 389 62 113 147 326 127 132 78 54 85 196 134 17 42 257 220 140 39 – 81 102 81 78 – – 164 47 – – 117 53 – – 12 299 2992 339 277 – – – – 30 301 28,126 1,977 9,021 617 3,768 318 2,076 78 2,586 216 759 33 2,322 102 762 28 305 1,526 475 187 152 105 32 135 20 3052 698 258 128 47 67 35 9 3053 306 3061 3069 828 3,054 1,696 1,358 217 979 515 464 59 380 216 164 104 316 114 202 38 237 151 87 30 68 49 18 100 205 104 102 12 69 31 38 308 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 21,529 1,537 949 746 884 964 2,026 6,937 629 328 230 352 282 785 2,881 229 108 109 181 – 390 1,527 105 90 40 43 73 138 2,022 255 114 51 124 145 190 626 28 – 16 51 – 66 1,877 104 124 51 60 137 184 645 39 18 17 20 – 47 Page 19 – 53 754 – – – – – 502 78 – 17 – – 1,191 90 – 37 50 41 67 156 93 – 45 284 257 237 78 – 116 70 91 69 62 – 202 – – 120 102 42 14 – – – – Slips or trips without fall 160 – 137 2,728 350 – 18 40 12 59 Fall on same level 438 83 355 11,596 1,175 199 – – – – 541 – – Fall to lower level 279 2791 2796 28 281 2816 See footnotes at end of table. 68 Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 11 96 – – – 17 110 105 118 30 – 72 66 58 58 17 – 92 – – – 119 66 37 – – 47 207 181 149 19 – 104 81 52 17 19 12 130 – – – 75 – 69 – 19 – – 123 98 76 10 – 58 – 44 – 103 – – – – – 56 40 – – – – – – – – – – 17 11 – 400 17 – 15 68 – – 26 76 61 87 38 – 33 18 62 37 – – 69 55 – – 58 – – – – – – 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total Printing trade services ............................ Typesetting ......................................... Platemaking services ......................... Chemicals and allied products ................... Industrial inorganic chemicals ................ Inorganic pigments ............................. Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ................................................ Plastics materials and synthetics ........... Plastics materials and resins .............. Synthetic rubber ................................. Organic fibers, noncellulosic .............. Drugs ...................................................... Pharmaceutical preparations .............. Soap, cleaners, and toilet goods ............ Soap and other detergents ................. Polishes and sanitation goods ............ Toilet preparations .............................. Paints and allied products ...................... Industrial organic chemicals ................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. ... Agricultural chemicals ............................ Agricultural chemicals, n.e.c. ............. Miscellaneous chemical products ........... Adhesives and sealants ..................... Printing ink .......................................... Chemical preparations, n.e.c. ............ Petroleum and coal products ...................... Petroleum refining .................................. Asphalt paving and roofing materials ..... Asphalt paving mixtures and blocks ... Asphalt felts and coatings .................. Miscellaneous petroleum and coal products ................................................ Lubricating oils and greases ............... 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 ....................... In lifting Repetitive motion 72 Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 91 17 75 2,858 257 – 63 1,599 192 – 19 760 18 – – – – 1,183 120 – 105 341 186 – 73 557 464 457 103 73 261 324 415 143 – 17 459 127 87 183 242 77 108 63 45 63 166 70 – 32 240 218 226 32 – 147 213 275 77 – 9 260 – – 135 102 – 46 – – 13 104 29 19 44 258 204 142 50 – 67 – 94 81 – 14 93 19 – – 17 13 – – – 112 96 61 – 20 190 147 255 78 – 107 47 139 62 – 19 286 66 – 193 316 138 97 66 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 43 – 66 – 66 428 93 – 68 48 28 – 8 62 61 74 – – 43 95 – 9 – 11 – – – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – 101 – – 32 – – – 23 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 17 – – – – – 1,422 117 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 140 – – – – 3,088 235 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 14 14 14 14 12 12 7,945 703 4,230 295 2,363 113 1,295 107 427 186 112 102 – – – – – 213 178 57 60 77 – – – – – 73 249 939 506 433 129 443 248 195 52 267 148 119 25 214 153 61 – – – – – – – – – – – – 140 233 115 118 5,861 410 295 252 260 240 527 3,292 219 174 80 124 191 247 1,863 40 61 48 30 – 69 871 48 37 19 36 – 70 270 22 – – – – 52 135 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 20 71 65 49 – – – – – All other events5 46 170 87 – 51 315 259 165 62 – 71 87 117 101 135 34 316 – – 220 234 126 63 – – 76 383 35 Total All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 57 By person 19 – 9 9 – 38 – – – – – – 9 9 30 30 2,407 211 59 106 49 143 222 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,1999 — 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 of freight, n.e.c. .... Water transportation services ................. Transportation by air .................................. Air transportation, scheduled .................. Air transportation, nonscheduled ............ Airports, flying fields, and services ......... Transportation services .............................. Freight transportation arrangement ........ Miscellaneous transportation services ... Communications ......................................... Telephone communications ................... Cable and other pay television services ................................................ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ............ Electric services ..................................... Gas production and distribution .............. Combination utility services .................... Water supply .......................................... Sanitary services .................................... Struck against object Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 3087 3088 3089 31 311 314 3143 1,081 1,009 12,335 1,200 331 501 – 245 286 3,800 363 125 118 – 92 156 1,577 128 – 38 – 80 93 867 98 42 39 – 53 – 1,084 108 – 41 – 13 – 405 33 – 19 – 106 – 1,068 129 46 50 18 17 418 26 – 18 – 40 41 411 412 413 414 415 42 196,725 5,790 12,944 8,630 564 744 634 2,345 65,682 42,143 1,030 1,466 996 55 134 51 224 15,797 21,467 470 634 457 36 70 20 49 8,529 11,766 360 498 313 15 38 17 115 3,746 5,931 81 117 73 – 19 – 16 2,282 13,458 1,177 523 258 – 39 73 147 5,629 18,518 126 1,406 806 43 88 84 382 5,763 7,243 – 414 211 – 42 19 132 2,624 421 422 44 444 449 45 451 452 458 47 473 478 48 481 60,331 4,866 6,420 798 4,956 67,736 63,319 714 3,704 5,491 3,610 1,329 17,743 13,137 14,483 1,236 2,127 127 1,821 14,494 13,553 – 855 1,659 1,196 432 2,470 1,746 7,917 593 1,145 – 1,018 7,370 6,941 – 388 798 534 248 926 637 3,386 324 534 – 446 4,223 3,981 – 217 506 420 78 1,116 831 2,059 209 343 – 281 2,080 1,877 – 186 316 233 79 195 150 5,388 219 504 – 429 2,519 2,066 142 311 218 125 75 1,812 1,039 5,395 353 671 – 562 5,953 5,499 141 313 796 484 174 2,295 1,624 2,495 123 325 – 217 2,286 2,162 – 103 89 54 – 845 692 484 49 491 492 493 494 495 3,299 14,612 3,744 1,745 2,336 753 5,989 536 3,020 780 306 478 102 1,329 198 1,515 298 96 365 – 693 234 783 241 136 95 – 297 – 517 213 22 9 – 233 628 1,001 258 135 329 – 254 377 1,509 384 252 242 – 582 126 648 153 112 83 – 289 427,757 118,779 65,180 31,063 15,186 20,974 59,503 15,075 50 501 502 503 136,110 67,176 12,291 3,001 7,576 35,349 19,989 3,258 1,011 2,314 18,089 10,512 1,833 663 1,398 8,653 4,485 863 99 457 6,308 3,390 181 192 350 8,521 4,412 912 112 486 12,160 5,567 1,146 285 815 4,287 1,563 174 – 176 504 505 506 9,587 4,011 4,648 1,606 1,778 1,262 809 844 641 182 450 333 385 336 176 291 287 272 1,040 282 260 309 95 79 507 508 5,474 14,297 1,154 5,300 529 2,639 354 1,336 219 1,056 575 1,048 333 859 119 414 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 ............................................. Machinery, equipment, and supplies ...... Struck by object Caught in or compressed or crushed 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,1999 — 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 308 358 3,210 280 100 104 – 204 164 1,889 134 – 51 – 116 142 1,301 210 – 121 – 77 – 554 32 – 7 – – – – – – 127 – – – – 55,937 939 4,200 3,437 128 212 116 302 16,195 29,824 – 2,695 2,374 98 69 98 53 8,130 5,553 124 109 56 – 20 – 29 1,188 6,771 205 273 159 – – – 77 1,832 18,157 735 2,802 1,558 229 79 219 713 8,025 268 – – 18 – – – – 100 1,098 65 297 161 54 – 13 41 173 674 64 278 144 54 – 13 38 93 423 – 20 17 – – – – 80 27,580 1,389 1,432 969 38 77 54 294 8,356 14,546 1,407 1,100 225 719 25,473 24,468 191 815 1,247 860 301 3,127 2,312 7,099 936 301 – 173 14,617 13,969 150 497 616 412 137 1,513 1,110 997 191 84 – 55 1,731 1,629 – 93 263 118 62 1,557 1,359 1,671 118 130 – 107 2,315 2,150 – 148 65 – – 1,188 962 7,528 462 391 – 342 2,931 2,614 – 247 593 398 80 1,751 1,259 100 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 171 – – – – 255 246 – – 17 – – 156 110 91 – – – – 152 151 – – 16 – – 58 32 80 – – – – 103 95 – – – – – 98 79 7,557 754 1,053 221 701 9,764 8,922 – 811 540 341 143 2,531 2,024 539 3,585 892 335 449 147 1,761 235 1,953 420 114 175 – 1,182 139 496 154 65 135 – 68 196 754 244 22 75 231 182 344 918 186 125 81 – 506 – – 132 30 16 47 – 32 – 19 120 29 15 42 – 28 389 2,466 634 345 397 108 981 Wholesale and retail trade ........................... 116,585 76,773 11,694 18,195 18,083 1,019 4,072 2,924 1,148 43,778 42,014 18,949 3,277 977 2,780 26,032 11,601 2,029 701 1,796 4,330 1,945 342 176 – 3,931 2,029 622 – – 8,974 4,655 1,531 196 308 241 111 – – – 593 147 – – – 135 – – – – 459 87 – – – 15,708 7,810 1,007 197 569 2,542 986 1,345 1,745 564 968 328 – 228 184 – 144 1,018 167 372 – – – – – – – – – – – – 2,262 286 672 1,748 4,030 1,154 2,064 148 299 142 617 434 348 – – – – – – – – 818 1,314 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 of freight, n.e.c. .... Water transportation services ................. Transportation by air .................................. Air transportation, scheduled .................. Air transportation, nonscheduled ............ Airports, flying fields, and services ......... Transportation services .............................. Freight transportation arrangement ........ Miscellaneous transportation services ... Communications ......................................... Telephone communications ................... Cable and other pay television services ................................................ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ............ Electric services ..................................... Gas production and distribution .............. Combination utility services .................... Water supply .......................................... Sanitary services .................................... 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 ............................................. Machinery, equipment, and supplies ...... See footnotes at end of table. Page 22 50 – 69 13 83 28 32 19 – – Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 11 – – – – – All other events5 145 113 1,358 114 – 60 – TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total 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 ........................................ Meat and fish markets ............................ Fruit and vegetable markets ................... Retail bakeries ........................................ Miscellaneous food stores ...................... Automotive dealers and service stations .... New and used car dealers ...................... Used car dealers .................................... Auto and home supply stores ................. Gasoline service stations ....................... Boat dealers ........................................... Recreational vehicle dealers .................. Motorcycle dealers ................................. Apparel and accessory stores .................... 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 509 51 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 6,292 68,934 3,508 4,049 1,636 37,717 2,187 2,144 2,610 5,534 9,549 2,305 15,361 819 866 312 8,914 433 335 538 1,099 2,045 1,157 7,577 336 442 154 4,244 221 173 167 670 1,169 410 4,168 219 254 116 2,628 83 – 220 220 367 493 2,918 194 127 – 1,687 – – 112 174 418 429 4,109 262 198 122 2,044 398 137 171 170 607 546 6,594 298 505 226 3,687 – 192 327 355 957 163 2,723 99 236 36 1,516 – – 290 203 306 52 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 533 291,647 20,910 15,922 885 1,630 1,583 890 48,708 44,794 1,765 83,430 6,714 5,179 427 490 354 264 14,228 13,316 361 47,091 4,048 3,322 236 295 156 – 8,696 8,076 235 22,410 1,427 1,126 147 57 77 – 3,706 3,485 89 8,878 830 476 – 41 72 195 1,354 1,297 – 12,453 1,385 998 – 208 96 – 2,447 2,211 61 47,343 1,560 1,193 – 91 206 – 7,222 6,725 204 10,788 768 651 – – – – 996 931 – 539 54 541 542 543 546 549 55 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 56 561 562 564 565 566 2,148 60,440 56,580 819 244 1,811 812 36,498 17,203 789 8,970 7,748 499 732 305 7,621 178 1,095 297 4,036 1,494 551 20,199 18,565 – – 760 213 9,999 4,900 272 3,386 1,111 147 – – 2,123 78 390 – 1,122 256 386 10,529 9,566 – 17 622 160 5,681 2,625 – 2,277 554 – – – 1,284 – 300 – 572 213 133 6,328 5,806 – – – – 2,242 1,177 – 643 287 – – – 576 – 62 – 445 – – 2,556 2,411 – – – – 909 371 – 310 170 – – – 161 – – – 53 – 175 1,480 1,293 – 16 – – 1,536 542 – 332 385 – 216 – 677 38 68 – 331 123 293 7,551 6,962 – – 367 – 4,370 2,199 – 381 1,612 94 – – 1,257 – 161 – 680 317 – 2,302 2,001 – 17 – 169 1,592 865 – 159 489 – – – 219 – – – 134 – 569 57 571 572 573 58 59 591 592 593 594 310 14,869 10,467 1,508 2,894 76,919 25,682 4,355 1,062 1,836 6,989 75 3,569 2,712 155 702 21,191 5,408 867 – 399 1,915 42 2,069 1,636 83 350 11,689 3,097 529 – 228 1,247 – 729 583 51 95 5,996 1,407 151 – 136 329 – 241 172 – 56 2,252 575 128 – – 186 44 921 717 92 112 1,986 2,020 318 – – 610 52 1,254 969 – 249 20,931 3,198 544 – 109 742 – 709 521 – 164 3,542 659 109 – – 178 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,1999 — 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 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 ........... 1,266 23,065 1,140 1,205 629 13,478 362 620 723 2,635 2,271 581 14,431 792 800 453 8,311 185 473 378 1,481 1,557 316 2,385 184 359 59 1,025 155 – – 82 419 189 1,902 – – – 699 213 403 – 39 419 281 4,319 181 266 68 2,260 141 165 114 309 816 – 131 – – – – – – – – 82 – 446 – – – 225 107 – – 18 – 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 ........................................ Meat and fish markets ............................ Fruit and vegetable markets ................... Retail bakeries ........................................ Miscellaneous food stores ...................... Automotive dealers and service stations .... New and used car dealers ...................... Used car dealers .................................... Auto and home supply stores ................. Gasoline service stations ....................... Boat dealers ........................................... Recreational vehicle dealers .................. Motorcycle dealers ................................. Apparel and accessory stores .................... 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 ... 74,571 6,554 5,051 198 548 449 308 15,118 13,830 404 50,741 4,523 3,290 177 433 346 277 10,037 9,079 233 7,364 363 258 – 15 72 – 1,379 1,271 72 14,264 677 527 – 33 67 – 1,199 1,170 18 9,109 609 485 – 33 – – 590 554 – 778 – – – – – – – – – 3,478 103 – – 55 – – 419 401 – 2,789 – – – – – – 288 279 – 884 18,514 17,920 – – 178 188 9,023 3,940 – 2,450 2,190 89 163 – 1,605 – 165 – 910 405 725 12,674 12,303 – – – – 5,642 2,071 – 1,697 1,585 – 116 – 1,096 – 90 – 527 381 – 2,633 2,592 – – – – 604 245 218 93 48 – – – 161 – – – 125 – – 1,153 915 – – – – 1,428 712 – 194 450 – – – 226 – – – 91 – – 908 811 – 17 – – 2,801 1,532 – 796 295 – – – 89 – – – 49 – – – – – – – – 498 87 – 199 – – – – 94 – – – – – – 700 689 – – – – 323 – – – 269 – – – 158 – 92 – 27 – – 631 621 – – – – 264 – – – 220 – – – 158 – 92 – 27 – – – – – – – – – 5,448 3,733 628 1,087 10,887 7,422 1,317 – 995 1,714 – 3,102 2,244 332 527 8,617 5,050 904 – 788 1,248 14 204 167 – – 766 1,254 252 – – 317 – 112 92 – – 8,657 811 81 – – 123 – 774 435 220 119 2,161 1,178 165 – 102 215 – – 118 – 59 – 1,372 285 137 – – 57 – – – – – 1,164 212 137 – – 57 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 24 66 – – 66 – 96 – – – – Total By person – 74 – – – – – – – 18 – All other assaults All other events5 – 372 – – – 217 97 – – – – 685 7,898 461 354 164 3,870 305 213 329 624 1,579 689 59 – – 53 – – 131 123 – 28,069 2,167 1,524 – 136 262 214 5,110 4,384 584 59 – – – 49 – – – – – – – – – 90 – 59 – 208 73 – – – – 142 4,986 4,819 – – – – 4,324 2,138 – 972 883 – 170 – 1,012 – 144 – 568 189 61 1,694 1,088 274 331 5,426 3,351 566 – 97 1,117 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,1999 — 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 4,907 2,486 4,046 947 341 765 424 119 398 302 184 300 162 – – 273 484 232 852 372 555 136 151 – 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 ................ Insurance carriers ....................................... Life insurance ......................................... Medical service and health insurance .... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ..... Pension, health, and welfare funds ........ Insurance agents, brokers, and service ..... Real estate ................................................. Real estate operators and lessors .......... Real estate agents and managers ......... Subdividers and developers ................... Holding and other investment offices ......... 60 601 602 603 606 609 61 615 616 62 63 631 632 633 637 64 65 651 653 655 67 39,472 8,005 175 4,723 1,631 1,165 221 1,785 430 792 1,753 7,286 1,821 1,960 2,666 109 1,592 18,505 9,439 7,048 1,988 546 7,541 1,308 38 938 – 172 – 170 105 – 369 647 93 136 339 – 134 4,828 2,061 2,095 668 85 4,269 726 14 580 – – – 58 13 – 272 283 27 77 143 – 80 2,770 1,066 1,348 356 81 2,118 462 14 294 – – 15 46 – – 88 229 43 42 120 – 53 1,237 596 437 204 – 649 75 – 37 – – – 56 50 – – 95 15 9 54 – – 415 188 179 44 – 2,611 414 10 302 – – – 66 10 – – 369 76 122 165 – 76 1,626 935 583 107 – 6,590 1,850 20 999 – 188 – 285 66 – 406 1,121 296 388 299 14 283 2,470 1,323 888 243 174 1,134 235 6 155 – – – 55 45 – – 187 34 63 75 – – 589 311 173 105 – 70 701 72 394,922 30,612 29,945 9,326 72,554 7,113 6,947 2,345 38,831 4,124 4,043 1,188 21,175 2,282 2,211 594 7,879 440 440 374 17,510 1,837 1,748 486 56,412 5,566 5,350 952 13,841 1,629 1,629 201 721 722 723 726 729 73 732 733 734 6,612 365 1,264 337 718 55,109 358 1,852 15,642 1,519 76 637 – – 11,309 – 406 2,924 629 – 493 – – 6,287 – 195 1,677 372 42 138 – – 2,626 – 94 664 334 – – – – 1,652 – 117 221 367 – – 82 – 3,291 – – 1,352 694 – 162 – – 7,736 118 180 2,073 192 – – – – 1,900 – 111 929 735 736 6,001 8,610 996 2,363 815 1,198 – 315 – 598 – 446 904 588 – 145 737 738 75 751 752 753 76 762 764 769 78 4,477 17,140 25,350 3,497 747 10,044 6,541 1,673 157 4,706 2,120 649 3,819 8,098 747 63 3,694 2,228 500 68 1,660 305 330 2,060 5,228 348 – 1,941 1,171 214 – 927 118 183 1,180 1,426 213 – 872 540 184 – 346 – 122 465 634 125 – 321 265 50 19 197 65 155 905 1,509 213 – 454 427 115 – 313 240 837 2,896 2,547 507 152 762 491 96 12 383 357 68 561 1,674 97 – 137 98 18 – 80 122 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 ......................... Miscellaneous repair services .................... Electrical repair shops ............................ Reupholstery and furniture repair ........... Miscellaneous repair shops .................... Motion pictures ........................................... See footnotes at end of table. Page 25 TABLE R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 Total In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions All other events5 Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – 34 436 157 – 36 – 110 – – – – – 64 – 22 31 – – 192 153 – – – 326 144 – 28 – 110 – – – – – 60 – 20 30 – – 116 94 – – – 110 13 – – – – – 16 – – – – – – – – – 77 – – – – 5,515 719 15 409 – 154 – 371 36 307 369 1,309 270 282 439 – 255 2,354 1,341 714 299 139 495 52 52 – 13,483 398 397 96 11,896 303 303 86 1,588 95 94 10 41,681 2,936 2,906 911 28 – – – – 1,321 – – 607 18 – – – – 573 – – – 10 – – – – 748 – – 585 676 105 – – – 6,660 – 105 1,793 Nonstore retailers ................................... Fuel dealers ............................................ Retail stores, n.e.c. ................................ 1,417 506 1,043 824 209 675 349 – 247 190 229 153 101 83 476 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 ................ Insurance carriers ....................................... Life insurance ......................................... Medical service and health insurance .... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ..... Pension, health, and welfare funds ........ Insurance agents, brokers, and service ..... Real estate ................................................. Real estate operators and lessors .......... Real estate agents and managers ......... Subdividers and developers ................... Holding and other investment offices ......... 7,754 1,621 46 732 – 388 – 228 – – 366 890 203 280 337 – 315 4,267 2,181 1,677 402 – 4,925 1,297 29 556 – 286 – 177 18 – 294 647 130 204 243 – 298 2,183 1,167 782 228 – 3,906 1,049 36 770 – – 19 286 87 – 138 1,632 377 521 675 – 313 442 276 130 – – 1,439 238 – 208 – – 14 61 19 – – 261 30 71 70 – – 817 351 421 44 – 2,513 414 – 175 – – 67 240 – – – 806 442 75 237 – 152 889 507 330 52 – Services ......................................................... 128,149 Hotels and other lodging places ................. 7,508 Hotels and motels ................................... 7,392 Personal services ....................................... 3,006 Laundry, cleaning, and garment services ................................................ 2,112 Photographic studios, portrait ................. 118 Beauty shops .......................................... – Funeral service and crematories ............ 122 Miscellaneous personal services ............ 584 Business services ....................................... 13,213 Credit reporting and collection ................ 80 Mailing, reproduction, stenographic ....... 411 Services to buildings .............................. 4,270 Miscellaneous equipment rental and leasing .................................................. 1,509 Personnel supply services ...................... 2,811 Computer and data processing services ................................................ 1,371 Miscellaneous business services ........... 2,699 Auto repair, services, and parking .............. 5,087 Automotive rentals, no drivers ................ 861 Automobile parking ................................. 98 Automotive repair shops ......................... 2,196 Miscellaneous repair services .................... 1,556 Electrical repair shops ............................ 374 Reupholstery and furniture repair ........... – Miscellaneous repair shops .................... 1,150 Motion pictures ........................................... 512 69,688 4,838 4,786 1,624 13,529 879 879 579 19,343 2,216 2,192 498 17,925 478 452 248 1,165 39 – – 313 8,210 – 281 1,857 393 – 148 – – 2,461 – 169 294 400 – – – – 2,708 – – 844 227 – – – – 4,446 – 344 500 – – – – – – – – – 1,036 2,124 – 186 – 339 1,126 515 – – – – – – – – 1,004 1,155 1,074 1,725 2,778 576 – 1,191 817 187 – 620 236 699 829 341 40 – 249 179 45 – 130 – 66 1,225 1,191 153 – 734 413 71 – 342 – 111 1,674 2,202 428 151 500 270 145 – 125 – – – – – – – – 644 246 99 79 – 29 – – – 73 – 503 234 98 79 – – – – – 73 – 141 – – – – – – – 16 – 520 1,885 2,367 337 119 1,239 783 281 45 454 405 See footnotes at end of table. Page 26 – 75 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 67 – – 46 – 636 191 401 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Contact with objects Industry2 SIC code3 Total cases Total Amusement and recreation services .......... Producers, orchestras, entertainers ....... Bowling centers ...................................... Commercial sports ................................. Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ................................................ Health services ........................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors .... Offices and clinics of dentists ................. Offices of other health practitioners ........ Nursing and personal care facilities ....... Hospitals ................................................. Medical and dental laboratories ............. Home health care services ..................... Health and allied services, n.e.c. ........... Legal services ............................................ Educational services .................................. Elementary and secondary schools ....... Colleges and universities ....................... Social services ........................................... Individual and family services ................. Job training and related services ............ Child day care services .......................... Social services, n.e.c. ............................ Museums, botanical, zoological gardens ... Museums and art galleries ..................... Botanical and zoological gardens ........... Membership organizations ......................... Business associations ............................ Professional organizations ..................... Labor organizations ................................ Civic and social associations .................. Religious organizations .......................... Membership organizations, n.e.c. ......... Engineering and management services ..... Engineering and architectural services .. Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping .. Research and testing services ............... Management and public relations .......... 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 79 792 793 794 19,365 984 396 2,686 5,252 240 – 757 2,536 138 – 527 1,983 71 – 134 495 24 – 68 798 123 – 64 2,913 90 138 318 802 23 – 79 799 80 801 802 804 805 806 807 808 809 81 82 821 822 83 832 833 835 839 84 841 842 86 861 862 863 864 866 869 87 871 872 873 874 15,266 173,441 7,971 1,316 1,553 64,041 80,169 2,214 12,079 4,099 3,073 9,722 2,820 5,731 38,201 9,084 7,486 3,974 2,230 1,179 725 454 6,258 325 214 356 3,744 511 1,108 14,447 4,053 1,241 3,305 5,847 4,222 21,625 1,018 – – 8,051 10,594 475 834 520 372 2,031 690 1,158 7,650 1,812 2,485 671 227 212 125 87 997 93 – – 698 71 – 2,898 1,077 107 700 1,013 1,862 10,903 638 – – 4,280 4,903 365 354 305 102 1,074 329 639 3,548 927 1,588 349 133 127 74 53 560 68 – – 361 – – 1,864 670 76 388 730 1,760 7,483 320 – – 2,820 3,718 90 286 182 127 579 193 322 2,366 796 393 270 – 53 28 25 349 – – – 272 – – 617 229 – 194 176 399 2,311 – – – 703 1,486 – 80 – – 152 44 106 1,213 – 120 – – 11 6 – 44 – – – 34 – – 213 – – 55 95 585 3,766 210 – – 533 1,947 106 743 205 208 814 171 558 2,499 510 620 224 180 95 75 21 543 – – – 217 – 265 993 212 159 284 339 2,355 23,843 1,243 – 159 9,648 9,931 246 1,797 709 676 1,751 531 956 5,792 1,518 1,043 1,173 323 242 189 53 1,146 – 48 – 712 135 – 2,397 633 98 394 1,272 690 4,829 448 – – 1,465 2,513 19 271 106 232 376 80 228 1,329 264 149 219 – 26 22 – 204 – – – 172 – – 417 161 – 60 187 See footnotes at end of table. Page 27 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,1999 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness4 Overexertion Industry2 In lifting Repetitive motion 3,776 163 82 435 2,199 81 – 162 561 48 – 51 1,262 16 – 124 584 26 – 44 3,095 76,869 1,711 – 680 31,289 36,875 297 4,790 1,154 441 2,336 541 1,519 9,382 2,063 1,727 819 425 244 123 121 985 – 40 – 612 139 – 3,214 892 364 742 1,216 1,917 39,572 758 – 338 17,202 17,989 154 2,509 561 264 1,210 254 776 5,037 1,062 1,026 586 302 168 93 75 724 – – – 446 99 – 1,999 627 171 410 792 462 5,394 1,102 – 203 940 2,348 150 146 138 459 299 – 219 1,078 570 100 – 114 36 16 20 180 – 19 – 93 – – 1,028 183 207 238 399 1,113 7,958 257 – – 2,651 3,948 110 323 203 245 416 97 271 1,300 277 163 85 – 75 33 42 413 – 20 – 250 – – 617 180 105 174 158 515 4,050 147 – – 182 850 639 1,828 352 – 399 67 205 3,174 844 346 – 576 16 – 12 582 76 – – 367 – – 1,380 417 94 295 574 Total Amusement and recreation services .......... Producers, orchestras, entertainers ....... Bowling centers ...................................... Commercial sports ................................. Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ................................................ Health services ........................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors .... Offices and clinics of dentists ................. Offices of other health practitioners ........ Nursing and personal care facilities ....... Hospitals ................................................. Medical and dental laboratories ............. Home health care services ..................... Health and allied services, n.e.c. ........... Legal services ............................................ Educational services .................................. Elementary and secondary schools ....... Colleges and universities ....................... Social services ........................................... Individual and family services ................. Job training and related services ............ Child day care services .......................... Social services, n.e.c. ............................ Museums, botanical, zoological gardens ... Museums and art galleries ..................... Botanical and zoological gardens ........... Membership organizations ......................... Business associations ............................ Professional organizations ..................... Labor organizations ................................ Civic and social associations .................. Religious organizations .......................... Membership organizations, n.e.c. ......... Engineering and management services ..... Engineering and architectural services .. Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping .. Research and testing services ............... Management and public relations .......... Exposure to Transharmful portation subaccistance dents or environment 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 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person All other assaults All other events5 29 213 – – 107 106 – – 38 107 – – 69 3,174 254 86 701 – 155 – – – – 86 – – – – 15 – 13 – – – – – 6 – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – 86 7,491 202 – – 3,859 2,637 82 302 391 – 335 291 27 2,871 362 443 – – 30 9 20 204 – – – 66 – – 163 57 – – 100 48 7,205 155 – – 3,783 2,576 82 210 381 – 319 287 19 2,838 350 443 – – – – – 49 – – – 34 – – 97 – – – 92 38 286 46 – – – 61 – 92 – – 16 – 8 – – – – – 26 8 18 155 – – – 31 – – 66 57 – – – 2,118 17,461 1,633 – 305 5,359 8,441 89 1,042 316 375 950 323 576 3,116 853 408 701 256 197 129 68 1,004 – 52 – 558 77 192 1,334 242 100 404 588 – – – 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
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