Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Private industry 5 ............................................... 1,880,525 492,939 Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 5 ........................ Agricultural production 5 ............................................ Agricultural production--crops 5 ............................. Field crops, except cash grains 5 ...................... Vegetables and melons 5 .................................. Fruits and tree nuts 5 ......................................... Horticultural specialties 5 ................................... Agricultural production--livestock 5 ........................ Livestock, except dairy and poultry 5 ................. Dairy farms 5 ...................................................... Poultry and eggs 5 ............................................. Animal specialties 5 ........................................... Agricultural services .............................................. Crop services ..................................................... Veterinary services ............................................ Animal services, except veterinary .................... Landscape and horticultural services ................ Forestry ................................................................. Timber tracts ...................................................... Forestry services ............................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping ............................... 01-02 01 013 016 017 018 02 021 024 025 027 07 072 074 075 078 08 081 085 09 Mining 6 .................................................................... Metal mining 6 ........................................................ Iron ores 6 .......................................................... Copper ores 6 .................................................... Lead and zinc ores 6 .......................................... Gold and silver ores 6 ........................................ Ferroalloy ores, except vanadium 6 ................... Miscellaneous metal ores 6 ............................... Coal mining 6 ......................................................... Bituminous coal and lignite mining 6 .................. Anthracite mining 6 ............................................ Oil and gas extraction ............................................ Crude petroleum and natural gas ...................... Oil and gas field services ................................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels 6 ..................... Dimension stone 6 ............................................. Crushed and broken stone 6 .............................. Sand and gravel 6 .............................................. Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals 6 ........... Chemical and fertilizer minerals 6 ...................... Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals 6 ............... 10 101 102 103 104 106 109 12 122 123 13 131 138 14 141 142 144 145 147 149 Construction ............................................................ General building contractors .................................. Residential building construction ....................... Operative builders ............................................. Nonresidential building construction .................. Heavy construction, except building ...................... 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 .............................................. 15 152 153 154 16 161 162 17 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 238,934 127,481 79,984 98,544 219,416 59,328 38,256 12,139 5,600 3,573 1,583 2,890 3,566 1,047 17,098 11,376 1,173 1,185 3,090 3,712 5,722 2,090 1,605 1,719 282 20,435 2,535 1,499 736 11,964 494 154 280 229 5,541 3,598 555 396 679 897 1,942 844 545 448 83 6,352 791 150 77 4,412 176 65 – 71 2,771 1,731 355 205 333 492 1,040 509 295 188 30 2,625 334 – – 1,781 157 60 – 47 1,277 894 84 115 217 170 384 188 – 113 24 2,279 129 – 38 1,753 – – – – 639 351 – 65 66 129 288 51 112 100 – 930 251 – – 579 – – – – 1,626 1,324 100 60 886 197 302 148 – 107 32 1,212 145 – 54 563 – – – – 1,771 1,002 – 192 191 528 769 234 204 283 48 1,733 197 105 69 1,092 – – – – 506 377 – – 209 82 129 61 – 49 – 514 84 – – 222 18 – – – 15,091 6,514 3,243 1,344 1,703 1,510 1,143 130 824 207 146 70 328 16 57 5,301 5,185 116 6,068 741 5,227 2,899 157 1,448 784 185 194 131 303 51 69 24 135 – 21 2,446 2,405 41 2,653 316 2,336 1,112 78 533 316 64 78 43 143 19 23 11 76 – 12 1,299 1,277 22 1,274 268 1,006 527 51 240 155 29 33 19 103 19 28 12 39 – – 631 617 14 322 – 301 288 6 159 83 13 19 8 55 12 18 75 20 17 64 18 10 6 417 406 11 426 56 362 236 11 116 63 17 20 9 – – – – – – – – – – 130 – 103 – – – – – – – 182,334 59,993 32,619 37,161 18,865 383 17,913 24,778 7,141 17,637 120,396 25,586 5,268 19,908 20,022 8,721 11,757 9,120 615 13,380 6,967 125 6,289 8,723 2,279 6,444 37,889 7,777 1,024 5,436 6,662 3,658 2,777 3,229 196 7,545 4,108 89 3,347 5,382 1,497 3,885 19,692 3,805 471 2,394 4,007 1,812 1,325 1,940 106 See footnotes at end of table. Page 1 – – – 19 28 5 489 484 5 865 – 840 294 21 133 78 21 25 16 – – 408 387 21 643 20 623 384 15 193 116 19 24 17 13,711 6,246 21,382 14,551 5,368 3,179 1,582 – 1,570 1,389 407 982 9,143 2,092 269 1,618 1,427 766 855 593 – 1,156 504 – 647 1,292 225 1,067 3,798 599 123 624 389 395 264 345 56 4,670 2,707 – 1,932 1,966 506 1,460 14,746 2,809 1,162 2,583 2,547 967 2,535 681 58 2,860 1,332 – 1,502 2,231 633 1,598 9,460 1,879 262 1,142 2,298 440 972 908 – 994 235 19 739 915 184 731 3,459 761 77 449 625 298 427 180 73 – 26 – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Total Private industry 5 ............................................... 526,594 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions In lifting Repetitive motion 311,851 73,796 87,164 77,617 4,146 24,241 18,538 5,703 216,740 123 2,080 73 2,007 4,610 68 622 56 – – – – 566 159 365 35 – 1,456 78 859 370 110 – – – – 51 19 571 – – – – – 533 156 365 – – 1,434 78 859 370 88 – – – – 2,146 1,610 107 159 486 505 537 129 112 256 36 2,304 408 – 60 882 132 58 – – 5 672 Total By person All other assaults All other events 8 Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 5 ........................ 7,315 4,177 497 2,020 1,970 Agricultural production 5 ............................................ Agricultural production--crops 5 ............................. Field crops, except cash grains 5 ...................... Vegetables and melons 5 .................................. Fruits and tree nuts 5 ......................................... Horticultural specialties 5 ................................... Agricultural production--livestock 5 ........................ Livestock, except dairy and poultry 5 ................. Dairy farms 5 ...................................................... Poultry and eggs 5 ............................................. Animal specialties 5 ........................................... Agricultural services .............................................. Crop services ..................................................... Veterinary services ............................................ Animal services, except veterinary .................... Landscape and horticultural services ................ Forestry ................................................................. Timber tracts ...................................................... Forestry services ............................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping ............................... 2,866 1,985 159 202 265 1,154 882 263 195 394 30 4,373 417 268 68 3,073 – – – 46 1,646 1,236 100 147 149 801 411 125 76 206 – 2,504 334 215 – 1,526 – – – – 188 131 – – – – 56 – – 26 – 305 – – 19 221 – – – – 835 572 57 – 92 84 263 155 – 48 28 1,160 252 – – 768 – – – 11 929 705 64 103 224 222 224 67 78 62 16 971 80 – – 610 69 – – – – – – – – – – – Mining 6 .................................................................... 3,918 1,527 76 557 441 120 Metal mining 6 ........................................................ Iron ores 6 .......................................................... Copper ores 6 .................................................... Lead and zinc ores 6 .......................................... Gold and silver ores 6 ........................................ Ferroalloy ores, except vanadium 6 ................... Miscellaneous metal ores 6 ............................... Coal mining 6 ......................................................... Bituminous coal and lignite mining 6 .................. Anthracite mining 6 ............................................ 96 33 11 8 34 – – – – – – – Oil and gas extraction ............................................ Crude petroleum and natural gas ...................... Oil and gas field services ................................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels 6 ..................... Dimension stone 6 ............................................. Crushed and broken stone 6 .............................. Sand and gravel 6 .............................................. Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals 6 ........... Chemical and fertilizer minerals 6 ...................... Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals 6 ............... 323 107 34 33 117 6 26 1,712 1,680 32 962 180 776 922 43 477 226 69 56 51 – 386 – 371 13 – – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 117 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Construction ............................................................ 41,984 24,074 2,891 7,059 7,275 867 434 201 233 20,530 General building contractors .................................. Residential building construction ....................... Operative builders ............................................. Nonresidential building construction .................. Heavy construction, except building ...................... 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 .............................................. 8,281 3,742 73 4,467 4,521 1,495 3,026 29,182 6,507 1,664 4,949 5,104 1,967 2,363 2,038 184 4,773 2,218 43 2,512 2,552 730 1,822 16,748 3,607 942 2,543 3,029 1,220 1,359 1,114 62 634 370 – 264 292 72 219 1,965 608 64 353 272 – 163 89 – 1,091 615 – 476 1,304 284 1,019 4,664 1,180 208 958 285 151 764 285 – 838 405 – 427 1,807 801 1,006 4,631 971 139 1,439 289 207 438 486 – – – – – – – – – – – 4,289 2,450 105 1,734 2,795 825 1,970 13,446 2,892 667 2,188 1,894 985 1,276 1,167 – – 8 668 659 9 441 60 380 322 9 168 86 26 11 22 – – – – – – – – – – 39 6 9 – 17 73 – – – – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 2 – – 148 141 7 201 – 173 169 8 93 38 12 11 7 40 38 – – – – – 53 – – 11 – 55 – – – – 32 – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – 11 6 90 86 51 – 746 176 – 350 – – – 41 – 54 137 10 127 207 – – 60 – – – 16 – 86 – – 54 54 10 44 61 – – – – – – – – 18 5 6 – 5 – – 126 124 – 466 – 418 61 – 32 17 – – – 83 – 83 146 – – 51 – – – – – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 7,130 3,833 1,501 1,002 1,404 1,529 567 Manufacturing .......................................................... 462,239 152,888 65,063 34,965 37,737 14,579 37,608 12,191 Durable goods ......................................................... 292,925 100,727 44,327 22,768 21,956 8,772 20,926 7,422 7,098 1,124 1,465 1,162 280 1,950 858 416 149 453 822 699 1,304 972 332 433 76 51 305 1,959 1,008 468 181 103 188 27 204 122 82 233 341 125 174 56 118 3,000 143 148 81 68 308 – 100 17 18 254 60 132 1,582 118 622 795 14 33 336 44 48 – 4,116 1,249 2,478 84 465 370 74 991 477 157 154 174 185 149 410 342 68 344 33 37 274 1,336 698 385 191 33 69 – 135 83 52 134 247 152 122 60 63 1,538 88 190 73 116 107 – 42 12 18 122 14 – 796 – 262 479 20 7 136 35 27 – 2,022 559 3,087 108 864 660 141 1,082 373 428 118 124 522 442 247 185 63 264 14 35 216 1,028 620 278 122 87 86 16 116 67 49 59 143 75 90 7 84 1,452 46 99 43 56 74 – 74 24 – 106 12 – 819 92 312 390 18 8 200 48 80 – 2,191 584 1,436 220 421 380 41 239 59 71 34 47 – – 460 372 89 62 – – – 277 158 94 – 14 25 8 37 – 12 18 49 38 16 10 – 1,026 – 62 41 21 16 – 67 – – – – – 765 – 121 607 – – 58 13 11 – 949 511 2,112 364 439 360 73 532 185 136 107 85 154 140 414 331 82 209 – 61 126 790 468 213 139 31 70 10 92 62 30 63 90 38 77 29 48 1,465 – 143 63 80 112 16 28 9 – 120 16 – 836 148 265 394 – 7 162 18 40 – 1,950 866 750 – 276 215 48 165 58 37 41 18 50 – 168 131 37 55 – 13 – 218 96 48 26 – 14 5 32 – 24 – 73 48 12 6 – 699 31 84 47 37 34 – 13 – – 58 – – 423 – 190 208 – 10 46 12 17 – 826 397 Miscellaneous special trade contractors ............ 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 ..................... 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 ........................... Wood television and radio cabinets ............... Office furniture ................................................... Wood office furniture ..................................... Office furniture, except wood ......................... Public building and related furniture .................. Partitions and fixtures ........................................ Wood partitions and fixtures .......................... Miscellaneous furniture and fixtures .................. Drapery hardware and blinds and shades ..... Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. ......................... Stone, clay, and glass products ............................. Flat glass ........................................................... Glass and glassware, pressed or blown ............ Glass containers ............................................ Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ................... Products of purchased glass ............................. Cement, hydraulic .............................................. Structural clay products ..................................... Ceramic wall and floor tile ............................. Structural clay products, n.e.c. ..................... Pottery and related products ............................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures ............................. Pottery products, n.e.c. ................................. Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ........... Concrete block and brick ............................... Concrete products, n.e.c. ............................. Ready-mixed concrete ................................... Lime ............................................................... Gypsum products .......................................... Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ..... Abrasive products .......................................... Mineral wool .................................................. Nonclay refractories ....................................... Primary metal industries ........................................ Blast furnace and basic steel products .............. 179 24 241 242 2421 2426 243 2431 2434 2435 2439 244 2448 245 2451 2452 249 2491 2493 2499 25 251 2511 2512 2514 2515 2517 252 2521 2522 253 254 2541 259 2591 2599 32 321 322 3221 3229 323 324 325 3253 3259 326 3261 3269 327 3271 3272 3273 3274 3275 329 3291 3296 3297 33 331 19,398 31,644 2,917 7,034 5,492 1,325 10,527 4,453 2,475 1,262 1,952 3,126 2,650 4,983 3,781 1,203 3,057 435 388 2,234 13,661 7,053 3,110 1,795 515 1,274 116 1,566 874 692 1,866 2,122 1,110 1,054 326 728 20,573 741 2,026 798 1,228 1,450 320 894 155 108 1,698 293 407 10,939 831 4,032 5,745 223 108 2,042 309 591 406 26,944 8,075 13,752 1,437 3,100 2,361 632 4,354 1,822 1,075 483 830 1,720 1,472 2,026 1,544 481 1,116 138 143 835 4,960 2,731 1,362 578 232 375 51 504 303 201 454 818 410 454 140 314 6,540 291 529 210 319 537 60 236 54 36 527 91 150 3,470 262 1,291 1,811 – 54 693 133 166 – 9,597 2,695 See footnotes at end of table. Page 3 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total In lifting Repetitive motion 4,406 2,872 373 817 648 118 58 Manufacturing .......................................................... 120,022 66,409 36,608 24,935 8,720 1,067 953 782 484 Miscellaneous special trade contractors ............ Durable goods ......................................................... 76,036 41,547 23,054 15,355 4,727 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 ..................... 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 ........................... Wood television and radio cabinets ............... Office furniture ................................................... Wood office furniture ..................................... Office furniture, except wood ......................... Public building and related furniture .................. Partitions and fixtures ........................................ Wood partitions and fixtures .......................... Miscellaneous furniture and fixtures .................. Drapery hardware and blinds and shades ..... Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. ......................... Stone, clay, and glass products ............................. Flat glass ........................................................... Glass and glassware, pressed or blown ............ Glass containers ............................................ Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ................... Products of purchased glass ............................. Cement, hydraulic .............................................. Structural clay products ..................................... Ceramic wall and floor tile ............................. Structural clay products, n.e.c. ..................... Pottery and related products ............................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures ............................. Pottery products, n.e.c. ................................. Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ........... Concrete block and brick ............................... Concrete products, n.e.c. ............................. Ready-mixed concrete ................................... Lime ............................................................... Gypsum products .......................................... Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ..... Abrasive products .......................................... Mineral wool .................................................. Nonclay refractories ....................................... Primary metal industries ........................................ Blast furnace and basic steel products .............. 7,729 254 1,509 1,140 320 3,330 1,556 698 406 576 766 656 1,158 786 372 713 70 58 585 4,046 1,922 758 514 96 482 29 469 273 196 674 689 375 292 86 206 5,108 189 569 173 396 434 63 318 44 – 730 162 190 1,991 196 790 937 – 18 661 71 210 192 6,972 2,008 3,838 69 566 456 92 1,695 737 444 97 374 477 398 720 475 244 312 33 29 250 2,610 1,286 471 365 62 342 19 302 150 152 404 446 276 173 53 120 3,031 148 314 121 192 230 39 209 39 – 455 119 118 1,162 154 298 674 – 14 384 37 112 – 3,226 796 1,254 59 278 164 113 538 209 122 98 84 60 56 71 43 28 249 – – 239 1,432 631 193 264 49 93 – 226 118 108 328 141 66 105 24 81 823 62 186 48 138 144 – 56 16 – 150 11 49 135 – 100 – – – 60 10 19 – 1,344 175 612 – 109 89 18 252 107 43 26 55 – – 85 68 17 108 50 8 – 324 118 50 25 10 32 – 33 19 14 67 90 35 15 – 14 1,019 – 127 47 80 54 – 39 19 – 17 – – 642 30 253 326 – – 111 15 42 – 2,126 448 695 262 124 122 – 74 32 – 11 19 93 79 74 54 – 68 – – – 203 152 58 40 30 21 – 10 – – 14 25 15 – – – 1,015 43 34 8 26 – – 44 – – – – – 818 34 273 507 – – 45 – 6 – 291 83 See footnotes at end of table. Page 4 Total 40 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 14 14 11 – 2,349 499 454 52,669 285 199 34,640 25 70 – – – 9 – – – – 9 – – – – – – – – – – – 15 – – – – – – – – – – – 44 – – – – – – – – – – – – 35 16 16 – – 201 76 14 – – – – – – – – – 28 – 22 12 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 18 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 15 15 – – – – – – – – – – – All other events 8 58 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 38 27 12 All other assaults – 35 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – By person 25 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 15 – 13 – 3,228 260 765 655 71 1,036 424 280 55 237 192 127 522 450 72 454 110 64 280 1,359 736 311 201 36 163 8 162 59 103 236 146 83 80 25 54 2,765 70 279 153 125 111 137 85 – – 77 – – 1,794 130 740 876 – 7 187 13 80 – 2,661 812 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 Blast furnaces and steel mills ........................ Steel wire and related products ..................... Cold finishing of steel shapes ........................ Steel pipe and tubes ...................................... Iron and steel foundries ..................................... Gray and ductile iron foundries ...................... Malleable iron foundries ................................ Steel investment foundries ............................ Steel foundries, n.e.c. ................................... Primary nonferrous metals ................................ Primary copper .............................................. Primary aluminum .......................................... Secondary nonferrous metals ............................ Nonferrous rolling and drawing .......................... Copper rolling and drawing ............................ Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil ..................... Aluminum extruded products ......................... Nonferrous rolling and drawing, n.e.c. .......... Nonferrous wiredrawing and insulating ......... Nonferrous foundries (castings) ........................ Aluminum die--castings ................................. Aluminum foundries ....................................... Nonferrous foundries, n.e.c. ......................... Miscellaneous primary metal products .............. Metal heat treating ......................................... Primary metal products, n.e.c. ...................... Fabricated metal products ..................................... Metal cans and shipping containers .................. Metal cans ..................................................... Cutlery, handtools, and hardware ...................... Cutlery ........................................................... Hand and edge tools, n.e.c. .......................... Saw blades and handsaws ............................ 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 ........................ Miscellaneous metal work ............................. Screw machine products, bolts, etc. .................. Screw machine products ............................... Bolts, nuts, rivets, and washers ..................... Metal forgings and stampings ............................ Iron and steel 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. .... Small arms ..................................................... Miscellaneous fabricated metal products .......... Industrial valves ............................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .............. Steel springs, except wire .............................. Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ......... Fabricated pipe and fittings ........................... Fabricated metal products, n.e.c. ................. SIC code 3 3312 3315 3316 3317 332 3321 3322 3324 3325 333 3331 3334 334 335 3351 3353 3354 3356 3357 336 3363 3365 3369 339 3398 3399 34 341 3411 342 3421 3423 3425 3429 343 3431 3432 3433 344 3441 3442 3443 3444 3446 3448 3449 345 3451 3452 346 3462 3465 3469 347 3471 3479 348 3483 3484 349 3491 3492 3493 3496 3498 3499 Total cases 5,009 672 976 1,333 6,469 4,480 114 366 1,509 965 60 471 1,090 4,536 676 221 959 313 2,317 4,730 2,091 1,405 194 1,079 596 483 51,716 1,168 612 3,030 246 868 204 1,712 1,623 470 417 736 18,235 4,244 2,360 4,201 4,432 1,278 1,280 442 3,210 1,920 1,290 10,904 1,378 5,847 3,436 4,545 2,708 1,837 668 239 295 8,333 462 946 361 2,010 1,142 2,089 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 1,566 260 352 498 2,568 1,881 36 102 550 267 10 110 319 1,541 197 56 390 129 758 1,734 780 576 – 472 285 187 20,933 538 192 1,170 78 443 57 591 640 164 145 330 8,068 1,990 928 1,852 1,803 737 604 154 1,152 776 376 4,408 528 2,277 1,511 1,752 983 769 168 41 106 3,037 209 335 145 719 349 777 738 136 166 203 1,079 755 12 51 261 76 6 21 152 692 86 20 186 42 350 660 348 158 – 207 173 34 9,030 125 50 296 26 53 16 201 193 93 17 82 3,923 1,206 432 931 750 239 281 84 330 228 101 2,012 216 1,222 529 949 510 438 58 10 32 1,147 107 145 – 256 132 255 283 39 81 153 439 282 6 23 128 66 – 33 50 323 48 13 60 35 167 519 134 284 – 67 17 50 4,390 159 46 364 – 197 17 146 116 – 11 76 1,274 157 218 237 363 141 141 16 410 292 118 977 71 445 448 375 217 158 66 18 46 650 50 52 – 160 – 244 331 57 81 105 490 373 7 19 92 82 – 24 80 442 49 21 122 49 199 336 179 – – 176 77 99 5,044 220 78 319 34 72 18 195 258 – 103 148 1,836 432 202 338 496 231 91 44 274 180 94 934 174 369 364 274 132 142 33 13 17 897 47 100 – 251 136 156 See footnotes at end of table. Page 5 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 387 12 – 100 124 91 – – 31 53 – 35 30 103 15 24 20 7 37 82 43 – – 45 20 – 1,197 26 – 64 7 – – 42 – – – – 623 165 57 141 188 – 46 – 34 – – 182 – 108 38 138 96 42 23 18 – 104 – – – 19 54 – 576 74 97 110 321 204 – 14 100 86 – 33 101 270 32 25 58 16 140 225 120 – – 81 – 73 3,120 58 43 136 8 – 14 88 47 – 18 20 965 246 90 284 237 – 56 – 307 185 122 776 78 382 277 292 214 78 35 20 11 505 34 69 – 127 63 113 313 17 – 54 160 112 – – 46 26 – 18 16 132 17 – 17 5 88 83 61 – – 12 – – 1,044 – – 42 – 12 – 20 13 – – 9 323 57 33 143 80 – – – 82 – 52 260 – 162 70 126 82 44 21 6 – 154 12 19 – 56 – 31 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Blast furnaces and steel mills ........................ Steel wire and related products ..................... Cold finishing of steel shapes ........................ Steel pipe and tubes ...................................... Iron and steel foundries ..................................... Gray and ductile iron foundries ...................... Malleable iron foundries ................................ Steel investment foundries ............................ Steel foundries, n.e.c. ................................... Primary nonferrous metals ................................ Primary copper .............................................. Primary aluminum .......................................... Secondary nonferrous metals ............................ Nonferrous rolling and drawing .......................... Copper rolling and drawing ............................ Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil ..................... Aluminum extruded products ......................... Nonferrous rolling and drawing, n.e.c. .......... Nonferrous wiredrawing and insulating ......... Nonferrous foundries (castings) ........................ Aluminum die--castings ................................. Aluminum foundries ....................................... Nonferrous foundries, n.e.c. ......................... Miscellaneous primary metal products .............. Metal heat treating ......................................... Primary metal products, n.e.c. ...................... Fabricated metal products ..................................... Metal cans and shipping containers .................. Metal cans ..................................................... Cutlery, handtools, and hardware ...................... Cutlery ........................................................... Hand and edge tools, n.e.c. .......................... Saw blades and handsaws ............................ 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 ........................ Miscellaneous metal work ............................. Screw machine products, bolts, etc. .................. Screw machine products ............................... Bolts, nuts, rivets, and washers ..................... Metal forgings and stampings ............................ Iron and steel 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. .... Small arms ..................................................... Miscellaneous fabricated metal products .......... Industrial valves ............................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .............. Steel springs, except wire .............................. Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ......... Fabricated pipe and fittings ........................... Fabricated metal products, n.e.c. ................. Total In lifting 1,150 179 299 365 1,854 1,291 46 125 393 240 13 124 192 1,405 220 36 308 76 731 1,062 420 329 – 211 135 76 13,306 279 161 809 76 236 64 432 520 166 110 244 4,276 884 865 803 1,095 243 254 132 945 569 376 2,723 455 1,412 813 1,069 698 372 202 66 90 2,483 121 308 136 614 312 625 475 68 54 190 890 672 9 65 144 80 8 25 105 723 79 18 181 47 384 499 210 172 19 134 84 50 7,873 170 103 481 44 135 41 261 349 97 73 180 2,514 369 562 471 711 148 155 97 590 401 189 1,423 169 747 494 726 518 208 115 33 59 1,505 85 213 – 324 204 452 Repetitive motion 78 33 – – 313 215 5 39 54 24 – 10 – 312 38 17 37 12 204 483 175 134 18 29 – – 2,982 45 30 373 47 65 – 241 163 68 62 34 597 112 109 110 158 100 – – 186 123 63 840 102 584 143 98 71 27 59 30 13 621 22 96 – 148 41 138 See footnotes at end of table. Page 6 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 324 45 – 53 496 303 10 40 143 116 11 59 230 239 50 12 51 24 102 506 276 112 – 91 46 45 2,961 55 36 100 – – 18 72 86 – 40 24 1,080 250 43 324 196 – 186 43 93 62 31 507 52 220 214 498 308 191 31 15 8 510 – – – 82 174 152 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 46 – – – 68 – – – 70 67 – – – 47 23 – – 23 16 25 – – 8 29 52 18 6 12 6 11 9 – – – – – – – – – – – 19 13 – – 11 – – 658 10 – 41 – 14 – 24 18 – 10 – 165 42 28 12 – – 19 – – – 12 219 – 132 43 65 27 38 11 – 5 106 – – – 19 – 55 18 – – 176 – – 9 – – – 9 – – – – 50 – – 30 – – – – – – – – – – – 100 – 93 – – – – – – – – – – Total – – – – 12 – – – 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 106 – – – – – – – – – – – 43 19 – – 16 – – – – – – – – – – 41 28 13 – – – – – – – – – – By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 48 – – – – – – – – – – – 18 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 – – – – – – – – – – 30 17 13 – – – – – – – – – – 58 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 11 11 – – – – – – – – – – – All other events 8 501 42 130 124 504 291 10 45 159 114 10 66 140 475 89 36 66 37 248 507 195 195 – 110 89 – 5,233 137 120 284 23 48 – 193 125 – 26 63 2,046 473 200 503 633 63 99 76 366 132 234 982 70 569 328 366 196 170 116 43 54 810 52 88 – 223 135 190 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 Industrial machinery and equipment ...................... Engines and turbines ......................................... Turbines and turbine generator sets .............. Internal combustion engines, n.e.c. .............. Farm and garden machinery ............................. Farm machinery and equipment .................... Lawn and garden equipment ......................... Construction and related machinery .................. Construction machinery ................................. Mining machinery .......................................... Oil and gas field machinery ........................... Conveyors and conveying equipment ........... Hoists, cranes, and monorails ....................... Industrial trucks and tractors ......................... Metalworking machinery .................................... Machine tools, metal cutting types ................ Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ............... Machine tool accessories .............................. Power-driven handtools ................................. Rolling mill machinery .................................... Welding apparatus ......................................... Metalworking machinery, n.e.c. .................... Special industry machinery ................................ Textile machinery .......................................... Woodworking machinery ............................... Paper industries 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 ......................... Commercial laundry equipment ..................... Refrigeration and heating equipment ............ Measuring and dispensing pumps ................. Service industry machinery, n.e.c. ................ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............................... Fluid power cylinders and actuators .............. Fluid power pumps and motors ..................... Scales and balances, except laboratory ........ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ........................... Electronic and other electric equipment ................ Electric distribution equipment ........................... Transformers, except electronic .................... Switchgear and switchboard apparatus ......... Electrical industrial apparatus ............................ Motors and generators .................................. Relays and industrial controls ........................ Household appliances ....................................... Household refrigerators and freezers ............ Household laundry equipment ....................... Electric housewares and fans ........................ Household appliances, n.e.c. ....................... SIC code 3 35 351 3511 3519 352 3523 3524 353 3531 3532 3533 3535 3536 3537 354 3541 3544 3545 3546 3547 3548 3549 355 3552 3553 3554 3556 3559 356 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 3568 3569 357 3571 3572 3577 3579 358 3581 3582 3585 3586 3589 359 3593 3594 3596 3599 36 361 3612 3613 362 3621 3625 363 3632 3633 3634 3639 Total cases 49,033 1,652 303 1,349 2,826 2,156 669 8,433 3,644 574 1,128 1,362 350 999 9,027 1,126 3,577 1,521 415 200 1,124 367 4,322 172 245 675 895 1,689 6,169 666 639 443 1,006 557 525 563 853 915 2,354 990 287 573 365 5,519 247 186 4,030 98 958 8,734 573 430 87 7,152 24,561 1,550 964 586 2,703 1,522 933 2,471 508 371 421 568 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 18,692 452 108 344 1,024 809 215 3,450 1,462 304 381 559 113 452 3,937 451 1,864 598 118 59 408 147 1,465 75 118 224 235 681 2,001 226 181 137 384 162 185 164 262 300 422 182 40 98 66 1,802 42 70 1,308 33 349 4,139 272 125 24 3,571 6,377 460 280 179 669 400 196 652 99 86 142 168 8,383 222 52 170 579 479 100 1,625 686 115 206 279 49 212 1,586 174 723 205 63 – 219 69 687 19 59 95 129 345 886 129 71 – 137 80 79 44 133 165 147 84 7 32 18 774 18 19 566 9 162 1,876 178 47 18 1,593 2,655 264 157 107 245 144 73 256 36 38 52 83 4,140 71 24 47 145 103 41 568 236 65 75 59 31 65 1,090 118 554 163 9 16 – 32 326 19 17 70 52 163 457 31 42 – 108 52 53 39 50 53 115 51 14 14 24 553 6 20 370 14 142 815 44 21 – 710 1,482 83 51 – 171 83 69 156 39 13 29 40 3,770 100 18 82 193 156 37 667 236 74 56 131 – 98 746 98 384 116 35 – – 13 330 26 36 43 – 103 435 33 58 – 120 14 – 48 73 40 70 20 10 21 20 306 11 20 256 – 15 922 27 32 – 818 1,573 73 56 17 199 134 41 185 10 22 51 39 See footnotes at end of table. Page 7 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 1,180 19 – 16 44 37 7 231 88 24 56 34 10 16 258 67 27 13 – 16 – – 138 – – 26 71 28 143 17 22 – 17 – 32 – 9 25 48 25 7 11 5 137 – 7 102 – 27 162 31 5 – 120 538 48 31 16 44 18 20 57 11 10 – – 3,107 76 15 60 242 190 52 391 142 24 109 60 – 23 532 137 140 80 27 – – 39 308 11 – 43 – 68 413 55 81 – 49 24 36 46 45 50 301 93 35 81 49 384 11 23 300 15 35 460 14 32 – 384 2,095 109 78 – 152 62 73 184 43 23 51 33 1,195 78 23 55 28 18 9 152 71 14 – 12 9 20 196 11 70 16 6 – – 12 84 11 – 14 17 36 169 18 26 12 35 – – 14 19 31 110 43 22 39 – 143 – – 120 – 18 236 12 10 – 203 508 28 12 17 42 14 24 62 – 8 15 19 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Industrial machinery and equipment ...................... Engines and turbines ......................................... Turbines and turbine generator sets .............. Internal combustion engines, n.e.c. .............. Farm and garden machinery ............................. Farm machinery and equipment .................... Lawn and garden equipment ......................... Construction and related machinery .................. Construction machinery ................................. Mining machinery .......................................... Oil and gas field machinery ........................... Conveyors and conveying equipment ........... Hoists, cranes, and monorails ....................... Industrial trucks and tractors ......................... Metalworking machinery .................................... Machine tools, metal cutting types ................ Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ............... Machine tool accessories .............................. Power-driven handtools ................................. Rolling mill machinery .................................... Welding apparatus ......................................... Metalworking machinery, n.e.c. .................... Special industry machinery ................................ Textile machinery .......................................... Woodworking machinery ............................... Paper industries 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 ......................... Commercial laundry equipment ..................... Refrigeration and heating equipment ............ Measuring and dispensing pumps ................. Service industry machinery, n.e.c. ................ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............................... Fluid power cylinders and actuators .............. Fluid power pumps and motors ..................... Scales and balances, except laboratory ........ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ........................... Electronic and other electric equipment ................ Electric distribution equipment ........................... Transformers, except electronic .................... Switchgear and switchboard apparatus ......... Electrical industrial apparatus ............................ Motors and generators .................................. Relays and industrial controls ........................ Household appliances ....................................... Household refrigerators and freezers ............ Household laundry equipment ....................... Electric housewares and fans ........................ Household appliances, n.e.c. ....................... Total In lifting Repetitive motion 12,972 545 86 459 756 568 189 2,118 941 106 345 336 74 215 2,260 225 893 367 186 44 286 108 1,297 50 63 230 316 357 1,790 170 160 167 271 191 122 93 343 274 638 287 46 134 154 1,520 57 33 1,106 22 301 2,047 158 150 27 1,540 6,563 402 243 159 820 485 273 700 136 107 91 162 6,636 345 65 280 398 302 96 1,016 441 45 179 129 34 119 1,084 145 372 217 46 14 – 59 548 34 18 68 63 187 979 111 78 – 176 142 29 42 186 133 418 188 36 85 94 770 23 20 535 10 183 1,079 76 86 10 824 3,983 230 137 92 446 248 158 352 58 28 63 98 2,613 218 24 194 139 75 64 250 139 – – 31 – 45 366 52 79 114 40 – – 20 193 5 7 38 17 110 416 75 39 14 75 16 – 46 59 70 292 138 42 72 37 389 41 12 282 5 50 350 36 51 14 179 3,521 190 112 78 504 297 178 362 88 68 76 68 See footnotes at end of table. Page 8 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 2,855 60 13 48 107 82 25 748 328 – 72 202 12 78 575 49 187 142 7 – – 14 269 – 14 20 140 72 303 24 36 – 58 23 32 – 25 48 98 21 33 33 – 250 9 11 187 – 44 445 14 12 9 382 1,720 161 108 53 123 79 24 86 20 11 9 – 590 15 – 15 37 32 – 158 26 – – 44 – 51 87 14 26 – 10 – – – 28 – 10 – – 10 62 – 9 – – 37 – – – – 67 20 – 16 – 70 8 – 51 – 8 66 – – – 59 259 12 – – 26 19 – 48 20 11 – 14 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 103 – – – 10 – 6 40 36 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 22 – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – – 8 – – – – – 12 – – – – 29 – – – – – – – – – – – Total By person 73 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – 49 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 28 – – – – – – – 15 – – – 15 47 – – – – – – – – – – – 10 24 13 24 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other assaults 13 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 9 – – – – 24 – – – – – – – – – – – 22 – – – – – – – – – – – All other events 8 5,654 189 30 160 438 340 98 890 407 86 106 84 102 94 792 114 274 185 16 34 – 20 539 15 19 78 78 324 821 78 83 – 98 88 82 156 72 108 373 178 59 87 47 810 78 22 564 22 124 802 30 40 7 692 2,904 140 94 46 316 142 140 309 88 43 33 86 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Electric lighting and wiring equipment ............... Electric lamps ................................................ Current-carrying wiring devices ..................... Noncurrent-carrying wiring devices ............... Residential lighting fixtures ............................ Commercial lighting fixtures .......................... Vehicular lighting equipment ......................... Household audio and video equipment and audio recordings ..................... Household audio and video equipment ......... Prerecorded records and tapes ..................... 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 coils and transformers .................. Electronic connectors .................................... Electronic components, n.e.c. ...................... Miscellaneous electrical equipment and supplies ........................................................... Storage batteries ........................................... Primary batteries, dry and wet ....................... Engine electrical equipment .......................... Magnetic and optical recording media ........... Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c. ..... Transportation equipment ...................................... Motor vehicles and equipment ........................... Motor vehicles and car bodies ....................... Truck and bus bodies .................................... Motor vehicle parts and accessories ............. Truck trailers .................................................. Motor homes .................................................. Aircraft and parts ............................................... Aircraft ........................................................... Aircraft engines and engine parts .................. Aircraft parts and equipment, n.e.c. .............. Ship and boat building and repairing ................. Ship building and repairing ............................ Boat building and repairing ............................ Railroad equipment ........................................... Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts ........................ Guided missiles, space vehicles, parts .............. Guided missiles and space vehicles .............. Miscellaneous transportation equipment ........... Travel trailers and campers ........................... Tanks and tank components ......................... Transportation equipment, n.e.c. .................. Instruments and related products .......................... Search and navigation equipment ..................... Measuring and controlling devices .................... Laboratory apparatus and furniture ............... Environmental controls .................................. Process control instruments .......................... Fluid meters and counting devices ................ Instruments to measure electricity ................. Analytical instruments .................................... Optical instruments and lenses ..................... Measuring and controlling devices, n.e.c. .... Medical instruments and supplies ..................... Surgical and medical instruments .................. Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 364 3641 3643 3644 3645 3646 3647 3,910 371 1,114 504 464 614 521 1,169 133 333 209 148 189 89 387 50 129 32 77 47 22 273 43 55 63 – 73 10 342 36 121 73 18 43 40 365 3651 3652 366 3661 3663 3669 367 3671 3672 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679 1,150 747 404 2,264 948 1,039 276 7,771 673 2,013 2,127 234 153 444 299 1,827 371 186 185 492 164 255 74 1,881 176 521 373 89 53 122 103 445 165 92 74 223 52 144 26 808 97 243 110 22 – 69 27 210 59 26 33 125 44 55 26 473 40 126 162 14 20 18 20 72 115 55 60 73 34 27 12 404 – 92 69 44 – – 49 100 369 3691 3692 3694 3695 3699 37 371 3711 3713 3714 3715 3716 372 3721 3724 3728 373 3731 3732 374 375 376 3761 379 3792 3795 3799 38 381 382 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825 3826 3827 3829 384 3841 2,742 591 80 1,395 272 403 57,029 36,714 14,789 2,014 17,938 1,380 592 7,605 3,814 1,316 2,475 8,411 5,906 2,505 1,319 686 560 370 1,734 738 106 891 9,451 1,210 3,629 214 709 727 140 834 325 154 527 3,077 1,161 684 154 19 374 78 58 15,040 9,122 2,949 678 4,745 542 208 1,967 618 485 864 2,584 1,717 867 369 177 148 99 672 287 38 347 2,151 213 890 92 177 182 36 181 93 28 101 782 310 307 94 10 151 15 37 6,259 3,516 1,219 317 1,644 240 96 864 260 265 339 1,217 717 500 213 79 59 35 310 136 28 146 716 79 291 38 68 56 17 71 9 9 – 253 96 143 29 – 77 29 – 4,138 2,482 948 159 1,151 194 30 602 230 129 243 730 506 224 86 52 49 39 136 65 – 69 664 56 314 37 61 60 8 62 66 – 16 231 118 183 31 6 104 29 13 2,592 1,754 446 108 1,126 58 17 332 66 76 191 331 239 92 40 27 21 16 86 38 6 42 508 26 182 14 42 48 6 25 8 – 38 237 63 See footnotes at end of table. Page 9 Fall to lower level 75 20 31 – – – – 20 6 14 51 22 26 – 160 – 49 70 8 – – – 16 82 37 – 31 8 – 1,706 818 184 164 397 47 27 331 273 19 38 430 296 134 55 17 12 – 43 32 – – 179 32 44 – 12 5 – – 12 9 – 72 28 Fall on same level 332 23 115 14 – 120 26 102 74 – 223 87 110 26 850 107 190 257 21 20 42 16 198 143 34 5 63 21 19 4,658 2,736 1,188 165 1,265 96 23 821 510 102 208 812 513 299 113 27 70 52 78 43 7 28 1,071 130 398 10 73 78 19 127 21 8 63 412 137 Slips or trips without fall 74 25 10 – – 16 – 23 10 12 50 28 17 – 194 – 83 50 – – – – 47 35 – – – 17 – 1,783 1,233 532 43 628 17 13 173 95 29 49 260 194 66 46 12 – – 53 35 – 13 258 31 50 – 5 14 – 20 – – – 54 21 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 In lifting Repetitive motion 1,214 64 347 165 150 180 189 754 28 208 96 138 97 132 382 32 87 24 46 55 92 179 23 56 58 – – 14 299 243 56 642 269 296 76 1,693 235 535 395 34 36 61 75 323 201 160 42 444 215 180 48 1,051 164 355 233 29 – – 60 175 140 113 – 366 123 197 46 1,001 81 91 241 35 9 71 22 451 62 33 93 48 37 8 842 15 212 322 17 – 78 57 135 793 180 27 419 52 115 14,725 9,942 3,617 505 5,325 382 113 1,768 936 280 552 1,911 1,371 540 305 119 153 102 526 189 30 307 2,299 315 886 44 176 194 38 156 74 35 167 656 249 506 118 17 274 33 63 7,607 5,224 1,491 236 3,118 316 62 954 526 130 298 820 559 261 158 29 94 64 328 102 22 204 1,409 205 504 25 118 123 14 78 57 23 67 387 145 576 70 8 316 36 146 6,848 5,319 2,790 72 2,376 49 32 896 547 131 219 338 247 91 93 79 39 16 82 43 9 29 1,433 165 512 20 120 119 8 132 53 23 38 512 175 174 51 – 84 23 13 2,595 1,612 442 83 923 136 28 327 108 91 128 369 187 182 100 50 21 16 117 29 – 87 624 112 269 18 38 28 – 62 5 6 108 142 75 Total Electric lighting and wiring equipment ............... Electric lamps ................................................ Current-carrying wiring devices ..................... Noncurrent-carrying wiring devices ............... Residential lighting fixtures ............................ Commercial lighting fixtures .......................... Vehicular lighting equipment ......................... Household audio and video equipment and audio recordings ..................... Household audio and video equipment ......... Prerecorded records and tapes ..................... 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 coils and transformers .................. Electronic connectors .................................... Electronic components, n.e.c. ...................... Miscellaneous electrical equipment and supplies ........................................................... Storage batteries ........................................... Primary batteries, dry and wet ....................... Engine electrical equipment .......................... Magnetic and optical recording media ........... Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c. ..... Transportation equipment ...................................... Motor vehicles and equipment ........................... Motor vehicles and car bodies ....................... Truck and bus bodies .................................... Motor vehicle parts and accessories ............. Truck trailers .................................................. Motor homes .................................................. Aircraft and parts ............................................... Aircraft ........................................................... Aircraft engines and engine parts .................. Aircraft parts and equipment, n.e.c. .............. Ship and boat building and repairing ................. Ship building and repairing ............................ Boat building and repairing ............................ Railroad equipment ........................................... Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts ........................ Guided missiles, space vehicles, parts .............. Guided missiles and space vehicles .............. Miscellaneous transportation equipment ........... Travel trailers and campers ........................... Tanks and tank components ......................... Transportation equipment, n.e.c. .................. Instruments and related products .......................... Search and navigation equipment ..................... Measuring and controlling devices .................... Laboratory apparatus and furniture ............... Environmental controls .................................. Process control instruments .......................... Fluid meters and counting devices ................ Instruments to measure electricity ................. Analytical instruments .................................... Optical instruments and lenses ..................... Measuring and controlling devices, n.e.c. .... Medical instruments and supplies ..................... Surgical and medical instruments .................. Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment See footnotes at end of table. Page 10 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 39 – 11 – – 10 9 23 13 10 26 16 – – – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 47 – 18 8 – – – – 8 39 25 6 – – – 791 537 278 31 218 – – 152 – 38 69 – – 11 24 18 17 12 16 10 – – 123 – 45 – 12 – – 10 – – 17 48 24 Total All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 439 50 123 18 54 43 94 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 107 69 38 308 181 92 34 1,074 46 293 408 29 – 50 19 200 13 9 – – 9 – All other events 8 By person 20 – 9 9 9 16 – 13 11 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 142 86 – – 34 – – – – 13 – – – 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 75 – – – 68 – – – 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 28 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 19 – – – – – – – – – – 12 5 – – – – – – – – – – – 11 5 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – 211 34 8 94 37 37 8,666 5,278 2,772 250 2,011 100 145 1,133 672 127 333 1,632 1,331 301 202 186 93 67 141 65 8 69 1,283 206 528 28 93 105 33 142 60 40 – 386 137 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 Surgical appliances and supplies .................. Dental equipment and supplies ..................... X-ray apparatus and tubes ............................ Electromedical equipment ............................. Ophthalmic goods .............................................. Photographic equipment and supplies .............. Miscellaneous manufacturing industries ................ Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ................. Jewelry, precious metal ................................. Musical instruments ........................................... Toys and sporting goods ................................... Dolls and stuffed toys .................................... Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. ............... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies ............... Pens and mechanical pencils ........................ Lead pencils and art goods ........................... Carbon paper and inked ribbons ................... Costume jewelry and notions ............................ Costume jewelry ............................................ Fasteners, buttons, needles, and pins ........... Miscellaneous manufactures ............................. Brooms and brushes ..................................... Signs and advertising specialities .................. Burial caskets ................................................ Hard surface floor coverings, n.e.c. .............. Manufacturing industries, n.e.c. .................... SIC code 3 3842 3843 3844 3845 385 386 39 391 3911 393 394 3942 3949 395 3951 3952 3955 396 3961 3965 399 3991 3993 3995 3996 3999 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 specialties ........................................ Canned fruits and vegetables ........................ Dehydrated fruits, vegetables, soups ............ Pickles, sauces, and salad dressings ............ Frozen fruits and vegetables ......................... Frozen specialities, n.e.c. ............................. Grain mill products ............................................. Flour and other grain mill products ................ Cereal breakfast foods .................................. Prepared flour mixes and doughs .................. Prepared feeds, n.e.c. .................................. Bakery products ................................................. Bread, cake, and related products ................. Cookies and crackers .................................... Sugar and confectionery products ..................... Raw cane sugar ............................................. Candy and other confectionery products ....... Chocolate and cocoa products ...................... Fats and oils ...................................................... Beverages ......................................................... Malt beverages .............................................. Wines, brandy, and brandy spirits ................. Distilled and blended liquors .......................... Bottled and canned soft drinks ...................... Flavoring extracts and syrups, n.e.c. ............ Miscellaneous food and kindred products ......... 20 201 2011 2013 2015 202 2022 2023 2024 2026 203 2032 2033 2034 2035 2037 2038 204 2041 2043 2045 2048 205 2051 2052 206 2061 2064 2066 207 208 2082 2084 2085 2086 2087 209 Total cases Caught in or compressed or crushed Total Struck by object Struck against object 1,301 193 118 304 428 1,051 8,314 700 328 471 2,529 21 1,703 497 130 164 114 444 241 204 3,672 324 1,710 156 145 1,338 317 81 29 45 67 184 2,685 198 94 158 794 – 589 190 44 56 22 138 58 80 1,208 123 570 43 34 438 126 6 7 18 15 73 1,110 44 18 93 372 – 268 44 6 14 12 44 – 32 512 47 258 8 12 187 73 18 8 13 18 38 579 10 – 28 170 – 149 64 – 14 – 25 – 16 282 33 147 26 7 70 112 47 7 8 24 35 709 94 29 30 185 – 128 60 33 21 6 60 – 28 280 38 107 7 10 119 169,313 52,160 20,736 12,198 59,156 15,971 6,210 3,864 5,897 6,738 1,224 538 993 3,932 6,970 368 2,329 770 638 1,535 1,329 5,470 1,303 625 955 1,494 6,355 4,537 1,567 2,394 320 1,291 225 1,169 7,324 711 682 394 5,035 417 6,765 17,225 5,447 2,441 1,277 1,729 1,672 293 108 304 955 2,062 135 661 246 200 460 360 1,571 295 151 403 445 1,837 1,313 452 625 83 364 42 306 1,579 129 155 107 1,047 120 2,128 7,558 2,888 1,564 476 848 691 115 58 95 423 794 59 236 115 46 221 116 573 91 58 146 194 651 545 90 216 59 109 8 118 702 64 78 – 480 – 926 3,862 995 359 327 309 376 64 13 74 218 431 – 97 – 58 115 104 400 – 49 94 118 498 298 171 126 14 46 15 112 393 37 19 44 274 – 530 See footnotes at end of table. Page 11 Fall to lower level 27 6 Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – 283 9 – – 34 – 22 14 – 10 – 16 – – 205 11 157 – – 30 181 27 15 52 41 85 558 44 31 43 162 – 85 42 12 17 13 18 – 8 249 47 94 12 17 79 16 20 102 139 – – – 68 – 44 9 – 8 – 18 – 18 36 – 11 – – 23 15,781 5,808 16,682 4,770 4,730 1,267 387 413 467 506 93 36 122 252 677 – 238 80 82 103 131 530 136 38 162 124 620 419 174 225 10 172 17 65 298 21 16 – 220 – 542 2,662 495 216 114 165 372 30 29 70 238 366 – 110 19 52 101 79 363 84 22 – 81 244 155 74 132 25 55 9 111 265 32 19 17 176 – 314 6,802 1,814 535 488 791 920 77 77 118 645 888 76 282 63 77 182 208 489 137 67 107 93 715 497 208 335 29 219 21 119 792 70 65 61 543 – 731 1,772 310 99 81 130 293 79 – 28 180 193 – 61 35 19 55 18 190 87 24 – 52 204 131 68 82 25 19 16 78 265 32 20 – 182 – 158 – 10 10 17 – – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Total In lifting Repetitive motion Surgical appliances and supplies .................. Dental equipment and supplies ..................... X-ray apparatus and tubes ............................ Electromedical equipment ............................. Ophthalmic goods .............................................. Photographic equipment and supplies .............. Miscellaneous manufacturing industries ................ Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ................. Jewelry, precious metal ................................. Musical instruments ........................................... Toys and sporting goods ................................... Dolls and stuffed toys .................................... Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. ............... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies ............... Pens and mechanical pencils ........................ Lead pencils and art goods ........................... Carbon paper and inked ribbons ................... Costume jewelry and notions ............................ Costume jewelry ............................................ Fasteners, buttons, needles, and pins ........... Miscellaneous manufactures ............................. Brooms and brushes ..................................... Signs and advertising specialities .................. Burial caskets ................................................ Hard surface floor coverings, n.e.c. .............. Manufacturing industries, n.e.c. .................... 270 24 26 87 93 344 2,316 214 123 119 718 – 427 74 14 28 21 97 55 42 1,094 62 538 61 57 376 146 14 21 61 52 257 1,333 40 19 50 420 – 266 36 7 15 12 68 – 28 718 46 321 40 19 292 275 23 11 26 66 152 804 174 34 78 268 – 186 56 25 15 16 23 19 – 204 40 50 – 7 104 Nondurable goods ................................................... 43,986 24,862 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 specialties ........................................ Canned fruits and vegetables ........................ Dehydrated fruits, vegetables, soups ............ Pickles, sauces, and salad dressings ............ Frozen fruits and vegetables ......................... Frozen specialities, n.e.c. ............................. Grain mill products ............................................. Flour and other grain mill products ................ Cereal breakfast foods .................................. Prepared flour mixes and doughs .................. Prepared feeds, n.e.c. .................................. Bakery products ................................................. Bread, cake, and related products ................. Cookies and crackers .................................... Sugar and confectionery products ..................... Raw cane sugar ............................................. Candy and other confectionery products ....... Chocolate and cocoa products ...................... Fats and oils ...................................................... Beverages ......................................................... Malt beverages .............................................. Wines, brandy, and brandy spirits ................. Distilled and blended liquors .......................... Bottled and canned soft drinks ...................... Flavoring extracts and syrups, n.e.c. ............ Miscellaneous food and kindred products ......... 14,549 2,825 976 839 1,009 1,894 283 131 229 1,239 1,282 – 418 206 99 257 262 1,657 417 197 252 494 1,823 1,342 395 453 40 247 58 221 2,584 206 131 135 1,990 94 1,808 8,425 1,495 418 501 576 1,026 136 82 122 674 684 18 231 104 – 132 168 1,078 350 97 96 354 1,052 727 254 280 28 163 39 86 1,481 68 57 96 1,179 73 1,244 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 43 14 – 10 – – Fires and explosions – – – – – – Total – – – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 214 256 18,029 93 156 101 95 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 31 – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 – 20 – – – – 6,120 1,240 449 253 537 783 174 94 130 372 923 – 421 82 85 195 100 491 83 83 73 120 728 541 168 329 62 143 55 102 999 116 206 37 623 – 526 13,554 9,579 3,993 284 469 4,768 2,295 846 504 945 274 130 19 31 94 401 – 82 – 18 152 122 335 158 28 – 74 513 331 155 140 – 95 10 – 242 31 15 – 131 – 536 3,648 1,167 442 240 484 370 126 66 51 121 663 54 213 67 75 99 155 191 – 29 – 56 189 143 29 253 45 139 10 175 259 71 – – 100 57 381 1,272 242 86 65 92 146 23 10 32 82 179 – 72 32 – 30 23 121 – 24 – 54 82 66 15 28 – 10 – – 293 23 24 – 224 – 168 88 14 249 122 112 – 10 – – – – – 14 – – – – – – 36 – – – – 20 18 – – – – – – 39 – 20 – 19 – – 7 – – – 6 – 6 – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – 11 – – – – – – All other events 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 103 – – – 24 – – – – – – 15 – 15 58 – 35 – 6 12 Page 12 By person – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 9 69 31 521 31 – 23 152 – 120 18 – 8 9 48 – 18 248 5 90 18 – 132 See footnotes at end of table. 7 25 Assaults and violent acts 9 – 17 – – – – – – – 14 – – – – – – – – – – – 20 18 – – – – – – 19 – – – 19 – – 158 14 28 49 38 119 887 24 12 40 298 6 216 90 29 22 29 70 58 12 365 32 164 11 18 140 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 Canned and cured fish and seafoods ............ Fresh or frozen prepared fish ........................ Roasted coffee .............................................. Potato chips and similar snacks .................... Macaroni and spaghetti ................................. Food preparations, n.e.c. .............................. Tobacco products .................................................. Cigarettes .......................................................... Cigars ................................................................ Tobacco stemming and redrying ....................... Textile mill products ............................................... Broadwoven fabric mills, manmade ................... Broadwoven fabric mills, wool ........................... 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 .................................. Finishing plants, manmade ............................ Finishing plants, n.e.c. .................................. Carpets and rugs ............................................... Yarn and thread mills ......................................... Yarn spinning mills ........................................ Throwing and winding mills ........................... Thread mills ................................................... Miscellaneous textile goods ............................... 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’ neckwear ............................ Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............. Men’s and boys’ work clothing ....................... Men’s and boys’ clothing, n.e.c. ................... Women’s and misses’ outerwear ....................... Women’s and misses’ blouses and shirts ...... Women’s, junior’s, and misses’ dresses ........ Women’s and misses’ suits and coats ........... Women’s and misses’ outerwear, n.e.c. ....... Women’s and children’s undergarments ........... Girls’ and children’s outerwear .......................... Girls’ and children’s dresses, blouses ........... Girls’ and children’s outerwear, n.e.c. .......... Miscellaneous apparel and accessories ............ Robes and dressing gowns ........................... Waterproof outerwear .................................... Leather and sheep-lined clothing .................. Apparel and accessories, n.e.c. ................... Miscellaneous fabricated textile products .......... Curtains and draperies .................................. Housefurnishings, n.e.c. ............................... Textile bags ................................................... Canvas and related products ......................... Pleating and stitching .................................... Automotive and apparel trimmings ................ Schiffli machine embroideries ........................ Fabricated textile products, n.e.c. ................. Paper and allied products ...................................... Pulp mills ........................................................... SIC code 3 Total cases Total Struck by object Struck against object 2091 2092 2095 2096 2098 2099 21 211 212 214 22 222 223 224 225 2252 2253 2254 2257 226 2261 2262 2269 227 228 2281 2282 2284 229 2297 2299 23 231 232 2321 330 2,265 232 1,211 178 2,226 813 518 29 188 8,960 821 259 638 2,483 603 623 303 332 1,597 478 594 525 866 833 452 283 98 1,173 166 333 14,258 869 3,987 863 87 920 – 289 72 677 268 149 17 80 2,936 229 115 258 593 82 155 80 110 594 165 204 226 310 295 190 82 – 449 58 153 4,148 214 893 146 27 474 17 116 38 242 97 57 – 38 1,045 67 54 111 188 17 50 24 34 246 48 94 104 83 108 52 – 9 154 31 35 1,602 59 266 33 23 244 – 46 9 177 82 48 – – 706 62 – 56 184 39 54 18 27 165 55 59 51 42 76 53 19 – 95 – 22 916 51 326 61 2322 2323 2325 2326 2329 233 2331 2335 2337 2339 234 236 2361 2369 238 2384 2385 2386 2389 239 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2399 26 261 278 38 1,303 938 568 2,754 335 312 254 1,853 518 451 166 285 617 71 58 23 177 4,659 497 981 359 872 197 1,117 79 557 14,051 188 89 – 268 160 203 751 88 80 72 512 129 96 30 66 217 28 6 10 64 1,770 87 287 144 562 100 420 20 149 5,111 55 20 16 108 43 46 349 – 53 40 226 53 39 17 22 111 20 – – 30 702 60 112 103 150 31 171 11 63 1,863 21 32 – 113 54 61 136 – – 10 106 45 32 – 27 50 – – – 20 256 15 60 – – 12 73 – 38 1,116 9 See footnotes at end of table. Page 13 Caught in or compressed or crushed 36 161 – 93 13 221 76 38 10 – 1,013 98 54 81 183 19 40 37 43 138 52 41 44 144 91 70 – 11 184 19 89 1,253 98 206 49 Fall to lower level 13 105 – 35 – 70 45 27 – 18 196 13 – – 63 – 13 10 20 42 30 9 – – 9 – – – 14 – 6 340 14 70 16 37 – 35 51 30 197 – 18 20 114 29 25 8 17 52 – – 8 11 612 7 103 13 311 54 80 – 40 1,838 22 Fall on same level 43 202 – 155 30 227 72 54 – – 887 76 – 59 287 64 69 20 29 135 27 64 44 46 111 31 – – 111 12 49 1,356 88 356 106 10 – 24 – 25 10 – 70 – – 10 54 22 8 – – 8 – – – – 134 – 12 – 75 – – – 27 481 12 83 81 58 283 – 40 49 171 41 66 16 50 57 6 – – 19 436 33 139 – – 42 95 11 58 1,064 17 Slips or trips without fall 18 48 – 24 6 56 11 10 – – 255 34 – – 92 21 31 – 9 14 10 – – 55 – – – – 35 – 7 202 40 54 12 – – 17 12 12 21 – – – 17 – 6 – – 8 – – – – 61 – – – – – 17 – 6 382 6 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Canned and cured fish and seafoods ............ Fresh or frozen prepared fish ........................ Roasted coffee .............................................. Potato chips and similar snacks .................... Macaroni and spaghetti ................................. Food preparations, n.e.c. .............................. Tobacco products .................................................. Cigarettes .......................................................... Cigars ................................................................ Tobacco stemming and redrying ....................... Textile mill products ............................................... Broadwoven fabric mills, manmade ................... Broadwoven fabric mills, wool ........................... 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 .................................. Finishing plants, manmade ............................ Finishing plants, n.e.c. .................................. Carpets and rugs ............................................... Yarn and thread mills ......................................... Yarn spinning mills ........................................ Throwing and winding mills ........................... Thread mills ................................................... Miscellaneous textile goods ............................... 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’ neckwear ............................ Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............. Men’s and boys’ work clothing ....................... Men’s and boys’ clothing, n.e.c. ................... Women’s and misses’ outerwear ....................... Women’s and misses’ blouses and shirts ...... Women’s, junior’s, and misses’ dresses ........ Women’s and misses’ suits and coats ........... Women’s and misses’ outerwear, n.e.c. ....... Women’s and children’s undergarments ........... Girls’ and children’s outerwear .......................... Girls’ and children’s dresses, blouses ........... Girls’ and children’s outerwear, n.e.c. .......... Miscellaneous apparel and accessories ............ Robes and dressing gowns ........................... Waterproof outerwear .................................... Leather and sheep-lined clothing .................. Apparel and accessories, n.e.c. ................... Miscellaneous fabricated textile products .......... Curtains and draperies .................................. Housefurnishings, n.e.c. ............................... Textile bags ................................................... Canvas and related products ......................... Pleating and stitching .................................... Automotive and apparel trimmings ................ Schiffli machine embroideries ........................ Fabricated textile products, n.e.c. ................. Paper and allied products ...................................... Pulp mills ........................................................... Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion 58 512 – 324 40 662 264 182 9 40 2,572 247 60 232 748 166 196 112 99 478 109 182 188 201 180 87 65 – 363 62 70 3,471 133 1,030 294 30 297 – 226 18 505 111 70 – – 1,269 138 11 152 397 120 86 67 30 256 63 100 93 58 57 29 – 13 174 36 33 2,024 77 642 198 23 241 – 148 – 115 15 – – – 673 58 19 11 313 170 63 34 10 35 30 – – 81 97 77 – 8 39 – – 2,641 241 911 147 53 132 – 60 6 127 24 18 – – 463 46 20 23 92 20 22 18 25 142 43 81 18 64 33 16 – – 39 – 22 579 45 192 28 92 – 296 234 114 791 166 113 76 436 149 107 51 56 150 22 19 – 53 1,021 179 306 79 71 38 198 16 134 3,658 51 63 – 173 132 76 501 92 33 62 314 75 78 42 36 71 11 6 – 27 538 129 163 55 19 32 86 10 44 1,805 23 39 – 352 281 92 474 – 16 21 415 103 94 40 54 118 – 20 8 20 584 92 118 56 – – 172 12 102 784 – 12 – 117 24 11 81 – 18 6 43 8 20 – 15 11 – – – – 182 – – – – – 102 – 33 581 14 See footnotes at end of table. Page 14 – 19 – 44 10 60 37 23 – 15 141 37 – 11 22 – – – 13 22 11 8 – – 13 9 – – 29 – – 82 – 17 – – – – – 6 33 – 18 – 14 – – – – – – – – – 31 – 14 – – – – – – 268 – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – – Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 27 – – – 30 – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 13 – 9 – 13 – – – – – – – – – – – 9 – – – – – – – – – – – 8 – 8 – 8 29 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 8 11 6 17 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 13 – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – 10 – – – – – – – – 24 – 8 – – – – – – – – 10 – 33 87 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – 23 – – – 14 – All other events 8 – 130 10 220 76 55 – 14 781 81 11 33 240 77 59 24 14 125 48 40 – 80 85 26 – 9 86 14 14 1,407 94 462 108 12 – 140 132 68 235 19 18 17 181 63 54 16 38 46 – 6 – 17 430 94 76 – 61 – 102 15 46 1,686 26 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 Paper mills ......................................................... Paperboard mills ................................................ Paperboard containers and boxes ..................... Setup paperboard 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 ...................................................... Stationery products ........................................ 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, gravure ........................ Commercial printing, n.e.c. ........................... Manifold business forms .................................... Greeting cards ................................................... Blankbooks and bookbinding ............................. Blankbooks and looseleaf binders ................. Bookbinding and related work ....................... Printing trade services ....................................... Typesetting .................................................... Platemaking services ..................................... Chemicals and allied products ............................... Industrial inorganic chemicals ........................... Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ............ Plastics materials and synthetics ....................... Plastics materials and resins ......................... Drugs ................................................................. Medicinals and botanicals ............................. Pharmaceutical preparations ......................... Diagnostic substances ................................... Biological products except diagnostic ............ Soap, cleaners, and toilet goods ....................... Soap and other detergents ............................ Polishes and sanitation goods ....................... Toilet preparations ......................................... Paints and allied products ................................. Industrial organic chemicals .............................. Cyclic crudes and intermediates .................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. .............. Agricultural chemicals ........................................ Agricultural chemicals, n.e.c. ........................ Miscellaneous chemical products ...................... Adhesives and sealants ................................. Explosives ..................................................... 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 .............................. SIC code 3 262 263 265 2652 2653 2655 2657 267 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 2679 27 271 272 273 2731 2732 274 275 2752 2754 2759 276 277 278 2782 2789 279 2791 2796 28 281 2819 282 2821 283 2833 2834 2835 2836 284 2841 2842 2844 285 286 2865 2869 287 2879 289 2891 2892 2893 2899 29 291 295 2951 2952 Total cases 3,143 860 4,408 222 2,638 300 966 5,451 384 818 1,126 515 324 511 592 150 1,030 25,119 7,760 1,435 1,924 1,029 895 559 10,574 6,599 496 3,479 771 300 1,264 536 728 532 197 334 11,470 950 592 1,271 718 2,884 373 2,104 144 263 2,169 646 494 1,002 969 1,037 312 709 721 174 1,469 401 240 306 474 1,731 682 885 577 308 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 919 357 1,744 123 1,001 156 368 2,036 151 251 469 176 134 198 220 – 413 7,415 1,799 311 608 302 306 128 3,662 2,212 159 1,291 247 63 467 140 327 131 – 105 2,847 149 76 409 201 675 75 486 55 60 687 206 119 345 210 160 26 134 241 39 316 – 75 41 88 438 103 314 275 40 297 200 651 – 389 85 122 694 54 126 156 70 34 63 53 – 138 2,341 609 118 209 128 82 50 1,142 647 52 444 37 31 113 40 72 31 – 24 1,174 66 30 185 78 280 30 179 51 20 302 108 49 134 78 71 10 60 98 – 95 – – – 37 150 33 109 106 – 209 53 355 14 203 – 106 490 39 51 120 32 10 57 78 – 95 1,865 593 90 170 81 89 34 765 456 41 268 63 14 112 28 84 22 8 14 814 40 18 100 48 199 – 152 – 22 160 51 22 87 71 52 8 44 17 – 174 – 75 19 35 174 19 152 138 14 340 75 604 67 331 47 117 797 50 67 187 64 82 77 89 – 166 2,865 505 82 206 84 123 29 1,595 1,013 59 523 147 14 214 68 146 73 10 63 598 30 16 100 62 143 – 116 – – 165 33 41 88 46 36 8 28 – – 39 – – 14 10 79 22 48 – 23 See footnotes at end of table. Page 15 Fall to lower level 170 43 155 – 82 – 27 102 – 16 18 8 – 11 20 – 12 793 347 69 45 30 14 40 252 169 9 74 17 – 7 – – 11 11 – 466 38 24 35 18 169 – 121 14 11 69 15 27 27 48 48 19 28 – – – – – – 17 104 44 48 – 23 Fall on same level 250 72 317 – 216 – 64 408 21 61 98 47 – 34 16 – 94 2,551 1,150 334 144 77 67 97 608 415 38 155 14 22 109 34 74 73 18 56 1,261 101 69 133 67 351 50 266 11 24 310 68 93 145 77 114 36 78 69 8 105 – – 19 30 141 59 69 – 35 Slips or trips without fall 116 24 102 – 68 – 10 134 – 30 45 10 – 14 – – – 926 336 34 48 19 30 12 422 335 12 75 – 52 13 – – – – – 342 27 27 55 42 82 – 61 – 17 42 28 – 9 28 12 – 10 – 10 71 – – – 32 110 40 32 – – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Paper mills ......................................................... Paperboard mills ................................................ Paperboard containers and boxes ..................... Setup paperboard 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 ...................................................... Stationery products ........................................ 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, gravure ........................ Commercial printing, n.e.c. ........................... Manifold business forms .................................... Greeting cards ................................................... Blankbooks and bookbinding ............................. Blankbooks and looseleaf binders ................. Bookbinding and related work ....................... Printing trade services ....................................... Typesetting .................................................... Platemaking services ..................................... Chemicals and allied products ............................... Industrial inorganic chemicals ........................... Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ............ Plastics materials and synthetics ....................... Plastics materials and resins ......................... Drugs ................................................................. Medicinals and botanicals ............................. Pharmaceutical preparations ......................... Diagnostic substances ................................... Biological products except diagnostic ............ Soap, cleaners, and toilet goods ....................... Soap and other detergents ............................ Polishes and sanitation goods ....................... Toilet preparations ......................................... Paints and allied products ................................. Industrial organic chemicals .............................. Cyclic crudes and intermediates .................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. .............. Agricultural chemicals ........................................ Agricultural chemicals, n.e.c. ........................ Miscellaneous chemical products ...................... Adhesives and sealants ................................. Explosives ..................................................... 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 .............................. Total In lifting Repetitive motion 830 151 1,208 39 713 56 304 1,418 92 250 280 156 66 116 176 – 217 6,817 1,988 329 594 331 263 122 2,836 1,710 169 957 332 73 372 151 222 172 115 57 2,947 250 154 327 191 735 121 534 – 55 474 157 106 209 350 245 66 179 127 36 438 – – 132 161 359 132 192 126 65 316 73 656 – 383 54 175 738 48 98 145 96 44 76 90 – 119 4,361 1,207 196 409 241 168 105 1,815 1,053 89 673 176 56 271 103 168 126 100 27 1,852 156 101 183 93 507 78 361 – 45 289 104 62 121 217 163 46 117 100 – 238 – – 61 79 199 34 153 105 48 130 30 226 14 113 16 72 393 24 26 89 53 17 39 49 – 76 1,593 337 111 119 38 81 58 743 534 20 190 21 54 136 99 37 16 13 – 509 26 15 40 31 182 17 141 9 14 122 27 – 94 – 52 – 52 – 13 35 – – – 22 33 19 – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 16 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 177 65 87 – 76 – 9 238 35 44 31 17 19 22 – – 64 724 90 65 46 36 10 24 412 258 16 138 8 – 34 29 – 40 – 38 1,496 180 99 148 91 299 35 208 10 46 201 78 74 44 74 302 132 153 101 – 191 – 73 – 30 192 94 73 – 46 60 20 87 – 75 – 12 100 – 50 – 7 – 11 – – 13 1,136 743 62 25 15 10 34 215 161 8 47 8 6 12 6 – 32 – 29 342 20 13 19 8 75 – 72 – – 94 19 37 37 – 20 – 14 – – 63 – – – 29 49 24 18 – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Total – – 11 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 25 17 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 7 – – – 28 – – – – 14 7 10 – – – – – 19 – – – – – 20 – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 11 54 32 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 50 38 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 – All other assaults 86 68 – – – – – 8 7 By person – – – – – 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 35 30 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 23 – – – – 12 – 11 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 11 – – – – – All other events 8 478 96 470 13 291 – 98 616 43 91 92 41 53 63 96 – 118 3,054 887 122 293 180 113 44 1,406 793 65 548 120 20 112 67 45 51 – 44 1,183 149 111 104 66 295 49 196 17 33 169 47 32 90 128 82 24 58 62 – 196 – – 52 49 250 134 105 – 84 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total 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 .................................. 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 ..................... Women’s footwear, except athletic ................ Footwear, except rubber, n.e.c. .................... Luggage ............................................................. Handbags and personal leather goods .............. Personal leather goods, n.e.c. ...................... Leather goods, n.e.c. ........................................ 299 2992 30 301 305 3052 3053 306 3061 3069 308 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 3087 3088 3089 31 311 314 3143 3144 3149 316 317 3172 319 Transportation and public utilities 6,7 ................... Railroad transportation 6 ........................................ Local and interurban passenger transit ................. Local and suburban transportation .................... Taxicabs ............................................................ Intercity and rural bus transportation ................. Bus charter service ............................................ School buses ..................................................... Trucking and warehousing 7 .................................. Trucking and courier services, except air 7 ....... Public warehousing and storage 7 ..................... Water transportation .............................................. Deep sea domestic transportation of freight ...... Water transportation of passengers .................. Water transportation services ............................ Transportation by air 7 ........................................... Air transportation, scheduled 7 .......................... Air transportation, nonscheduled 7 .................... Airports, flying fields, and services .................... Transportation services 7 ....................................... Passenger transportation arrangement ............. Freight transportation arrangement 7 ................ Miscellaneous transportation services 7 ............ Communications .................................................... Telephone communications ............................... Radio and television broadcasting ..................... Cable and other pay television services ............ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ....................... Electric services ................................................. Gas production and distribution ......................... Combination utility services ............................... Water supply ...................................................... Sanitary services ............................................... 40 41 411 412 413 414 415 42 421 422 44 442 448 449 45 451 452 458 47 472 473 478 48 481 483 484 49 491 492 493 494 495 – 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 163 148 31,591 1,886 2,575 1,244 1,331 3,974 2,045 1,930 23,062 1,652 581 820 748 852 2,139 656 723 14,890 2,165 624 817 377 215 130 206 208 146 205 20 11,023 555 1,038 617 421 1,198 571 627 8,204 717 247 350 309 360 692 214 216 5,099 749 259 204 106 43 34 74 72 43 120 – – 4,609 239 476 358 118 482 206 276 3,404 325 66 128 154 157 191 89 68 2,224 297 79 72 43 16 10 46 17 15 74 – – 2,500 117 243 118 125 259 136 123 1,869 109 65 72 – 75 249 18 85 1,166 162 68 60 31 13 11 – 15 6 – – – 3,086 158 286 121 165 368 167 201 2,268 244 97 130 115 121 164 103 – 1,257 243 76 62 25 11 13 19 40 23 37 12 – 686 28 16 – – 83 46 38 553 68 – – – – 40 – – 371 34 12 6 – – – – – – – 13 13 2,387 112 133 74 59 245 144 101 1,888 101 28 – 60 98 115 177 50 1,222 162 59 55 31 6 11 – 14 – – 38 – 738 42 110 78 31 75 32 44 512 39 11 – – 76 68 – – 267 32 – 15 – 9 – – – – – 224,030 44,941 21,725 12,045 5,907 17,096 24,073 8,238 5,807 14,309 9,153 794 1,236 653 2,411 82,218 77,010 4,929 7,382 650 173 5,576 73,636 69,592 560 3,484 4,308 346 2,662 1,278 18,924 13,097 1,263 4,441 17,353 4,637 2,579 2,060 768 7,279 953 1,645 966 64 191 139 262 16,873 15,419 1,331 2,309 – 50 1,867 15,578 14,459 127 992 1,120 18 718 380 2,755 1,886 157 696 3,691 836 445 256 164 1,987 214 737 429 30 97 90 72 8,299 7,410 787 1,307 – 28 1,055 7,528 6,943 42 542 515 12 301 203 1,413 988 96 328 1,702 469 230 117 60 828 74 519 338 23 41 28 85 4,332 4,088 241 369 – 8 284 4,614 4,433 34 147 306 – 205 96 921 623 40 256 904 164 103 77 34 526 10 129 68 – 15 10 35 2,072 1,815 247 395 – – 302 2,208 2,026 8 174 213 – 165 47 203 121 – 64 678 123 63 42 24 422 147 500 231 8 75 48 135 9,626 9,288 320 489 – 35 302 2,157 1,840 52 264 347 58 176 112 2,732 1,696 57 966 1,096 321 146 206 32 388 470 1,585 726 36 401 91 318 9,262 8,841 405 1,095 – 34 940 6,758 6,281 110 367 531 81 261 188 2,621 1,548 464 597 1,736 433 304 367 45 587 852 396 175 9 – 15 176 2,592 2,497 90 258 – – 180 2,471 2,270 14 188 123 11 89 20 740 558 39 140 806 251 142 110 21 283 See footnotes at end of table. Page 17 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion 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 .................................. 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 ..................... Women’s footwear, except athletic ................ Footwear, except rubber, n.e.c. .................... Luggage ............................................................. Handbags and personal leather goods .............. Personal leather goods, n.e.c. ...................... Leather goods, n.e.c. ........................................ 36 – 8,907 653 847 286 562 1,405 769 636 5,969 361 160 265 187 104 600 146 294 3,852 443 130 158 81 42 24 36 69 57 35 11 11 4,589 276 522 190 332 542 252 290 3,228 208 96 166 121 63 473 79 206 1,817 226 60 79 44 18 8 17 34 23 28 – – 2,147 154 137 78 59 259 166 93 1,582 70 39 – – – 89 39 – 1,282 391 54 221 73 81 41 18 15 15 – – – 1,753 60 79 – 49 249 150 99 1,364 139 17 85 36 – 136 27 – 874 120 68 34 17 8 – 11 6 6 – – – 640 58 10 – – 88 40 48 482 – – – – 83 106 9 – 223 26 – 17 – – – – – – – Transportation and public utilities 6,7 ................... 68,162 38,550 4,113 6,666 18,339 Railroad transportation 6 ........................................ 918 4,052 3,348 98 252 115 239 21,948 20,388 1,487 1,316 – – 852 30,892 29,807 132 954 1,081 45 770 264 3,636 2,589 208 808 4,294 1,094 517 415 180 2,078 41 2,713 2,351 80 133 64 85 10,372 9,421 925 528 – 12 404 19,932 19,291 94 547 591 22 456 111 1,983 1,397 148 414 2,378 543 233 208 64 1,323 15 287 67 – – 8 191 891 761 124 79 – – 64 1,067 1,029 – 32 125 36 44 45 1,198 1,112 15 69 434 127 144 69 23 71 132 265 183 19 – 16 20 1,752 1,605 136 261 – – 202 2,259 2,107 20 132 119 11 39 65 998 808 18 168 881 308 126 120 15 307 576 3,543 2,279 389 123 101 642 7,834 7,526 297 565 – – 497 2,848 2,667 30 151 441 54 318 69 1,313 810 156 340 1,220 280 149 90 143 549 Local and interurban passenger transit ................. Local and suburban transportation .................... Taxicabs ............................................................ Intercity and rural bus transportation ................. Bus charter service ............................................ School buses ..................................................... Trucking and warehousing 7 .................................. Trucking and courier services, except air 7 ....... Public warehousing and storage 7 ..................... Water transportation .............................................. Deep sea domestic transportation of freight ...... Water transportation of passengers .................. Water transportation services ............................ Transportation by air 7 ........................................... Air transportation, scheduled 7 .......................... Air transportation, nonscheduled 7 .................... Airports, flying fields, and services .................... Transportation services 7 ....................................... Passenger transportation arrangement ............. Freight transportation arrangement 7 ................ Miscellaneous transportation services 7 ............ Communications .................................................... Telephone communications ............................... Radio and television broadcasting ..................... Cable and other pay television services ............ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ....................... Electric services ................................................. Gas production and distribution ......................... Combination utility services ............................... Water supply ...................................................... Sanitary services ............................................... See footnotes at end of table. Page 18 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – Total By person – – – – 24 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 17 – – – – – – – 13 – – – – – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – 5 – 5 – 5 – 5 – 5 – – – – – 463 – 17 – – – 8 – 314 288 26 29 20 – – – – – – – – – – 15 – – 9 68 – 34 8 – 19 5 – – – – – All other assaults All other events 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 11 11 3,270 223 203 68 135 368 125 243 2,473 145 74 – 94 47 287 32 73 1,688 202 37 101 59 20 15 – 26 15 11 1,899 724 1,174 30,040 74 386 252 38 33 8 54 654 639 15 12 – – 12 405 389 – 11 18 8 8 – 153 67 – 81 197 46 57 24 14 56 71 332 210 38 33 – 50 – – – – – – – 139 132 – – 14 8 – – 58 12 – 42 48 14 12 – – 20 – 1,668 1,634 920 123 104 104 374 10,472 9,757 699 969 – – 651 9,192 8,740 65 386 403 26 238 132 2,762 2,019 141 567 2,930 936 515 395 132 953 54 42 – – 8 – 597 592 – – – – – 266 258 – – – – – – 95 55 – 38 149 33 46 20 14 37 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases 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 ................. 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 ...................... 50 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 51 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 Retail trade .............................................................. Building materials and garden supplies ................. Lumber and other building materials ................. Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores ..................... Hardware stores ................................................ Retail nurseries and garden stores .................... 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 ................................. 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 ................................... 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 ............... 52 521 523 525 526 53 531 533 539 54 541 542 543 546 549 55 551 553 554 555 556 557 56 561 562 565 566 569 57 571 572 573 58 59 591 592 593 594 Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Struck by object Struck against object 466,744 130,796 69,844 34,249 17,060 19,602 63,755 14,514 144,698 42,323 21,704 9,937 7,252 7,856 11,602 3,722 76,296 11,585 2,147 9,975 9,105 5,107 4,391 6,250 16,678 11,058 68,401 3,364 2,616 1,824 35,255 2,412 2,597 2,664 7,941 9,728 25,294 3,476 486 3,277 1,759 2,190 1,119 1,176 6,732 5,079 17,029 860 578 427 9,048 1,070 618 570 1,728 2,129 13,748 1,514 206 1,825 802 1,082 508 554 3,607 3,649 7,956 497 228 232 3,771 415 361 266 986 1,199 5,531 768 203 505 783 400 371 335 1,237 929 4,406 130 186 77 2,707 109 – 257 367 462 3,586 683 – 466 92 495 174 154 1,222 262 3,666 165 89 58 2,338 444 – – 290 168 2,966 395 – 539 191 154 168 195 585 692 4,890 219 72 101 2,712 362 – 159 463 766 5,046 701 94 804 728 596 324 322 1,105 370 6,556 408 205 179 3,722 159 219 162 650 853 1,793 154 72 179 89 130 98 276 353 443 1,928 83 155 11 1,125 – – 133 167 140 322,046 88,473 48,140 24,312 9,808 11,746 52,153 10,792 25,331 19,937 1,131 1,626 1,745 54,427 48,673 2,662 3,092 73,716 70,021 554 262 1,747 720 40,030 17,634 10,516 9,204 904 775 510 7,529 661 1,318 3,513 1,274 284 13,764 9,781 1,464 2,519 78,213 29,035 5,066 674 1,159 8,225 8,900 7,133 362 537 584 14,098 12,847 420 831 20,508 19,191 211 67 577 280 13,600 6,001 4,190 2,690 254 188 – 2,138 259 336 963 251 148 3,356 2,620 273 462 18,188 7,687 1,060 164 305 2,586 5,023 4,066 118 410 294 8,991 8,224 201 566 10,900 10,325 82 35 178 193 6,258 2,657 2,125 1,169 – – – 1,378 – 234 540 181 93 1,948 1,592 145 211 9,473 4,168 634 97 99 1,699 2,144 1,547 194 72 193 3,489 3,109 174 205 6,039 5,570 118 – 210 69 3,297 1,578 878 589 – – – 486 – 56 291 57 48 893 707 57 129 5,573 2,391 325 – 94 505 775 647 – 46 – 1,133 1,043 – 51 3,002 2,738 – – 189 9 2,207 766 590 799 – – – 98 – 39 36 – – 240 141 56 43 1,588 764 49 – 104 287 1,736 1,481 – 89 47 2,440 2,250 – 139 1,384 1,273 – 64 – 23 1,200 234 323 384 – – – 651 – 155 154 141 15 979 686 120 173 2,098 1,256 287 – 58 454 1,969 1,574 81 144 133 6,396 5,951 207 237 10,873 10,431 88 34 220 80 3,764 2,122 507 992 – – – 1,060 – 191 522 270 36 955 710 48 197 23,358 3,779 647 183 115 1,411 661 581 – 33 45 1,339 1,192 – 135 2,154 2,077 – – – 11 1,560 1,111 146 255 – – – 212 – 38 140 – 13 370 268 – 91 3,846 649 144 – 19 120 Total Wholesale and retail trade ...................................... Fall to lower level Caught in or compressed or crushed See footnotes at end of table. Page 19 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Total Wholesale and retail trade ...................................... 129,322 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment In lifting Repetitive motion 88,760 12,954 20,203 21,240 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions All other assaults All other events 8 Total By person 760 3,947 3,420 528 49,651 Wholesale trade ....................................................... 45,227 29,234 3,298 4,391 10,451 272 372 155 217 15,185 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 ................. 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 ...................... 23,392 3,378 1,026 3,795 3,272 1,263 1,521 2,392 4,425 2,320 21,835 983 754 672 11,395 278 650 865 3,040 3,197 15,712 2,467 808 2,362 2,424 647 929 2,000 2,573 1,502 13,522 546 547 404 7,303 174 320 547 1,526 2,154 1,876 138 – – 318 119 114 392 481 174 1,422 164 86 127 620 – – – 127 178 2,821 243 – – 831 158 121 – 820 458 1,570 33 152 10 462 138 357 – 92 224 5,280 1,699 188 353 831 98 394 693 748 278 5,171 240 337 181 2,277 – 134 206 555 1,145 128 – – – – – – – – – 144 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 314 – – – 129 105 – – 46 – – – – – – – – – – – 126 – – – 69 – – – 42 – – – – – – – – – – – 188 – – – – – – – – – 7,641 1,364 143 854 1,067 387 528 734 1,386 1,178 7,544 374 265 111 3,748 132 428 364 1,074 1,047 Retail trade .............................................................. 84,095 59,526 9,656 15,812 10,789 488 3,575 3,264 311 34,466 Building materials and garden supplies ................. Lumber and other building materials ................. Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores ..................... Hardware stores ................................................ Retail nurseries and garden stores .................... 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 ................................. 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 ................................... 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 ............... 7,994 6,086 360 556 639 19,514 16,824 1,537 1,153 20,554 19,727 204 66 421 117 8,380 3,601 2,080 1,909 215 267 – 1,999 201 288 970 373 – 5,217 3,528 607 1,081 11,952 8,485 1,366 195 372 2,171 5,662 4,238 268 443 511 13,580 11,624 1,112 843 15,767 15,158 192 38 274 90 5,089 2,129 1,637 1,117 – – – 1,242 – 189 536 284 16 3,142 2,075 438 629 9,137 5,907 982 180 252 1,473 288 – 136 32 – 1,273 1,129 114 30 3,568 3,469 – – 62 – 772 267 100 339 – – – 124 – 25 66 – – 563 507 – 52 1,706 1,362 157 – – 422 478 367 – 24 81 1,483 1,371 – 66 2,657 2,363 – – 164 50 1,856 773 640 287 – – – 154 – 30 99 – 15 159 74 48 36 8,121 906 77 – 50 156 1,121 942 – 42 71 801 710 – 52 2,922 2,813 – 17 – 40 2,735 1,195 909 388 – – 204 49 – 24 10 – – 790 374 219 197 1,232 1,138 154 – 46 147 84 71 60 – – – – 452 424 – – 353 351 – – – – 316 80 – 174 – – – 91 – 25 56 – – 19 – – 12 1,694 280 67 – 83 66 – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 20 – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – 214 – 149 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 95 – – – – – – – 535 484 – – 374 373 – – – – 397 143 – 176 – – – 96 – 25 61 – – – – – 17 1,700 356 77 – 92 80 82 – – – – – – – – – 81 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 76 – – – 14 2,089 1,636 94 156 114 6,535 5,904 182 448 8,702 8,284 – – 211 96 5,553 2,128 1,408 1,780 – – – 1,046 – 207 527 188 – 1,342 998 133 211 5,876 3,322 1,090 – 87 652 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Nonstore retailers .............................................. Fuel dealers ....................................................... Retail stores, n.e.c. ........................................... 596 598 599 Finance, insurance, and real estate ....................... Depository institutions ........................................... Central reserve depositories .............................. Commercial banks ............................................. Savings institutions ............................................ Credit unions ..................................................... Functions closely related to banking ................. Nondepository institutions ..................................... Business credit institutions ................................ Mortgage bankers and brokers .......................... Security and commodity brokers ........................... Security brokers and dealers ............................. Security and commodity exchanges .................. Security and commodity services ...................... Insurance carriers .................................................. Life insurance .................................................... Medical service and health insurance ............... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ................. Title insurance ................................................... Pension, health, and welfare funds ................... Insurance agents, brokers, and service ................. Real estate ............................................................ Real estate operators and lessors ..................... Real estate agents and managers ..................... Title abstract offices ........................................... Subdividers and developers .............................. Holding and other investment offices .................... Investment offices .............................................. Trusts ................................................................. 60 601 602 603 606 609 61 615 616 62 621 623 628 63 631 632 633 636 637 64 65 651 653 654 655 67 672 673 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 ............................... Miscellaneous repair shops ............................... Motion picture distribution and services ............ Motion picture theaters ...................................... Amusement and recreation services ..................... Producers, orchestras, entertainers .................. Bowling centers ................................................. Commercial sports ............................................. 70 701 72 721 722 723 726 729 73 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 75 751 752 753 76 769 782 783 79 792 793 794 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 6,216 3,246 4,448 1,602 640 1,330 414 315 911 1,007 189 234 155 61 108 137 178 124 611 358 454 175 89 99 42,784 8,053 3,702 2,674 746 3,628 8,066 1,296 9,043 308 6,975 726 772 221 1,558 380 526 766 499 98 169 6,593 1,792 1,966 2,504 126 156 2,053 21,696 11,458 7,920 101 2,217 1,076 87 214 1,280 69 920 70 198 – 154 58 65 173 104 25 44 648 122 178 261 – 75 243 5,336 2,920 2,031 – 382 219 11 – 442 25 286 38 89 – 73 – 34 94 72 – 14 301 47 85 93 – 72 175 2,504 1,087 1,173 – 242 113 7 19 390 22 242 18 89 – 57 – 28 43 17 – 19 228 46 65 108 – – 51 1,822 1,275 459 – 85 82 – – 207 11 182 12 – – – – – 24 13 – – 63 19 11 33 – – – 416 234 151 – – – – – 783 – 669 59 – – 377 – 32 58 37 – 14 272 84 59 123 – – 60 2,050 1,126 688 – 233 – – – 2,196 33 1,736 280 100 – 336 76 162 128 70 – 46 1,263 428 413 328 – – 501 3,451 1,990 1,164 – 266 189 24 – 294 8 212 – 19 – 42 – 31 42 – – – 137 18 49 57 – – – 699 265 406 – – 58 – 13 449,047 77,616 37,138 24,921 9,002 17,858 66,655 16,543 37,585 36,738 10,607 6,802 1,363 1,502 668 189 59,836 282 2,766 17,053 7,376 13,418 2,835 14,741 20,757 3,039 836 11,851 8,453 6,625 98 1,049 24,672 2,043 823 2,936 9,426 9,312 2,495 1,455 379 542 101 15 13,658 – 573 4,081 911 4,221 258 3,461 6,034 555 132 3,583 3,220 2,759 – 270 6,976 374 250 684 4,413 4,399 1,198 676 199 251 – – 6,281 – 218 1,271 593 2,092 113 1,879 2,692 290 50 1,656 1,581 1,320 – 153 4,038 188 120 377 3,383 3,368 608 308 175 116 – – 4,285 – 70 2,388 – 766 102 856 1,668 165 61 1,010 832 696 – 86 1,862 110 112 169 1,009 924 363 338 – – – – 1,694 – 270 174 – 860 22 266 858 44 12 196 429 379 13 – 621 – – 34 1,560 1,532 701 433 187 – – 6 4,988 – 846 874 1,039 332 147 1,498 836 94 17 560 352 233 – – 1,094 118 – 60 7,521 7,452 1,459 674 342 296 114 34 7,696 – 255 2,686 502 901 468 2,667 2,190 704 198 478 651 471 – 241 4,151 544 – 333 1,367 1,366 264 243 – – – – 1,494 – – 409 – 135 66 718 3,369 81 – 3,188 70 54 – – 906 – – 70 See footnotes at end of table. Page 21 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion Nonstore retailers .............................................. Fuel dealers ....................................................... Retail stores, n.e.c. ........................................... 2,347 987 1,046 1,626 617 776 404 – 350 128 353 142 190 248 301 Finance, insurance, and real estate ....................... 8,122 5,290 3,599 1,952 Depository institutions ........................................... Central reserve depositories .............................. Commercial banks ............................................. Savings institutions ............................................ Credit unions ..................................................... Functions closely related to banking ................. Nondepository institutions ..................................... Business credit institutions ................................ Mortgage bankers and brokers .......................... Security and commodity brokers ........................... Security brokers and dealers ............................. Security and commodity exchanges .................. Security and commodity services ...................... Insurance carriers .................................................. Life insurance .................................................... Medical service and health insurance ............... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ................. Title insurance ................................................... Pension, health, and welfare funds ................... Insurance agents, brokers, and service ................. Real estate ............................................................ Real estate operators and lessors ..................... Real estate agents and managers ..................... Title abstract offices ........................................... Subdividers and developers .............................. Holding and other investment offices .................... Investment offices .............................................. Trusts ................................................................. 1,314 96 967 79 129 – 158 80 65 179 112 27 39 930 188 312 396 – 18 206 5,182 2,740 1,682 – 734 154 12 60 815 66 572 47 112 – 133 76 47 138 98 – – 647 128 230 267 – – 125 3,328 1,768 1,044 – 490 104 11 56 1,185 28 863 34 168 93 236 50 116 85 56 – 9 1,483 272 724 409 – – 236 282 150 77 – – 92 15 – Services .................................................................... 147,749 83,064 4,085 4,048 1,664 1,278 – 89 224 – 8,314 – 329 2,882 643 2,879 352 1,071 2,320 166 53 1,449 1,146 860 16 – 2,376 198 – 141 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 ............................... Miscellaneous repair shops ............................... Motion picture distribution and services ............ Motion picture theaters ...................................... Amusement and recreation services ..................... Producers, orchestras, entertainers .................. Bowling centers ................................................. Commercial sports ............................................. 8,595 8,554 2,655 1,993 221 96 306 39 12,077 – 499 4,248 916 4,027 507 1,662 3,586 287 110 2,312 2,109 1,480 – – 4,174 334 121 442 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total By person – – – – – – – 1,883 114 622 541 286 8 231 – – – 58 32 11 17 16 – – 171 72 28 70 – – 63 1,330 680 540 – 110 – 15 – 273 6 223 31 – – 43 14 – 24 – – – 638 288 59 285 – – 315 497 251 135 – 106 93 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 106 – 92 – – – – – 276 – 257 – 19 – – – – – – – – 56 37 – 17 – – – 273 178 76 – 19 – – – 273 – 254 – 19 – – – – – – – – 49 37 – 12 – – – 204 134 67 – – – – – 13,058 23,772 17,749 632 14,295 13,075 544 538 677 321 – 243 – 25 2,503 135 218 564 – 413 386 694 238 56 – – 216 181 – – 755 – – 94 2,855 2,322 925 757 – 124 – – 2,717 – – 1,034 – 516 101 636 731 72 – 449 369 311 – – 1,495 82 241 53 416 416 346 240 – – – 15 4,523 – 78 1,335 549 952 477 1,073 1,734 804 149 435 510 371 – – 526 – – 34 192 176 – – – – – – 65 – – – – – – – 133 – – – – – – – 51 – – – 255 226 50 – – – – – 575 – – 68 – – – 414 158 – 64 – – – – 294 373 – – 117 163 163 41 – – – – – 494 – – – – – – 379 157 – 64 – – – – 294 176 – – 63 See footnotes at end of table. Page 22 17 11 All other assaults – – – All other events 8 605 323 552 81 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 5,450 – – – 1,156 57 897 146 49 – 153 48 43 58 46 – 12 990 281 141 557 – – 394 2,490 1,151 1,030 – 309 210 7 74 1,220 53,120 92 4,851 4,843 1,029 651 156 132 – 49 9,540 – 256 1,751 2,967 1,834 417 1,883 1,746 372 108 529 912 735 14 – 4,173 488 – 1,047 6 – – – – – – 69 – – – 16 – – – – – – – 81 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 197 – – 54 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Contact with objects Industry 2 Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ........................................................... Health services ...................................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors ............... Offices and clinics of dentists ............................ Offices of other health practitioners ................... Nursing and personal care facilities ................... Hospitals ............................................................ Medical and dental laboratories ......................... Home health care services ................................ Health and allied services, n.e.c. ...................... Legal services ........................................................ Educational services .............................................. Elementary and secondary schools ................... Colleges and universities ................................... Vocational schools ............................................. Social services ....................................................... Individual and family services ............................ Job training and related services ....................... Child day care services ..................................... Residential care ................................................. Social services, n.e.c. ....................................... Museums and art galleries ................................ Membership organizations .................................... Business associations ....................................... Labor organizations ........................................... Civic and social associations ............................. Religious organizations ..................................... Membership organizations, n.e.c. ..................... Engineering and management services ................ Engineering and architectural services .............. Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping ............. Research and testing services .......................... Management and public relations ...................... SIC code 3 799 80 801 802 804 805 806 807 808 809 81 82 821 822 824 83 832 833 835 836 839 841 86 861 863 864 866 869 87 871 872 873 874 Total cases 18,804 201,321 7,401 1,292 1,207 77,962 89,400 1,762 17,770 4,493 3,017 11,333 3,770 6,749 336 44,835 10,934 5,106 6,150 20,447 2,198 716 7,651 368 299 5,142 779 957 15,041 3,774 2,237 3,626 5,404 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in or compressed or crushed 5,660 21,781 842 – 86 8,167 11,220 174 866 406 373 1,983 717 1,148 – 6,323 1,406 1,354 876 2,393 294 192 1,360 – – 1,056 – 190 2,885 830 222 913 920 3,353 10,027 514 – – 3,615 5,176 60 390 235 182 1,187 495 614 – 2,937 697 616 464 1,016 144 124 724 – – 507 – 165 1,378 387 – 428 497 1,464 7,634 282 – – 3,044 3,729 60 325 141 137 553 123 397 – 2,326 547 371 378 933 97 43 437 – – 400 – – 1,002 246 – 354 265 543 2,590 17 – – 1,196 1,214 40 90 – – 172 77 92 – 800 110 282 – 358 49 11 100 – – 86 – – 224 94 – 55 76 See footnotes at end of table. Page 23 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 804 3,904 284 – 19 738 1,893 70 746 111 195 1,415 198 1,161 – 1,598 442 197 120 746 92 82 293 – – 204 – – 681 231 – 129 283 3,223 28,069 1,114 – 106 10,712 12,271 422 2,192 904 298 2,244 906 1,201 – 8,321 2,117 948 1,723 3,136 398 98 1,341 – – 856 140 161 1,943 657 – 391 778 797 5,458 168 – – 1,609 2,988 81 460 107 40 280 101 163 – 1,500 268 299 239 536 157 23 1,148 – – 1,094 – – 542 101 – 130 252 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work 1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1996 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 4 Overexertion Industry 2 Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ........................................................... Health services ...................................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors ............... Offices and clinics of dentists ............................ Offices of other health practitioners ................... Nursing and personal care facilities ................... Hospitals ............................................................ Medical and dental laboratories ......................... Home health care services ................................ Health and allied services, n.e.c. ...................... Legal services ........................................................ Educational services .............................................. Elementary and secondary schools ................... Colleges and universities ................................... Vocational schools ............................................. Social services ....................................................... Individual and family services ............................ Job training and related services ....................... Child day care services ..................................... Residential care ................................................. Social services, n.e.c. ....................................... Museums and art galleries ................................ Membership organizations .................................... Business associations ....................................... Labor organizations ........................................... Civic and social associations ............................. Religious organizations ..................................... Membership organizations, n.e.c. ..................... Engineering and management services ................ Engineering and architectural services .............. Accounting, auditing, and bookkeeping ............. Research and testing services .......................... Management and public relations ...................... Total In lifting Repetitive motion 3,276 92,873 1,188 – 600 41,768 39,892 254 8,150 782 519 2,171 621 1,456 – 12,804 3,190 1,173 1,324 6,658 459 209 1,156 – – 624 217 187 4,462 715 1,441 982 1,324 1,975 48,591 744 – 329 23,623 18,123 202 5,102 447 431 1,194 297 850 – 8,290 1,802 774 1,086 4,389 239 122 690 – – 392 178 – 3,636 432 1,433 725 1,046 640 5,120 807 – – 299 2,622 97 268 691 898 407 106 294 – 387 92 68 – 109 48 8 378 – – 61 198 – 883 210 180 230 263 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 Labor Statistics. 5 Excludes farms with fewer than 11 employees. 6 Data conforming to OSHA definitions for mining operators in coal, metal, and nonmetal mining and for employers in railroad transportation are provided Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 1,119 10,410 1,393 – 86 2,935 4,734 107 430 506 55 489 97 357 – 2,509 742 128 287 1,298 53 23 286 – – 221 – 15 647 195 – 211 239 472 4,698 125 – – 301 1,064 369 2,199 445 170 508 155 175 – 2,838 812 263 360 1,289 113 – 176 – – 74 – – 1,238 423 – 79 706 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – 47 – – – – – – – – 19 10 – – – – – – – – – – 15 – – 15 – – 17 – – – – Total By person 240 8,698 48 – – 4,971 2,973 15 435 231 – 628 527 76 – 2,781 614 224 131 1,693 119 – 265 – – 49 – 195 162 – – – 129 101 8,224 47 – – 4,740 2,913 8 286 207 – 592 518 50 – 2,709 568 220 122 1,680 118 – 52 – – – – – 134 – – – 129 All other assaults 139 474 – – – 232 60 7 149 – – 36 – 26 – 72 46 – – – – – 213 – – 18 – 195 – – – – – All other events 8 2,562 20,264 1,428 – 167 6,447 9,718 174 2,025 307 450 1,199 336 712 – 5,744 1,229 448 1,019 2,585 463 72 1,232 95 – 888 – 121 1,583 379 – 552 507 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. 7 In 1996, air courier operations previously classified in Industry Groups 421, 422, 423, 452, 473, and 478 were reclassified to Industry Group 451. As a result, the 1996 estimates for these SIC’s and Major Industry Groups 42, 45, and 47 are not comparable to those for prior years. In addition, the 1996 estimates for transportation and public utilities may have more variability than those for prior years. 8 Includes nonclassifiable responses. NOTE: Dashes indicate data that are not available. Because of rounding, data may not sum to totals. n.e.c. = not elsewhere classified. Page 24 SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz