Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Private industry 4 ............................................... 2,040,929 562,187 Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 4 ........................ Agricultural production 4 ............................................ Agricultural production—crops 4 ............................ Cash grains ....................................................... Field crops, except cash grains ......................... Vegetables and melons ..................................... Fruits and tree nuts ............................................ Horticultural specialties ...................................... General farms, primarily crop ............................ Agricultural production—livestock 4 ....................... Livestock, except dairy and poultry ................... Dairy farms ........................................................ Poultry and eggs ................................................ Animal specialties .............................................. General farms, primarily animal ......................... Agricultural services .............................................. Crop services ..................................................... Veterinary services ............................................ Animal services, except veterinary .................... Farm labor and management services .............. Landscape and horticultural services ................ Forestry ................................................................. Timber tracts ...................................................... Forest products .................................................. Forestry services ............................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping ............................... Commercial fishing ............................................ 01-02 01 011 013 016 017 018 019 02 021 024 025 027 029 07 072 074 075 076 078 08 081 083 085 09 091 Mining 5 .................................................................... Metal mining 5 ........................................................ Iron ores ............................................................ Copper ores ....................................................... Lead and zinc ores ............................................ Gold and silver ores ........................................... Ferroalloy ores, except vanadium ..................... Miscellaneous metal ores .................................. Coal mining 5 ......................................................... Bituminous coal and lignite mining .................... Anthracite mining ............................................... Oil and gas extraction ............................................ Crude petroleum and natural gas ...................... Oil and gas field services ................................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels 5 ..................... Dimension stone ................................................ Crushed and broken stone ................................ Sand and gravel ................................................ Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals .............. Chemical and fertilizer minerals ........................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals .................. 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 ............................... 15 152 153 154 16 161 162 17 171 172 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 270,369 143,458 95,043 104,801 224,244 59,647 42,111 13,543 6,693 3,416 2,138 2,681 3,546 1,480 17,386 12,861 180 1,802 2,089 3,809 3,991 989 4,525 1,681 1,096 1,321 342 85 23,473 3,020 2,264 1,359 3,906 12,840 829 404 69 355 424 343 5,774 4,383 51 652 790 1,293 1,278 319 1,391 588 277 374 106 47 7,266 920 159 614 1,058 4,515 334 208 16 111 168 130 2,801 2,065 19 338 329 664 562 154 736 342 151 150 62 32 3,596 294 89 495 332 2,386 197 120 – 78 99 75 1,594 1,254 – 161 218 304 488 – 340 114 79 111 27 9 1,688 216 70 57 428 917 93 57 – 33 41 32 895 647 16 95 190 120 172 – 248 114 30 90 15 – 1,198 186 – – – 942 23 – – – 23 17 1,250 897 – 112 77 443 245 – 354 133 84 98 31 7 1,345 186 – 81 570 456 76 – 27 42 9 – 1,729 1,202 – 179 162 369 423 – 527 158 144 181 42 – 1,707 264 139 222 203 880 49 18 – 31 61 56 526 416 – – 64 229 96 – 110 30 27 38 14 – 909 89 – – 190 592 36 – – 32 9 – 19,778 7,618 4,113 1,513 1,665 1,651 1,913 219 872 201 228 52 310 22 59 6,449 6,298 151 9,172 1,226 7,925 3,285 190 1,595 895 257 197 151 322 50 94 14 134 7 23 2,909 2,865 44 3,106 309 2,795 1,281 94 608 380 78 61 60 157 19 52 6 62 – 15 1,544 1,520 24 1,788 178 1,610 624 57 287 188 38 30 24 98 22 25 65 9 17 98 15 30 8 35 79 25 24 7 466 443 23 667 50 616 420 11 218 126 35 18 12 22 – – 513 493 20 1,044 150 892 277 14 127 79 23 20 14 – – – – – – – – – – 219 67 152 – – – – – – – 190,591 62,978 40,315 20,198 653 19,464 27,857 8,692 19,165 122,420 31,474 5,597 14,142 6,939 131 7,072 9,897 3,009 6,888 38,940 9,971 1,350 See footnotes at end of table. Page 1 – – – 43 27 – – 752 741 11 344 52 292 319 13 175 87 16 12 16 – – 584 575 9 687 48 637 329 24 141 102 23 19 20 32,617 15,183 7,800 22,634 14,185 5,047 8,170 4,281 87 3,802 5,911 1,615 4,296 18,536 3,960 600 3,133 1,427 – 1,684 1,439 552 887 10,612 2,872 425 1,516 743 – 765 1,698 524 1,174 4,587 1,414 44 5,061 2,884 61 2,116 1,840 575 1,265 15,734 3,542 1,029 3,158 1,902 – 1,228 2,268 619 1,648 8,760 1,813 816 795 374 – 382 1,038 259 779 3,214 908 204 – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 334,843 82,625 103,541 73,841 Industry 2 Total Private industry 4 ............................................... 559,938 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions All other events 6 Total By person All other assaults 4,250 29,024 22,956 6,068 236,831 58 1,670 5,350 55 2,374 1,829 – 224 217 647 491 226 545 208 188 132 16 – 2,872 498 340 – 677 1,317 77 38 – 35 28 26 1,343 Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 4 ........................ 8,406 4,734 890 2,102 2,314 71 1,728 Agricultural production 4 ............................................ Agricultural production—crops 4 ............................ Cash grains ....................................................... Field crops, except cash grains ......................... Vegetables and melons ..................................... Fruits and tree nuts ............................................ Horticultural specialties ...................................... General farms, primarily crop ............................ Agricultural production—livestock 4 ....................... Livestock, except dairy and poultry ................... Dairy farms ........................................................ Poultry and eggs ................................................ Animal specialties .............................................. General farms, primarily animal ......................... Agricultural services .............................................. Crop services ..................................................... Veterinary services ............................................ Animal services, except veterinary .................... Farm labor and management services .............. Landscape and horticultural services ................ Forestry ................................................................. Timber tracts ...................................................... Forest products .................................................. Forestry services ............................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping ............................... Commercial fishing ............................................ 3,102 2,404 – 331 335 440 1,013 245 698 245 86 301 54 12 5,083 658 301 97 543 3,402 156 74 12 70 65 43 1,963 1,594 19 214 242 337 687 95 369 114 41 173 35 6 2,634 374 220 – 404 1,513 102 54 11 38 35 18 320 178 – – – – 62 – 142 40 12 83 6 – 501 91 128 – – 264 34 – – 14 36 29 966 738 16 – 231 210 205 – 228 99 44 69 12 – 1,071 118 67 70 152 664 48 36 – 9 17 17 890 732 – 217 155 109 155 – 157 64 34 36 18 6 1,379 176 – – 453 723 14 – – 9 31 31 43 19 411 62 – – – – 14 – 350 117 197 10 24 – 1,312 – 1,054 183 57 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 357 50 – – 19 – 10 – 307 109 165 7 24 – 1,309 – 1,054 180 57 18 – – – – – – Mining 5 .................................................................... 5,217 1,991 158 1,155 466 – – – Metal mining 5 ........................................................ Iron ores ............................................................ Copper ores ....................................................... Lead and zinc ores ............................................ Gold and silver ores ........................................... Ferroalloy ores, except vanadium ..................... Miscellaneous metal ores .................................. Coal mining 5 ......................................................... Bituminous coal and lignite mining .................... Anthracite mining ............................................... Oil and gas extraction ............................................ Crude petroleum and natural gas ...................... Oil and gas field services ................................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels 5 ..................... Dimension stone ................................................ Crushed and broken stone ................................ Sand and gravel ................................................ Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals .............. Chemical and fertilizer minerals ........................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals .................. 312 106 65 23 90 6 22 2,245 2,192 53 1,635 276 1,357 1,025 65 499 233 107 72 49 90 22 26 7 28 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Construction ............................................................ 42,976 156 296 23,552 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 ............................... 9,250 4,506 295 4,449 5,822 1,714 4,108 27,904 7,781 882 63 142 – – 93 50 – 43 104 – – 4,506 2,165 – 2,295 3,165 985 2,180 15,880 3,924 776 – 5 887 873 14 682 94 585 332 29 159 67 43 18 16 – – – – – – – 44 5 9 – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 – 24 – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 35 – 149 77 72 – – – – – – – 5 139 130 9 783 113 663 189 – 106 53 5 12 9 24,785 3,584 8,385 6,067 732 452 5,212 2,741 214 2,258 3,260 1,075 2,185 16,313 4,624 559 849 348 – 501 505 168 337 2,229 606 135 1,425 361 – 1,034 1,392 462 929 5,568 1,584 139 719 424 – 273 1,728 813 915 3,620 1,174 227 206 199 – – 129 69 60 398 78 – 205 96 – 108 74 18 55 174 92 17 7 7 See footnotes at end of table. Page 2 35 34 – 421 45 375 10 – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – 42 8 31 – – – – 11 – 70 – – 12 – – – 7 – – 133 132 – 1,116 129 980 82 – 30 24 8 13 7 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness 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 object 5,516 5,704 3,438 3,412 3,143 216 6,190 2,708 2,680 2,062 1,755 1,549 91 3,131 1,570 1,742 683 912 870 52 1,486 598 755 366 320 352 64 676 2,624 2,593 1,353 2,020 940 73 1,559 1,178 1,202 729 704 745 102 1,471 541 416 155 241 216 – 532 Manufacturing .......................................................... 527,458 179,011 76,039 40,047 44,123 16,594 39,176 12,839 Durable goods ......................................................... 336,008 120,944 53,844 26,088 26,252 9,890 21,620 7,567 8,979 1,954 1,562 1,129 398 2,530 785 612 251 77 805 1,057 898 1,213 834 379 662 79 56 528 2,855 1,468 648 415 112 248 18 29 204 131 73 236 734 451 282 213 109 104 2,718 59 215 92 123 336 128 86 19 116 – 25 61 1,537 134 732 3,100 222 654 452 197 1,201 432 373 82 18 296 414 324 343 271 72 265 52 13 200 1,468 792 361 170 66 163 16 17 138 47 92 102 364 215 150 70 14 56 1,476 34 189 94 96 157 110 48 25 95 7 23 15 750 49 336 3,710 138 1,494 1,018 471 1,137 546 285 105 76 125 307 228 171 120 51 462 27 55 380 1,460 825 450 158 50 155 – 6 110 38 72 128 341 167 174 55 20 35 1,692 17 159 90 70 115 107 49 23 102 – 34 60 888 122 243 1,373 306 334 307 – 274 132 66 16 23 37 – – 369 276 93 56 11 21 24 290 187 110 35 8 26 – 6 29 8 21 15 35 – 25 24 8 16 1,212 – 76 60 17 41 37 29 – 51 12 – 33 848 – 276 1,968 368 440 345 89 644 206 122 96 56 165 107 98 265 201 64 142 29 58 55 906 537 218 141 62 111 – – 74 31 42 87 154 81 73 54 28 26 1,322 25 161 112 50 89 48 – 11 87 13 38 34 721 58 200 599 56 89 73 16 267 90 73 – 6 76 – – 114 78 36 40 – 17 24 260 141 58 39 7 29 – 9 25 13 12 47 30 – 22 17 7 9 440 15 46 28 18 20 – – – 12 – 10 – 303 18 64 Electrical work ................................................... Masonry, stonework, and plastering .................. Carpentry and floor work ................................... Roofing, siding, and sheet metal work ............... Concrete work ................................................... Water well drilling .............................................. Miscellaneous special trade contractors ............ Lumber and wood products ................................... Logging .............................................................. Sawmills and planing mills ................................. Sawmills and planing mills, general ............... Hardwood dimension and flooring mills ......... Millwork, plywood and structural members ........ Millwork .......................................................... Wood kitchen cabinets .................................. Hardwood veneer and plywood ..................... Softwood veneer and plywood ...................... Structural wood members, n.e.c. .................. Wood containers ................................................ Wood pallets and skids .................................. Wood buildings and mobile homes .................... Mobile homes ................................................ Prefabricated wood buildings ........................ Miscellaneous wood products ........................... Wood preserving ........................................... Reconstituted wood products ........................ Wood products, n.e.c. ................................... Furniture and fixtures ............................................. Household furniture ........................................... Wood household furniture ............................. Upholstered household furniture ................... Metal household furniture .............................. Mattresses and bedsprings ........................... Wood television and radio cabinets ............... Household furniture, n.e.c. ........................... Office furniture ................................................... Wood office furniture ..................................... Office furniture, except wood ......................... Public building and related furniture .................. Partitions and fixtures ........................................ Wood partitions and fixtures .......................... Partitions and fixtures, except wood .............. Miscellaneous furniture and fixtures .................. Drapery hardware and blinds and shades ..... Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. ......................... Stone, clay, and glass products ............................. Flat glass ........................................................... Glass and glassware, pressed or blown ............ Glass containers ............................................ Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ................... Products of purchased glass ............................. Structural clay products ..................................... Brick and structural clay tile ........................... Ceramic wall and floor tile ............................. Pottery and related products ............................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures ............................. Porcelain electrical supplies .......................... Pottery products, n.e.c. ................................. Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ........... Concrete block and brick ............................... Concrete products, n.e.c. ............................. 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 24 241 242 2421 2426 243 2431 2434 2435 2436 2439 244 2448 245 2451 2452 249 2491 2493 2499 25 251 2511 2512 2514 2515 2517 2519 252 2521 2522 253 254 2541 2542 259 2591 2599 32 321 322 3221 3229 323 325 3251 3253 326 3261 3264 3269 327 3271 3272 19,055 17,522 9,084 11,702 9,237 785 17,963 35,378 4,533 8,120 6,058 1,941 11,968 4,881 2,815 1,183 505 2,584 3,113 2,425 4,445 3,149 1,296 3,200 506 430 2,263 16,997 9,063 3,746 2,362 826 1,860 104 165 1,557 751 806 1,999 3,499 1,857 1,642 880 406 474 19,240 425 1,947 945 1,002 1,603 1,025 500 187 1,276 257 398 496 10,125 850 3,756 16,746 2,429 3,857 2,718 1,096 5,195 1,930 1,302 479 180 1,304 1,905 1,555 1,897 1,356 542 1,462 164 138 1,161 6,272 3,408 1,604 809 288 612 40 54 487 227 260 513 1,508 876 633 356 155 201 6,461 121 624 311 314 690 361 186 76 337 33 95 148 3,456 344 1,425 See footnotes at end of table. Page 3 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total In lifting Repetitive motion 4,338 4,297 2,082 2,527 2,072 296 3,628 2,047 2,924 1,488 1,408 1,045 162 2,056 249 337 327 162 202 – 204 1,054 491 64 1,026 391 52 768 285 178 97 254 392 – 1,005 197 – – – – – – Manufacturing .......................................................... 136,399 75,910 44,258 28,611 8,840 1,251 1,001 576 426 59,478 514 300 214 39,089 17 4,293 900 1,010 783 209 1,314 528 266 130 92 298 245 171 472 351 121 352 88 58 206 1,734 958 422 253 64 202 – 12 238 100 138 164 293 148 145 80 46 34 2,292 42 269 114 155 163 152 70 29 80 24 29 27 1,238 117 430 Electrical work ................................................... Masonry, stonework, and plastering .................. Carpentry and floor work ................................... Roofing, siding, and sheet metal work ............... Concrete work ................................................... Water well drilling .............................................. Miscellaneous special trade contractors ............ Durable goods ......................................................... 86,325 48,125 27,156 17,384 4,630 889 Lumber and wood products ................................... Logging .............................................................. Sawmills and planing mills ................................. Sawmills and planing mills, general ............... Hardwood dimension and flooring mills ......... Millwork, plywood and structural members ........ Millwork .......................................................... Wood kitchen cabinets .................................. Hardwood veneer and plywood ..................... Softwood veneer and plywood ...................... Structural wood members, n.e.c. .................. Wood containers ................................................ Wood pallets and skids .................................. Wood buildings and mobile homes .................... Mobile homes ................................................ Prefabricated wood buildings ........................ Miscellaneous wood products ........................... Wood preserving ........................................... Reconstituted wood products ........................ Wood products, n.e.c. ................................... Furniture and fixtures ............................................. Household furniture ........................................... Wood household furniture ............................. Upholstered household furniture ................... Metal household furniture .............................. Mattresses and bedsprings ........................... Wood television and radio cabinets ............... Household furniture, n.e.c. ........................... Office furniture ................................................... Wood office furniture ..................................... Office furniture, except wood ......................... Public building and related furniture .................. Partitions and fixtures ........................................ Wood partitions and fixtures .......................... Partitions and fixtures, except wood .............. Miscellaneous furniture and fixtures .................. Drapery hardware and blinds and shades ..... Furniture and fixtures, n.e.c. ......................... Stone, clay, and glass products ............................. Flat glass ........................................................... Glass and glassware, pressed or blown ............ Glass containers ............................................ Pressed and blown glass, n.e.c. ................... Products of purchased glass ............................. Structural clay products ..................................... Brick and structural clay tile ........................... Ceramic wall and floor tile ............................. Pottery and related products ............................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures ............................. Porcelain electrical supplies .......................... Pottery products, n.e.c. ................................. Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ........... Concrete block and brick ............................... Concrete products, n.e.c. ............................. 7,824 240 1,826 1,468 340 3,339 1,481 765 350 119 624 691 474 1,070 719 351 659 96 89 475 5,160 2,790 952 794 246 718 35 44 524 290 233 570 1,059 556 503 218 74 144 4,723 102 400 191 209 412 312 125 45 471 131 150 136 2,154 161 991 4,279 – 1,039 862 170 1,880 888 436 136 22 398 360 284 593 434 160 369 62 38 270 3,010 1,611 567 446 117 442 18 21 341 198 143 340 583 301 282 136 48 87 2,716 42 225 119 106 233 190 106 8 289 80 70 88 1,312 111 582 1,206 – 255 144 100 562 367 127 34 16 18 54 – 72 37 35 246 34 – 209 1,564 746 301 235 90 94 8 17 115 63 53 458 164 87 77 80 58 22 910 30 234 40 193 104 43 18 17 103 27 37 37 208 – 86 607 – 127 54 52 192 56 79 34 6 17 – – 112 94 18 116 – 20 96 579 164 33 34 51 41 – 6 53 12 42 126 195 79 116 39 24 15 1,010 45 99 73 26 77 50 35 7 126 10 32 82 494 53 226 595 170 80 68 12 158 90 12 20 6 30 17 – 57 27 30 112 82 16 14 166 99 36 17 6 23 – 12 10 6 – 17 28 12 16 12 7 – 777 34 31 10 22 – 13 – – 10 8 – – 635 56 51 129 – 94 93 – – – – – – – – – – – – 13 – 9 – 12 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 68 – 7 7 – – – – – – – – – 48 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 4 Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 39 – – – – – – – – – 19 – – – – 15 – – 12 10 – – – – – 56 22 7 – – – – – – – – – 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 49 16 – – – – – – – – – – 32 – 32 – 32 – – – 32 – – – 26 – – – – – – – – – – – – 19 – – 3,044 2,290 839 1,329 1,112 – 2,535 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – – All other events 6 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Ready-mixed concrete ................................... Gypsum products .......................................... Cut stone and stone products ............................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ..... Abrasive products .......................................... Minerals, ground or treated ........................... Mineral wool .................................................. Nonmetallic mineral products, n.e.c. ............ Primary metal industries ........................................ Blast furnace and basic steel products .............. Blast furnaces and steel mills ........................ Steel wire and related products ..................... Cold finishing of steel shapes ........................ Steel pipe and tubes ...................................... Iron and steel foundries ..................................... Gray and ductile iron foundries ...................... Malleable iron foundries ................................ Steel investment foundries ............................ Steel foundries, n.e.c. ................................... Primary nonferrous metals ................................ Primary copper .............................................. Primary aluminum .......................................... Primary nonferrous metals, n.e.c. ................. Secondary nonferrous metals ............................ Nonferrous rolling and drawing .......................... Copper rolling and drawing ............................ Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil ..................... Aluminum extruded products ......................... Nonferrous rolling and drawing, n.e.c. .......... Nonferrous wiredrawing and insulating ......... Nonferrous foundries (castings) ........................ Aluminum die—castings ................................ Nonferrous die—casting except aluminum ..................................................... Aluminum foundries ....................................... Miscellaneous primary metal products .............. Primary metal products, n.e.c. ...................... Fabricated metal products ..................................... Metal cans and shipping containers .................. Metal cans ..................................................... Metal barrels, drums, and pails ..................... 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 ................................... Nonferrous forgings ....................................... Automotive stampings ................................... Metal stampings, n.e.c. ................................. SIC code 3 Total cases Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object Fall to lower level Fall on same level 3273 3275 328 329 3291 3295 3296 3299 33 331 3312 3315 3316 3317 332 3321 3322 3324 3325 333 3331 3334 3339 334 335 3351 3353 3354 3356 3357 336 3363 5,246 122 444 2,006 632 269 370 277 31,004 8,401 4,603 1,082 1,107 1,558 8,470 5,774 236 524 1,937 1,388 152 981 256 1,386 4,892 948 358 1,008 376 2,135 5,070 2,365 1,584 48 191 579 132 55 106 116 11,230 3,050 1,344 559 483 656 3,371 2,177 95 165 934 458 46 345 67 519 1,778 410 126 382 115 724 1,670 784 617 24 62 185 36 17 35 – 4,967 1,387 572 206 251 350 1,537 986 35 54 462 226 26 162 37 283 744 168 40 199 52 283 626 314 346 10 – 119 – 18 21 56 2,115 633 331 78 119 106 513 294 17 44 159 78 10 52 16 58 338 88 27 56 10 153 410 197 496 15 100 204 55 16 48 – 2,589 746 326 186 64 168 628 358 17 42 211 124 9 105 11 136 493 100 48 91 38 202 385 160 530 6 – 109 – 50 12 – 1,113 557 442 17 53 43 174 123 – 9 37 65 10 43 12 56 131 30 17 21 – 59 81 39 445 15 – 138 – 38 41 20 1,997 756 527 37 57 129 364 271 – 26 63 89 17 62 10 76 356 55 46 61 35 153 218 133 3364 3365 339 3399 34 341 3411 3412 342 3421 3423 3425 3429 343 3431 3432 3433 344 3441 3442 3443 3444 3446 3448 3449 345 3451 3452 346 3462 3463 3465 3469 470 1,310 1,398 425 59,608 1,035 630 405 3,798 320 917 224 2,337 1,485 335 509 641 22,078 4,688 3,177 5,669 4,711 1,740 1,503 590 3,418 1,984 1,434 11,610 1,552 168 5,588 4,167 94 469 385 128 24,359 407 217 191 1,371 121 338 95 816 564 137 155 272 9,802 2,429 1,194 2,569 1,980 706 633 292 1,658 928 730 4,711 667 77 2,128 1,805 37 190 165 45 10,770 143 68 76 465 49 97 45 273 202 33 49 120 4,883 1,501 501 1,314 795 343 316 113 511 332 179 1,970 342 39 796 782 19 103 85 31 5,139 76 50 – 248 12 68 34 135 132 42 41 50 1,909 278 330 448 488 177 75 113 492 253 239 1,070 103 18 592 346 25 105 76 33 5,514 126 71 54 482 48 116 12 306 113 – 60 44 1,821 453 290 319 476 107 124 52 404 252 152 1,106 142 15 473 467 – 36 43 139 41 3,391 67 52 15 193 – 84 14 90 78 23 30 24 1,137 177 214 293 272 90 68 – 135 84 51 910 122 7 436 337 See footnotes at end of table. Page 5 15 48 18 1,453 74 61 13 50 – 11 – 38 21 – 6 15 710 145 72 198 140 68 49 37 83 – 46 181 43 – 119 16 Slips or trips without fall 208 – – 39 – – 22 – 700 278 142 34 43 55 125 90 13 – 17 22 – – 9 29 125 57 21 10 10 26 96 61 14 – – 12 1,067 36 31 – 71 – 7 – 63 19 – 10 – 345 84 61 97 42 51 – – 41 – 33 219 37 – 104 71 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Ready-mixed concrete ................................... Gypsum products .......................................... Cut stone and stone products ............................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ..... Abrasive products .......................................... Minerals, ground or treated ........................... Mineral wool .................................................. Nonmetallic mineral products, n.e.c. ............ Primary metal industries ........................................ Blast furnace and basic steel products .............. Blast furnaces and steel mills ........................ Steel wire and related products ..................... Cold finishing of steel shapes ........................ Steel pipe and tubes ...................................... Iron and steel foundries ..................................... Gray and ductile iron foundries ...................... Malleable iron foundries ................................ Steel investment foundries ............................ Steel foundries, n.e.c. ................................... Primary nonferrous metals ................................ Primary copper .............................................. Primary aluminum .......................................... Primary nonferrous metals, n.e.c. ................. Secondary nonferrous metals ............................ Nonferrous rolling and drawing .......................... Copper rolling and drawing ............................ Aluminum sheet, plate, and foil ..................... Aluminum extruded products ......................... Nonferrous rolling and drawing, n.e.c. .......... Nonferrous wiredrawing and insulating ......... Nonferrous foundries (castings) ........................ Aluminum die—castings ................................ Nonferrous die—casting except aluminum ..................................................... Aluminum foundries ....................................... Miscellaneous primary metal products .............. Primary metal products, n.e.c. ...................... Fabricated metal products ..................................... Metal cans and shipping containers .................. Metal cans ..................................................... Metal barrels, drums, and pails ..................... 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 ................................... Nonferrous forgings ....................................... Automotive stampings ................................... Metal stampings, n.e.c. ................................. Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total In lifting Repetitive motion 934 21 175 591 242 38 109 52 7,979 1,855 976 236 264 362 2,381 1,762 54 178 388 336 48 227 61 262 1,393 254 83 346 97 598 1,268 583 586 12 70 298 93 32 71 – 3,674 761 368 81 163 145 1,041 764 14 111 153 103 7 71 24 150 672 133 29 172 49 275 668 309 105 – – 178 115 17 16 – 1,693 194 84 – 15 68 583 395 15 62 112 57 – – 21 50 311 14 15 43 12 222 440 217 203 – – 86 – – 23 – 2,471 489 384 45 – 50 588 373 13 26 176 123 12 84 28 194 262 38 15 58 50 87 686 245 522 – – 45 16 – 14 – 467 166 105 30 – 20 114 94 – – 16 49 – 40 5 25 23 – – 8 – – 58 26 44 – – – – – – – 226 67 56 – – – 43 29 – – 10 47 6 – 8 – 12 6 – – – – 30 13 140 311 483 132 15,879 253 120 132 1,004 96 214 70 624 478 102 176 200 5,742 1,017 985 1,215 1,423 492 466 145 940 596 344 2,834 326 40 1,411 999 58 168 279 49 9,224 124 45 79 601 70 127 53 352 211 44 66 100 3,244 509 532 694 896 276 277 60 682 454 228 1,680 138 13 843 642 37 91 57 21 3,816 18 17 – 466 45 120 13 288 103 13 44 46 642 86 230 161 80 57 – – 167 143 23 1,044 76 – 699 256 53 255 128 29 3,334 58 27 30 177 9 57 9 102 76 15 27 34 1,375 356 70 545 199 86 75 43 120 51 68 486 93 8 249 132 – – – – – 120 – – – – – – – – – – – – 90 – – 49 – – 20 – – – – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 6 11 33 – 595 10 10 – 59 – 8 – 48 9 – 6 – 200 17 47 63 – – – – 13 – – 186 26 8 106 47 Total By person – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 45 28 27 38 28 27 95 – – – 12 – – – 7 – – – – – – – – 17 – – – – – – – – – – – 50 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 45 – – – 7 – – – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other events 6 665 22 – 234 68 42 29 – 3,083 960 516 97 176 168 721 456 – 54 182 143 7 100 35 150 499 81 34 77 48 254 516 260 63 110 94 41 5,500 111 93 18 398 40 76 20 262 136 40 54 41 2,008 360 300 472 530 171 133 42 238 112 126 1,033 159 20 336 503 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Metal services, n.e.c. ........................................ Plating and polishing ..................................... Metal coating and allied services ................... Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c. .................... Small arms ammunition ................................. Ammunition, except for small arms, n.e.c. .... Small arms ..................................................... Miscellaneous fabricated metal products .......... Industrial valves ............................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .............. Valves and pipe fittings, n.e.c. ...................... Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ......... Fabricated pipe and fittings ........................... Fabricated metal products, n.e.c. ................. Industrial machinery and equipment ...................... 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 ........................... Elevators and moving stairways .................... 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 ................................. Welding apparatus ......................................... Metalworking machinery, n.e.c. .................... Special industry machinery ................................ Textile machinery .......................................... Woodworking machinery ............................... Paper industries machinery ........................... Printing trades machinery .............................. Food products machinery .............................. Special industry machinery, n.e.c. ................ General industrial machinery ............................. Pumps and pumping equipment .................... Ball and roller bearings .................................. Air and gas compressors ............................... Blowers and fans ........................................... Packaging machinery .................................... Speed changers, drives, and gears ............... Industrial furnaces and ovens ........................ Power transmission equipment, n.e.c. .......... General industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............. Computer and office equipment ........................ Electronic computers ..................................... Computer storage devices ............................. Computer peripheral equipment, n.e.c. ........ Office machines, n.e.c. ................................. Refrigeration and service machinery ................. Automatic vending machines ......................... Refrigeration and heating equipment ............ Measuring and dispensing pumps ................. Service industry machinery, n.e.c. ................ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............................... Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves ................ Fluid power cylinders and actuators .............. SIC code 3 347 3471 3479 348 3482 3483 3484 349 3491 3492 3494 3496 3498 3499 35 351 3511 3519 352 3523 3524 353 3531 3532 3533 3534 3535 3536 3537 354 3541 3544 3545 3546 3548 3549 355 3552 3553 3554 3555 3556 3559 356 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 3566 3567 3568 3569 357 3571 3572 3577 3579 358 3581 3585 3586 3589 359 3592 3593 Total cases 5,235 3,105 2,130 779 167 331 212 10,170 698 910 1,456 2,615 1,162 2,354 56,358 2,222 651 1,570 3,688 2,698 991 8,122 2,819 795 774 321 1,540 512 1,360 8,620 1,226 3,791 1,137 499 589 271 4,802 464 438 510 495 856 2,040 7,140 665 872 695 1,263 477 452 447 673 1,596 3,112 1,375 396 632 436 7,200 275 5,039 136 1,534 11,451 707 816 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 1,648 918 730 238 74 80 70 3,961 263 300 639 891 485 949 21,834 576 166 410 1,429 1,108 322 3,358 1,098 321 238 146 794 153 609 3,977 419 1,981 525 162 202 95 1,777 240 200 200 111 316 710 2,446 246 288 170 443 164 183 161 283 510 623 240 93 133 99 2,577 86 1,812 40 567 5,071 155 302 917 490 427 102 35 42 25 1,576 103 104 294 303 231 424 9,290 208 57 151 713 566 147 1,607 530 170 111 53 374 82 287 1,385 123 794 155 36 79 59 860 143 78 90 42 122 385 959 115 95 44 209 56 79 64 107 191 253 85 14 83 36 1,175 34 837 7 276 2,131 50 121 336 203 133 65 29 16 18 811 51 114 100 224 65 163 4,877 139 23 116 229 148 80 611 188 65 50 32 136 24 115 1,159 111 510 165 69 43 14 336 30 47 44 35 71 110 562 57 79 42 103 55 44 54 53 75 212 125 22 18 25 659 20 446 10 164 971 45 71 273 159 114 51 – 16 19 1,139 56 66 135 271 155 262 4,368 154 62 92 274 196 79 619 195 43 44 48 168 40 82 859 80 422 151 39 60 9 303 43 32 22 9 72 125 565 52 96 35 88 35 38 26 63 132 75 16 – 20 33 450 22 307 12 90 1,068 45 69 See footnotes at end of table. Page 7 Fall to lower level Fall on same level 136 93 43 22 – 18 – 177 10 13 32 27 30 40 1,408 68 25 43 36 22 15 190 88 24 15 – 39 13 10 164 39 95 – – – – 151 – 20 15 23 38 50 151 13 6 8 28 – – 20 22 45 83 62 – 10 7 217 – 159 – 42 348 7 8 285 176 109 60 9 23 6 525 30 63 84 135 57 96 3,214 210 65 145 177 107 70 477 212 49 – – 68 35 79 381 77 135 43 36 43 11 352 34 10 19 35 97 157 477 46 64 55 52 21 24 24 58 133 301 168 40 30 31 359 18 213 6 109 480 38 24 Slips or trips without fall 96 56 40 9 – 7 – 231 7 36 43 54 – 48 1,254 72 36 36 42 26 16 258 62 29 32 – 73 16 38 263 39 109 26 10 19 17 76 – – 14 9 – 33 136 – 66 – 16 – – – 11 – 61 27 12 12 8 122 – 88 – 27 225 30 26 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Metal services, n.e.c. ........................................ Plating and polishing ..................................... Metal coating and allied services ................... Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c. .................... Small arms ammunition ................................. Ammunition, except for small arms, n.e.c. .... Small arms ..................................................... Miscellaneous fabricated metal products .......... Industrial valves ............................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .............. Valves and pipe fittings, n.e.c. ...................... Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ......... Fabricated pipe and fittings ........................... Fabricated metal products, n.e.c. ................. Industrial machinery and equipment ...................... 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 ........................... Elevators and moving stairways .................... 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 ................................. Welding apparatus ......................................... Metalworking machinery, n.e.c. .................... Special industry machinery ................................ Textile machinery .......................................... Woodworking machinery ............................... Paper industries machinery ........................... Printing trades machinery .............................. Food products machinery .............................. Special industry machinery, n.e.c. ................ General industrial machinery ............................. Pumps and pumping equipment .................... Ball and roller bearings .................................. Air and gas compressors ............................... Blowers and fans ........................................... Packaging machinery .................................... Speed changers, drives, and gears ............... Industrial furnaces and ovens ........................ Power transmission equipment, n.e.c. .......... General industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............. Computer and office equipment ........................ Electronic computers ..................................... Computer storage devices ............................. Computer peripheral equipment, n.e.c. ........ Office machines, n.e.c. ................................. Refrigeration and service machinery ................. Automatic vending machines ......................... Refrigeration and heating equipment ............ Measuring and dispensing pumps ................. Service industry machinery, n.e.c. ................ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............................... Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves ................ Fluid power cylinders and actuators .............. Total In lifting Repetitive motion 1,561 958 603 207 44 84 55 2,860 165 309 371 734 366 657 15,204 680 194 487 1,067 726 340 2,045 646 217 294 84 289 125 391 2,064 382 811 246 173 152 82 1,300 104 102 169 208 225 492 2,159 138 269 221 457 154 121 133 183 482 908 354 99 208 157 2,098 113 1,437 46 434 2,882 181 283 946 563 383 146 44 60 28 1,590 88 166 220 331 211 402 8,852 368 91 278 662 463 198 1,157 315 126 174 54 174 68 246 1,167 218 440 183 92 81 53 730 74 61 86 157 118 234 1,190 83 132 140 232 115 70 83 84 251 628 238 64 159 106 1,174 54 859 26 202 1,775 105 180 317 197 120 99 16 40 43 959 71 67 129 416 46 171 3,299 258 46 213 221 151 70 272 100 24 30 – 48 28 40 490 61 142 71 60 54 30 218 19 38 7 19 – 113 396 35 56 44 65 15 28 15 37 101 328 169 53 60 40 514 24 421 20 48 601 117 42 See footnotes at end of table. Page 8 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 541 346 195 43 7 26 10 459 45 30 44 111 81 112 2,937 67 22 44 256 215 41 456 202 57 20 17 69 38 53 370 35 155 77 10 34 7 216 21 18 14 11 62 90 364 20 24 82 69 – 21 29 25 90 167 56 23 43 12 374 12 231 8 108 668 70 52 52 35 17 10 – 10 – 58 14 – – 10 – 12 680 26 – 21 58 42 16 96 54 – – – – – 19 111 23 63 15 – – – 60 9 10 – – – 31 78 – 12 – 23 – 8 15 10 – 85 55 8 12 9 88 – 64 – 22 78 – 7 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – 6 – – – 13 – – – – – – 131 – – – – – – 40 20 – – – – 16 – 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 8 – – – – 48 – – Total By person – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 27 – – – – – – 20 – – – – – 17 44 89 – – – – – – – – – – – – 32 16 – 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 – – – – 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 17 – 14 – – – – – 21 7 – 13 13 16 – – – – – 45 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 19 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 11 8 16 13 – – – – – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – All other events 6 592 320 272 85 15 40 26 899 94 87 104 235 80 238 6,307 258 94 164 394 296 98 898 322 71 95 58 150 84 119 790 149 298 129 40 79 24 642 19 33 69 70 89 362 911 148 87 109 110 106 53 48 44 206 545 239 67 121 70 825 16 594 14 171 1,044 103 72 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 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 .................................. Carbon and graphite products ....................... Relays and industrial controls ........................ Electrical industrial apparatus, n.e.c. ............ Household appliances ....................................... Household cooking equipment ...................... Household refrigerators and freezers ............ Household laundry equipment ....................... Electric housewares and fans ........................ Household vacuum cleaners ......................... Household appliances, n.e.c. ....................... Electric lighting and wiring equipment ............... Electric lamps ................................................ Current-carrying wiring devices ..................... Noncurrent-carrying wiring devices ............... Residential lighting fixtures ............................ Commercial lighting fixtures .......................... Vehicular lighting equipment ......................... Lighting equipment, n.e.c. ............................ 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 ........................................... SIC code 3 Total cases Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 3594 3596 3599 36 361 3612 3613 362 3621 3624 3625 3629 363 3631 3632 3633 3634 3635 3639 364 3641 3643 3644 3645 3646 3647 3648 1,040 175 8,713 27,490 1,734 996 737 2,942 1,796 234 783 128 3,117 379 678 470 840 218 532 4,204 477 1,447 539 468 576 404 293 358 67 4,189 7,324 540 292 248 786 466 73 192 55 952 114 161 82 290 87 219 1,369 152 508 186 160 193 97 74 170 32 1,758 2,930 225 133 92 383 206 35 123 18 388 49 60 26 61 65 127 552 45 187 65 86 99 32 37 43 26 786 1,787 111 59 52 174 100 20 44 11 222 43 50 19 90 – – 365 46 124 22 27 77 49 20 107 – 843 1,815 114 63 52 169 116 12 15 26 206 15 22 21 79 19 49 383 60 169 88 32 9 11 14 16 – 317 658 36 16 20 66 34 9 21 – 67 12 18 11 19 – – 108 8 15 12 14 57 – – 66 – 348 2,298 102 54 48 160 94 6 46 14 201 – 50 34 65 20 27 311 36 142 27 28 20 43 16 12 – 153 612 27 8 19 29 26 – – – 87 – 34 14 – – 12 61 15 24 – – 12 – – 365 3651 3652 366 3661 3663 3669 367 3671 3672 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679 1,381 995 386 2,649 809 1,495 345 8,157 862 1,996 2,168 300 167 378 314 1,972 362 254 109 535 144 323 69 2,015 207 567 401 97 39 140 84 480 110 103 7 250 72 141 36 752 108 254 107 44 21 37 44 138 99 54 45 133 33 94 6 494 71 112 142 18 6 15 17 113 123 74 48 102 18 62 22 466 22 108 79 24 8 68 17 140 37 27 10 83 24 48 10 201 14 76 41 5 6 – – 57 96 69 27 334 126 182 26 865 84 187 297 36 20 – 45 176 53 12 41 52 12 37 369 3691 3692 3694 3695 3699 37 371 3711 3713 3714 3715 3716 372 3721 3724 3728 373 3731 3732 374 3,305 446 352 1,776 253 478 70,006 47,708 20,628 1,892 22,126 2,678 384 7,776 4,503 970 2,302 9,205 6,761 2,445 1,155 764 104 67 438 49 106 20,769 14,620 5,184 644 7,857 830 105 1,809 846 315 648 2,546 1,769 777 345 272 43 – 140 29 57 9,043 6,518 2,221 270 3,548 425 53 595 223 115 256 1,098 726 372 167 189 22 41 109 8 9 4,731 3,125 1,682 145 1,133 142 23 599 286 110 204 645 432 214 91 252 39 16 164 10 23 3,470 2,569 586 138 1,668 168 10 312 146 54 112 302 160 142 57 62 24 7 19 8 229 42 15 93 25 53 4,826 3,245 1,466 148 1,487 112 32 624 336 124 165 625 397 228 60 See footnotes at end of table. Page 9 – 1,805 812 380 64 282 67 20 282 170 23 90 559 489 70 45 – 230 13 81 64 – – – 6 64 73 12 – 41 9 10 2,222 1,442 754 40 549 76 22 356 262 51 43 316 261 55 19 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 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 .................................. Carbon and graphite products ....................... Relays and industrial controls ........................ Electrical industrial apparatus, n.e.c. ............ Household appliances ....................................... Household cooking equipment ...................... Household refrigerators and freezers ............ Household laundry equipment ....................... Electric housewares and fans ........................ Household vacuum cleaners ......................... Household appliances, n.e.c. ....................... Electric lighting and wiring equipment ............... Electric lamps ................................................ Current-carrying wiring devices ..................... Noncurrent-carrying wiring devices ............... Residential lighting fixtures ............................ Commercial lighting fixtures .......................... Vehicular lighting equipment ......................... Lighting equipment, n.e.c. ............................ 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 ........................................... Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion 334 53 2,032 7,382 421 229 192 875 509 100 246 20 794 100 176 129 202 42 144 1,225 135 441 209 123 140 103 74 210 31 1,250 4,361 229 85 144 505 266 66 160 13 453 72 98 72 127 27 57 738 60 288 122 99 87 52 30 86 13 344 3,652 249 155 94 505 362 14 118 12 404 48 63 95 106 49 41 354 42 86 18 43 49 84 32 49 11 485 1,641 98 70 28 131 96 10 16 9 77 15 17 – 36 – – 180 37 44 35 12 28 19 – 424 341 83 650 214 336 101 2,025 356 437 444 55 50 87 109 489 246 214 32 419 142 218 59 1,284 257 312 288 36 25 60 76 231 156 115 41 377 118 198 61 992 86 160 280 42 11 73 30 310 55 26 28 185 51 129 – 759 28 257 256 29 28 29 9 122 969 124 125 476 73 171 17,332 11,705 4,433 514 5,971 671 117 2,026 1,187 245 593 2,146 1,490 656 346 486 76 71 239 27 74 9,016 6,003 2,050 195 3,334 364 60 1,221 732 150 338 1,035 741 294 114 616 67 57 412 32 47 8,392 6,804 3,819 62 2,723 169 30 804 486 67 251 409 279 130 47 157 23 21 59 26 28 3,664 2,400 850 109 1,012 408 21 370 221 41 107 540 437 104 109 See footnotes at end of table. Page 10 – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – 59 302 10 10 – 25 21 – – – 66 – 20 11 24 – – 83 – 21 – 8 17 7 25 20 10 10 41 21 13 8 40 46 77 – – – 13 – – 13 – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 18 6 – – – 5 843 691 295 60 308 – – 59 – 10 23 – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – 47 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – 10 – 7 – 26 16 – 5 16 Total By person – – – – – – – 10 – – – – – 106 – – 13 – – – 20 – – 13 39 – 9 12 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 18 – – 12 – 6 13 13 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 57 19 – – – – – – – – 8 – 12 – – – – – – – – – – 27 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 8 – All other events 6 112 21 737 3,495 245 158 88 352 189 22 124 18 463 70 135 88 77 – 87 484 47 162 50 80 59 32 54 177 139 38 380 97 222 61 987 59 222 356 32 13 29 27 249 406 41 56 226 29 53 9,990 5,925 3,435 239 1,907 316 28 1,415 967 84 364 1,984 1,579 406 170 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 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 .................. Surgical appliances and supplies .................. Dental equipment and supplies ..................... X-ray apparatus and tubes ............................ Electromedical equipment ............................. Photographic equipment and supplies .............. Watches, clocks, watchcases and parts ............ Miscellaneous manufacturing industries ................ Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ................. Jewelry, precious metal ................................. Silverware and plated ware ........................... Jewelers’ materials and lapidary work ........... Musical instruments ........................................... Toys and sporting goods ................................... Dolls and stuffed toys .................................... Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............ Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. ............... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies ............... Pens and mechanical pencils ........................ Lead pencils and art goods ........................... Marking devices ............................................. 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 3 375 376 3761 379 3792 3795 3799 38 381 382 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825 3826 3827 3829 384 3841 3842 3843 3844 3845 386 387 39 391 3911 3914 3915 393 394 3942 3944 3949 395 3951 3952 3953 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 ........................ 20 201 2011 2013 2015 202 2022 2023 2024 2026 203 2032 2033 Total cases Slips or trips without fall Fall to lower level Fall on same level – 21 228 21 82 – 20 17 – 22 5 – 9 110 25 81 – – – – – 185 31 8 23 – – 40 – 6 34 22 8 7 – – 10 – 10 78 – 43 – 14 19 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 970 932 624 2,260 1,137 99 1,023 10,268 1,212 3,670 166 777 807 177 675 343 194 531 3,736 1,564 1,382 260 179 352 1,092 90 9,660 556 340 113 104 322 3,404 27 1,180 2,197 692 131 266 194 102 347 203 144 4,340 433 2,009 277 121 1,499 280 260 78 908 468 24 416 2,308 238 922 50 194 202 49 96 116 64 151 827 311 334 64 45 73 193 30 3,641 205 103 42 60 115 1,156 – 386 770 216 47 107 44 18 114 68 46 1,835 193 876 112 23 631 108 123 52 435 232 6 196 941 115 415 25 70 104 33 38 75 21 48 311 109 117 38 14 33 – – 1,352 64 32 20 12 36 440 – 182 258 62 8 40 9 5 36 29 7 714 68 325 48 – 270 58 26 22 187 96 16 74 522 61 182 14 33 36 5 14 21 10 49 191 77 75 12 14 13 – 15 875 39 31 – – 24 268 – 85 183 61 17 22 15 7 43 15 29 439 22 254 18 6 139 56 70 – 105 55 – 48 568 39 195 8 69 40 7 21 – 9 38 246 83 125 9 – 24 – 7 1,066 88 30 15 43 40 329 – 99 230 78 14 42 18 – 27 19 8 504 84 216 17 11 176 18 228 53 64 5 9 13 – 12 8 – 13 86 51 17 – 9 8 – – 351 15 6 8 – 15 84 – 35 50 14 6 – – – 7 6 – 215 11 164 – – 36 37 84 70 151 97 9 44 1,063 128 366 14 95 72 15 85 21 16 47 412 197 119 28 17 51 – – 636 33 28 – – 18 188 – 85 103 58 12 19 20 8 40 28 12 300 36 133 20 7 104 191,450 58,067 22,194 13,959 17,871 6,704 17,555 5,273 65,495 18,687 8,422 4,670 5,594 7,673 1,486 639 1,065 4,352 7,333 302 2,174 18,927 6,093 2,954 1,356 1,783 1,789 357 143 266 978 2,061 103 512 8,381 3,092 1,739 724 629 778 149 75 80 464 736 48 186 4,584 1,176 536 242 398 437 109 14 72 227 629 – 157 4,634 1,354 475 362 517 461 90 25 73 256 542 40 126 2,908 447 196 139 112 443 65 34 – 298 317 19 107 6,738 1,643 675 402 566 963 177 61 139 571 938 29 313 2,093 543 283 72 188 350 51 19 47 228 239 14 88 See footnotes at end of table. Page 11 26 24 70 47 – – 17 16 47 22 – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total In lifting Repetitive motion 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 .................. Surgical appliances and supplies .................. Dental equipment and supplies ..................... X-ray apparatus and tubes ............................ Electromedical equipment ............................. Photographic equipment and supplies .............. Watches, clocks, watchcases and parts ............ Miscellaneous manufacturing industries ................ Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ................. Jewelry, precious metal ................................. Silverware and plated ware ........................... Jewelers’ materials and lapidary work ........... Musical instruments ........................................... Toys and sporting goods ................................... Dolls and stuffed toys .................................... Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............ Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. ............... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies ............... Pens and mechanical pencils ........................ Lead pencils and art goods ........................... Marking devices ............................................. 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. .................... 305 236 183 568 252 12 304 2,461 257 869 47 203 187 48 136 78 45 126 906 378 304 83 60 81 316 21 2,381 78 49 14 16 71 909 10 363 537 197 27 67 66 37 69 33 36 1,056 88 524 82 50 313 106 163 128 374 153 8 212 1,488 153 553 22 145 124 22 87 38 39 76 511 174 187 54 39 57 204 9 1,505 48 29 11 8 32 531 6 198 326 133 16 36 52 29 45 23 21 716 47 414 56 26 173 129 99 85 101 52 13 36 1,589 203 565 16 163 129 25 110 28 25 69 538 213 240 23 10 52 176 20 1,035 83 62 20 – 52 464 7 161 296 98 10 32 30 26 39 25 14 298 60 53 39 – 142 49 29 24 167 71 – 92 682 66 253 12 27 64 9 39 24 10 69 264 128 84 15 11 26 – 6 458 58 41 – 16 12 156 – 33 123 20 8 9 – – 42 27 15 170 12 76 – – 74 12 110 18 45 – – 6 8 13 6 – – 32 15 – – – 12 – – 95 5 5 – – – 36 – 19 16 – – – – – – – – 48 6 – 12 – 18 Nondurable goods ................................................... 50,074 27,785 17,102 11,228 4,210 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 ........................ 15,988 3,470 1,496 1,104 870 2,339 439 201 303 1,361 1,531 94 475 8,722 1,804 804 570 430 1,277 259 115 186 704 866 15 251 5,459 3,051 1,355 725 971 387 88 11 143 144 429 – 52 4,292 1,392 472 392 529 417 128 71 – 172 692 12 262 1,791 285 156 58 71 113 – 11 – 72 182 – 70 – – – – – – – – – – – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 12 – 22 13 31 19 – – – – – – – – Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 18 21 12 6 – 12 – – – – 6 – – – 5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 14 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 14 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 11 11 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 22 – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 14 All other events 6 130 156 128 210 109 26 75 1,560 216 486 16 60 112 21 154 56 26 41 556 246 196 41 27 45 199 14 836 33 24 – 6 35 363 9 92 262 64 9 26 23 6 23 16 8 317 24 112 8 11 161 – – – – – – – – – 362 487 275 212 20,388 98 215 79 67 – – 22 – – – – – – – 113 – – – – 22 – – – – – – – 102 66 57 – – – – – – – – – – 6,987 1,675 769 416 490 850 172 87 71 506 943 26 294 20 12 – – – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 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 .................................. Rice milling .................................................... Prepared flour mixes and doughs .................. Wet corn milling ............................................. Dog and cat food ........................................... Prepared feeds, n.e.c. .................................. Bakery products ................................................. Bread, cake, and related products ................. Cookies and crackers .................................... Frozen bakery products, except bread .......... Sugar and confectionery products ..................... Raw cane sugar ............................................. Beet sugar ..................................................... Candy and other confectionery products ....... Fats and oils ...................................................... Animal and marine fats and oils .................... Edible fats and oils, n.e.c. ............................. 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 ......... Fresh or frozen prepared fish ........................ Roasted coffee .............................................. Potato chips and similar snacks .................... Food preparations, n.e.c. .............................. Tobacco products .................................................. Cigarettes .......................................................... Textile mill products ............................................... Broadwoven fabric mills, cotton ......................... Broadwoven fabric mills, manmade ................... Broadwoven fabric mills, wool ........................... Narrow fabric mills ............................................. Knitting mills ...................................................... Women’s hosiery, except socks .................... Hosiery, n.e.c. ............................................... Knit outerwear mills ....................................... Knit underwear mills ...................................... Weft knit fabric mills ....................................... Lace and warp knit fabric mills ...................... Knitting mills, n.e.c. ....................................... 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 ............................... Coated fabrics, not rubberized ...................... Tire cord and fabrics ...................................... Nonwoven fabrics .......................................... Apparel and other textile products ......................... Men’s and boys’ suits and coats ........................ Men’s and boys’ furnishings .............................. Men’s and boys’ shirts ................................... SIC code 3 2034 2035 2037 2038 204 2041 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 205 2051 2052 2053 206 2061 2063 2064 207 2077 2079 208 2082 2084 2085 2086 2087 209 2092 2095 2096 2099 21 211 22 221 222 223 224 225 2251 2252 2253 2254 2257 2258 2259 226 2261 2262 2269 227 228 2281 2282 2284 229 2295 2296 2297 23 231 232 2321 Total cases 708 663 1,945 1,540 4,756 536 628 256 936 364 711 1,324 6,671 4,346 2,123 202 3,358 346 373 1,497 1,224 455 388 9,137 882 559 309 6,789 482 6,658 2,286 365 1,219 1,725 709 357 10,306 410 588 237 632 3,064 186 973 604 457 383 406 54 1,502 532 548 422 1,019 1,113 874 143 96 1,741 512 220 203 17,438 753 5,608 1,013 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 218 179 556 492 1,510 157 139 84 397 85 195 451 1,890 1,287 528 75 1,076 131 115 480 300 114 48 2,124 226 112 129 1,540 101 2,084 818 103 220 541 230 114 3,280 151 155 61 245 765 24 126 178 129 126 155 27 477 169 173 135 325 386 311 – 41 714 205 74 78 4,368 165 1,167 222 56 49 203 194 745 88 50 31 204 – 68 267 615 447 138 31 381 96 38 138 125 57 – 980 100 60 40 724 43 929 399 61 80 213 86 41 1,237 40 54 21 85 308 8 25 70 65 47 87 5 140 53 26 61 145 177 140 13 – 267 69 43 31 1,626 47 440 92 96 81 140 149 329 35 24 28 86 – 39 88 494 307 179 8 339 17 30 166 79 50 – 590 89 – 61 397 16 510 192 28 60 181 55 34 734 26 29 9 48 225 8 61 44 30 44 26 13 136 58 48 31 65 70 57 11 – 126 33 15 14 1,185 54 311 50 37 32 169 138 337 23 38 26 84 12 80 73 658 434 190 34 280 – 25 144 42 – 18 452 34 – 23 350 – 507 149 13 57 130 78 32 1,081 66 59 24 103 154 – 24 43 34 22 23 – 168 48 89 31 91 121 101 10 10 295 101 13 31 1,245 50 340 62 See footnotes at end of table. Page 13 Fall to lower level 28 26 89 48 361 80 44 22 – – 44 108 301 216 83 – 160 – 22 46 90 47 – 424 42 – 23 308 – 364 108 12 81 67 41 22 340 20 46 5 28 86 – 18 16 17 13 21 – 58 16 30 12 19 37 34 – – 41 10 10 – 399 – 116 30 Fall on same level 101 77 274 144 438 44 66 20 55 – 76 143 781 479 267 36 467 34 28 180 99 – – 747 74 63 15 519 59 662 188 18 162 214 79 30 1,023 69 70 36 60 303 38 82 40 38 36 69 – 128 31 58 39 134 129 109 12 8 96 29 22 7 1,465 47 388 95 Slips or trips without fall 39 14 68 16 190 13 19 13 – – – 68 142 114 29 – 83 – 19 30 19 – – 345 44 14 11 256 17 182 28 30 45 58 12 6 260 18 10 5 14 90 7 35 11 8 20 9 – 48 19 10 20 32 14 – – – 28 7 – – 262 13 97 14 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 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 .................................. Rice milling .................................................... Prepared flour mixes and doughs .................. Wet corn milling ............................................. Dog and cat food ........................................... Prepared feeds, n.e.c. .................................. Bakery products ................................................. Bread, cake, and related products ................. Cookies and crackers .................................... Frozen bakery products, except bread .......... Sugar and confectionery products ..................... Raw cane sugar ............................................. Beet sugar ..................................................... Candy and other confectionery products ....... Fats and oils ...................................................... Animal and marine fats and oils .................... Edible fats and oils, n.e.c. ............................. 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 ......... Fresh or frozen prepared fish ........................ Roasted coffee .............................................. Potato chips and similar snacks .................... Food preparations, n.e.c. .............................. Tobacco products .................................................. Cigarettes .......................................................... Textile mill products ............................................... Broadwoven fabric mills, cotton ......................... Broadwoven fabric mills, manmade ................... Broadwoven fabric mills, wool ........................... Narrow fabric mills ............................................. Knitting mills ...................................................... Women’s hosiery, except socks .................... Hosiery, n.e.c. ............................................... Knit outerwear mills ....................................... Knit underwear mills ...................................... Weft knit fabric mills ....................................... Lace and warp knit fabric mills ...................... Knitting mills, n.e.c. ....................................... 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 ............................... Coated fabrics, not rubberized ...................... Tire cord and fabrics ...................................... Nonwoven fabrics .......................................... Apparel and other textile products ......................... Men’s and boys’ suits and coats ........................ Men’s and boys’ furnishings .............................. Men’s and boys’ shirts ................................... Total In lifting Repetitive motion 136 140 403 284 1,067 144 187 54 204 78 200 200 1,783 1,125 620 38 696 31 106 331 341 85 210 3,124 276 143 83 2,464 137 1,636 501 119 270 517 175 94 2,973 83 213 62 169 819 28 294 184 110 91 98 13 449 171 138 141 278 330 251 50 29 571 214 67 54 4,601 182 1,463 306 72 92 241 196 591 63 113 34 109 – 131 116 947 549 371 27 429 28 32 225 121 53 54 1,750 134 98 54 1,375 91 937 273 84 143 326 78 39 1,534 39 72 28 105 443 15 151 148 63 27 32 7 218 75 60 83 155 131 105 12 15 343 173 29 24 2,797 114 919 207 9 47 103 214 178 42 39 – 68 – – 17 434 232 186 15 162 – 12 122 – – 14 217 26 – 23 148 – 572 220 – 172 143 27 13 946 23 34 34 32 549 40 298 81 85 31 – 11 22 16 – – 82 67 48 16 – 104 9 19 12 3,615 196 1,590 239 See footnotes at end of table. Page 14 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 50 69 151 147 310 10 40 16 – – 40 121 255 143 94 17 266 53 30 118 193 114 – 389 42 50 – 204 87 378 207 10 70 61 30 23 465 11 12 9 15 133 21 28 30 30 9 14 – 184 57 81 46 38 31 – – – 32 17 – 7 917 46 235 36 12 12 47 41 200 – 17 – 36 – 78 54 156 103 51 – 80 18 – 16 18 – – 626 20 19 – 565 16 132 – 7 16 57 29 – 70 – – – 6 17 – – 7 – – – – 16 7 6 – – 15 15 – – – – – – 81 8 14 – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – – – Total – – – – 12 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 33 28 – – – – – – – – – 51 26 – – 38 32 – 7 – – – – – – 24 19 – – – – – 26 – – – – 33 28 – – – – – – – – – – – – 19 – 6 – – – – 26 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 15 19 9 14 14 – – – – – 18 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 48 – 11 11 – – – – – – 8 26 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other assaults 27 – – – – – 32 – – – – – – – – By person 14 – – – – 6 – – – – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 20 – – – 28 – 18 8 All other events 6 117 100 254 152 468 38 77 40 78 – 52 145 895 620 260 15 367 64 37 175 120 – – 1,052 107 140 16 734 38 616 177 58 174 67 84 51 890 25 35 25 62 269 28 93 56 34 24 34 – 114 43 47 23 110 97 69 – – 153 21 22 38 1,667 92 517 59 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 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, 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 ........... Women’s and children’s underwear .............. Bras, girdles, and allied garments ................. Girls’ and children’s outerwear .......................... Girls’ and children’s dresses, blouses ........... Girls’ and children’s outerwear, n.e.c. .......... Miscellaneous apparel and accessories ............ Fabric dress and work gloves ........................ Robes and dressing gowns ........................... Apparel belts .................................................. 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 ........................................................... Paper mills ......................................................... Paperboard mills ................................................ Paperboard containers and boxes ..................... Setup paperboard boxes ............................... Corrugated and solid fiber boxes ................... Fiber cans, drums and similar products ......... Sanitary food containers ................................ Folding paperboard boxes ............................. Miscellaneous converted paper products .......... Paper coated and laminated, packaging ....... Paper coated and laminated, n.e.c. .............. Bags: plastics, laminated, and coated ........... Bags: uncoated paper and multiwall .............. Die-cut paper and board ................................ Sanitary paper products ................................ Envelopes ...................................................... 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 ....................... SIC code 3 2322 2323 2325 2326 2329 233 2335 2337 2339 234 2341 2342 236 2361 2369 238 2381 2384 2387 2389 239 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2397 2399 26 261 262 263 265 2652 2653 2655 2656 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 Total cases 346 82 1,790 1,396 981 3,510 374 474 2,343 872 575 297 842 141 701 590 88 88 71 267 4,791 476 1,187 399 618 234 1,046 69 762 16,330 145 3,119 986 5,291 185 2,934 290 552 1,330 6,788 739 969 876 571 453 858 701 259 1,361 28,174 8,186 933 2,077 855 1,222 671 13,130 8,351 702 4,077 1,063 326 1,457 709 748 Total Struck by object 60 34 338 299 214 928 106 105 649 158 134 25 162 22 140 250 22 27 44 133 1,410 89 393 143 188 101 304 29 163 5,695 41 931 250 1,964 83 1,150 126 166 440 2,508 343 279 378 202 129 396 284 62 434 8,670 2,027 257 549 199 350 150 4,731 3,008 218 1,506 428 73 359 156 203 14 15 164 94 60 304 31 28 209 58 49 9 69 – 66 141 8 14 19 93 532 28 164 36 103 33 96 10 64 1,742 15 321 94 585 25 352 33 42 134 727 142 110 87 63 59 75 76 9 106 2,502 711 52 167 88 80 62 1,275 808 50 418 84 24 105 46 59 See footnotes at end of table. Page 15 Struck against object Caught in object 23 19 14 73 84 89 270 43 52 170 38 34 – 27 – 24 63 12 8 7 – 405 25 136 42 31 46 74 – 49 2,336 15 337 42 824 36 527 64 61 137 1,119 124 70 212 119 41 218 121 20 194 3,679 665 90 218 56 162 46 2,164 1,388 104 673 227 30 179 69 110 – 88 100 44 272 21 21 205 58 45 13 61 16 44 39 – 6 17 15 359 26 74 45 35 20 115 16 29 1,279 9 205 95 415 – 212 12 59 111 556 72 87 72 10 – 91 76 33 95 2,034 556 52 150 52 98 31 1,048 631 63 354 105 9 66 34 32 Fall to lower level 19 7 25 6 29 89 21 6 55 6 – – – – – 28 8 – – 10 148 12 40 – 49 8 23 – 12 528 10 188 42 158 – 103 – 14 37 130 – 14 13 – 10 18 – – 47 804 313 65 50 38 12 11 286 163 11 112 22 9 43 15 28 Fall on same level 24 21 110 74 63 284 56 36 169 65 35 30 71 20 50 38 6 5 6 14 526 30 121 51 93 19 92 – 117 1,260 12 293 109 382 9 195 41 – 113 463 41 57 61 32 70 77 22 17 87 2,599 1,184 86 184 101 83 102 752 482 44 226 62 35 124 45 79 Slips or trips without fall – – 28 24 30 56 – 7 44 16 10 6 6 – – 7 – – – – 58 – 16 – – – 30 – 7 517 – 139 61 152 – 87 – 9 57 163 15 38 26 20 – 27 – – 32 655 217 40 36 17 18 29 278 164 15 100 18 – 36 22 13 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 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, 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 ........... Women’s and children’s underwear .............. Bras, girdles, and allied garments ................. Girls’ and children’s outerwear .......................... Girls’ and children’s dresses, blouses ........... Girls’ and children’s outerwear, n.e.c. .......... Miscellaneous apparel and accessories ............ Fabric dress and work gloves ........................ Robes and dressing gowns ........................... Apparel belts .................................................. 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 ........................................................... Paper mills ......................................................... Paperboard mills ................................................ Paperboard containers and boxes ..................... Setup paperboard boxes ............................... Corrugated and solid fiber boxes ................... Fiber cans, drums and similar products ......... Sanitary food containers ................................ Folding paperboard boxes ............................. Miscellaneous converted paper products .......... Paper coated and laminated, packaging ....... Paper coated and laminated, n.e.c. .............. Bags: plastics, laminated, and coated ........... Bags: uncoated paper and multiwall .............. Die-cut paper and board ................................ Sanitary paper products ................................ Envelopes ...................................................... 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 ....................... Total In lifting Repetitive motion 152 – 376 377 249 884 74 123 580 334 226 108 234 62 172 123 15 29 13 55 1,292 194 321 98 152 74 251 23 179 4,537 22 750 257 1,460 24 756 56 206 419 2,047 225 377 215 146 138 150 206 108 483 8,181 1,998 246 825 316 509 69 4,139 2,668 233 1,238 291 74 501 211 290 88 – 228 219 174 518 42 78 336 215 128 87 162 42 120 64 – 12 11 36 750 112 201 62 66 46 181 12 71 2,271 – 260 85 834 18 412 36 129 239 1,088 108 226 113 84 72 66 142 70 207 5,452 1,249 153 571 225 347 50 2,821 1,783 146 891 158 55 360 132 228 56 – 582 438 271 632 37 85 443 155 80 75 217 13 204 75 26 8 – 24 640 86 93 90 45 11 134 – 180 790 – 121 32 238 27 102 – 45 58 395 11 41 65 48 11 59 90 39 30 2,214 478 47 163 67 96 90 1,003 717 66 221 101 84 231 169 62 See footnotes at end of table. Page 16 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 12 – 112 26 49 235 50 71 85 41 38 – 47 – 44 22 – 10 – – 251 24 41 – – 11 110 – 41 726 22 198 87 222 16 112 35 14 45 197 26 24 44 31 – 23 – – 40 629 114 34 44 22 22 13 319 158 17 144 21 12 59 31 28 – – 8 – – 19 – 8 10 – – – – – – – – – – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 36 – 12 – – – – – 9 329 – 54 48 136 – 114 – – 14 90 – – 7 – 13 15 9 – 34 1,186 786 28 38 27 11 63 228 127 6 95 – – 10 – – Total – – – 6 – 10 – – 8 – – – 5 – 5 – – – – – 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 – – – – – 22 7 – 15 13 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 60 43 – – – – – 16 9 – 5 8 85 60 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 5 10 20 8 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 6 – 10 10 All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – By person 13 – – – – – – – – 25 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other events 6 21 13 209 143 73 372 23 33 300 96 48 48 94 19 75 42 11 8 – 14 409 40 150 – 58 7 89 7 53 1,906 31 430 92 564 16 308 – 71 147 789 55 133 64 86 66 94 87 30 174 3,135 1,009 127 186 67 119 143 1,364 852 82 429 112 38 95 57 39 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Printing trade services ....................................... Typesetting .................................................... Platemaking services ..................................... Chemicals and allied products ............................... Industrial inorganic chemicals ........................... Alkalies and chlorine ...................................... Inorganic pigments ........................................ Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ............ Plastics materials and synthetics ....................... Plastics materials and resins ......................... Organic fibers, noncellulosic .......................... Drugs ................................................................. Medicinals and botanicals ............................. Pharmaceutical preparations ......................... Diagnostic substances ................................... Biological products except diagnostic ............ Soap, cleaners, and toilet goods ....................... Soap and other detergents ............................ Polishes and sanitation goods ....................... Toilet preparations ......................................... Paints and allied products ................................. Industrial organic chemicals .............................. Cyclic crudes and intermediates .................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. .............. Agricultural chemicals ........................................ Nitrogenous fertilizers .................................... Fertilizers, mixing only ................................... 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 .............................. Miscellaneous petroleum and coal products ..... Lubricating oils and greases .......................... Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products ........ Tires and inner tubes ......................................... Rubber and plastics footwear ............................ Hose and belting and gaskets and packing ....... Rubber and plastics hose and belting ........... Gaskets, packing and sealing devices .......... Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c. .................... Mechanical rubber goods .............................. Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c. ................ Miscellaneous plastics products, n.e.c. ............ Unsupported plastics film and sheet .............. Unsupported plastics profile shapes .............. 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 ................ Luggage ............................................................. Handbags and personal leather goods .............. 279 2791 2796 28 281 2812 2816 2819 282 2821 2824 283 2833 2834 2835 2836 284 2841 2842 2844 285 286 2865 2869 287 2873 2875 2879 289 2891 2892 2893 2899 29 291 295 2951 2952 299 2992 30 301 302 305 3052 3053 306 3061 3069 308 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 3087 3088 3089 31 311 314 3143 3144 316 317 332 102 230 13,599 1,230 89 332 703 1,675 879 282 3,300 308 2,667 165 160 2,513 524 652 1,247 1,213 1,083 303 745 805 165 343 197 1,780 417 98 263 918 1,940 823 837 475 362 280 255 34,758 2,131 298 2,192 1,119 1,073 4,526 2,154 2,372 25,611 1,471 750 722 853 1,170 1,880 782 737 17,247 2,701 595 1,315 536 412 231 224 96 28 69 3,393 376 21 70 264 373 156 101 802 86 648 31 36 608 121 124 358 378 217 55 156 226 14 156 40 414 111 31 48 203 454 171 228 89 138 56 40 12,128 636 89 775 420 355 1,471 684 787 9,158 629 253 244 331 484 724 271 271 5,952 922 224 352 179 100 75 96 See footnotes at end of table. Page 17 Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 15 60 23 37 1,062 162 – 11 150 130 33 49 237 – 206 – 6 205 56 58 91 99 46 32 10 51 – – 24 132 27 – 8 86 118 43 63 – 53 12 12 3,313 246 30 265 132 132 376 200 176 2,397 170 70 73 83 124 159 107 98 1,513 324 64 127 69 37 34 50 20 – – 17 1,206 111 – 41 56 167 81 42 290 32 227 20 11 179 36 38 101 187 93 14 79 50 – – – 129 34 – 28 56 194 74 107 49 58 13 13 4,922 248 40 271 175 96 630 280 349 3,733 290 101 111 171 83 285 96 97 2,498 299 66 102 43 45 31 26 13 852 90 15 12 56 54 36 – 192 28 141 7 16 165 20 29 115 50 67 6 61 99 – 78 9 134 49 28 – 45 107 39 44 – 24 – – 2,950 106 18 173 85 88 360 146 214 2,293 105 69 46 49 186 221 – 45 1,542 178 28 97 62 6 – 18 Fall to lower level 6 – – 590 45 – 17 20 79 47 15 166 17 132 9 10 84 16 16 42 33 74 20 55 32 – – 6 77 17 – – 46 178 33 142 124 19 – – 870 61 13 74 64 9 58 21 38 664 42 24 18 13 84 74 39 – 348 47 22 14 – 6 – – Fall on same level 69 21 48 1,349 98 – 29 49 152 79 28 408 30 322 38 19 320 36 106 171 97 76 17 54 43 – – 30 153 37 11 20 74 143 56 65 – 40 – – 2,735 146 22 145 69 76 253 130 123 2,169 101 82 31 105 97 154 97 – 1,492 163 36 75 26 29 13 – Slips or trips without fall – – – 484 20 – – 13 61 32 16 108 – 94 – 5 66 10 14 43 37 39 18 19 50 – – – 103 38 – 15 50 90 41 48 – 25 – – 846 104 – 32 19 13 85 43 42 620 20 23 15 26 – 66 17 14 418 54 8 31 – 7 – – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Total Printing trade services ....................................... Typesetting .................................................... Platemaking services ..................................... Chemicals and allied products ............................... Industrial inorganic chemicals ........................... Alkalies and chlorine ...................................... Inorganic pigments ........................................ Industrial inorganic chemicals, n.e.c. ............ Plastics materials and synthetics ....................... Plastics materials and resins ......................... Organic fibers, noncellulosic .......................... Drugs ................................................................. Medicinals and botanicals ............................. Pharmaceutical preparations ......................... Diagnostic substances ................................... Biological products except diagnostic ............ Soap, cleaners, and toilet goods ....................... Soap and other detergents ............................ Polishes and sanitation goods ....................... Toilet preparations ......................................... Paints and allied products ................................. Industrial organic chemicals .............................. Cyclic crudes and intermediates .................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. .............. Agricultural chemicals ........................................ Nitrogenous fertilizers .................................... Fertilizers, mixing only ................................... 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 .............................. Miscellaneous petroleum and coal products ..... Lubricating oils and greases .......................... Rubber and miscellaneous plastics products ........ Tires and inner tubes ......................................... Rubber and plastics footwear ............................ Hose and belting and gaskets and packing ....... Rubber and plastics hose and belting ........... Gaskets, packing and sealing devices .......... Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c. .................... Mechanical rubber goods .............................. Fabricated rubber products, n.e.c. ................ Miscellaneous plastics products, n.e.c. ............ Unsupported plastics film and sheet .............. Unsupported plastics profile shapes .............. 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 ................ Luggage ............................................................. Handbags and personal leather goods .............. In lifting 38 Repetitive motion 35 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 17 13 – – – – 32 3,368 277 23 102 130 458 275 61 784 52 653 38 41 646 137 186 282 310 220 65 153 209 – 72 44 462 117 21 118 195 433 182 127 63 64 124 121 9,175 684 54 670 307 363 1,377 633 744 6,390 399 200 216 213 233 425 188 243 4,274 644 166 289 131 84 84 55 32 1,851 118 – 32 75 242 129 33 506 31 431 17 27 376 45 122 186 191 96 19 77 77 14 – 24 245 69 12 59 97 226 60 73 – 40 93 93 4,564 288 25 325 129 196 625 252 373 3,300 238 132 93 92 158 233 108 112 2,134 292 59 137 52 34 36 32 12 796 46 15 7 18 86 39 11 248 – 205 17 17 206 43 46 118 38 49 21 28 27 – – 16 96 – 11 – 75 55 31 – – – 18 18 2,751 148 57 178 98 80 428 257 171 1,940 39 74 51 31 44 90 – 42 1,557 448 29 325 87 105 38 25 13 1,642 142 7 21 102 250 147 18 317 73 214 19 10 270 73 68 105 129 225 42 177 65 – – 22 244 56 – 17 160 196 98 74 58 16 – – 2,213 54 6 91 41 50 328 155 173 1,733 86 28 85 31 69 118 77 36 1,204 117 35 56 17 17 11 8 See footnotes at end of table. Page 18 28 20 9 291 35 – – 31 25 6 – 60 – 51 – – 72 21 20 27 – 36 27 10 27 – – 8 31 12 – – 16 51 18 34 – 7 – – 368 50 – 7 – – 39 18 21 270 – – 13 17 – 13 – – 159 12 – – – – – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – 90 32 – 31 – – – – – – – – – 9 – 9 – – Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – 46 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 32 6 – 6 12 – – – 24 – – – 15 32 26 – – – – – 64 21 – – – – 7 – 7 37 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 32 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 38 – – – – – – – – 30 – – – – – 13 – – 31 – – – – – – – 37 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 14 – – – – – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 13 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 25 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 13 – – – – – – – – – – All other events 6 61 19 42 1,551 160 17 51 74 186 95 31 400 28 341 10 22 229 66 62 101 151 140 38 88 114 – – 29 171 14 15 40 85 307 167 108 61 46 33 27 3,571 227 48 218 100 118 477 211 266 2,601 147 67 46 81 114 201 52 93 1,799 291 69 171 94 60 8 33 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Women’s handbags and purses .................... Personal leather goods, n.e.c. ...................... Leather goods, n.e.c. ........................................ 3171 3172 319 Transportation and public utilities 5 ...................... Railroad transportation 5 ........................................ Local and interurban passenger transit ................. Local and suburban transportation .................... Taxicabs ............................................................ Intercity and rural bus transportation ................. Bus charter service ............................................ School buses ..................................................... Trucking and warehousing .................................... Trucking and courier services, except air .......... Public warehousing and storage ....................... Trucking terminal facilities ................................. Water transportation .............................................. Deep sea domestic transportation of freight ...... Water transportation of freight, n.e.c. ............... Water transportation of passengers .................. Water transportation services ............................ Transportation by air .............................................. Air transportation, scheduled ............................. Air transportation, nonscheduled ....................... Airports, flying fields, and services .................... Pipelines, except natural gas ................................. Transportation services ......................................... Passenger transportation arrangement ............. Freight transportation arrangement ................... Miscellaneous transportation services ............... Communications .................................................... Telephone communications ............................... Telegraph and other 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 42 421 422 423 44 442 444 448 449 45 451 452 458 46 47 472 473 478 48 481 482 483 484 49 491 492 493 494 495 Wholesale and retail trade ...................................... Wholesale trade ....................................................... Wholesale trade—durable goods .......................... Motor vehicles, parts, and supplies ................... Furniture and homefurnishings .......................... Lumber and construction materials ................... Professional and commercial equipment ........... Metals and minerals, except petroleum ............. Electrical goods ................................................. Hardware, plumbing and heating equipment ..... Machinery, equipment, and supplies ................. 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 ................... 50 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 51 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 68 156 206 – 55 119 Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object – – – – 40 8 19 47 42 Slips or trips without fall Fall to lower level Fall on same level – – – – – – – – 12 222,897 49,838 22,844 14,082 7,511 15,415 21,332 8,774 7,042 15,126 10,107 944 984 694 2,380 105,138 99,471 5,374 293 7,110 426 468 284 5,630 45,272 40,179 690 4,402 113 6,724 594 4,289 1,774 17,245 11,036 91 981 4,864 19,128 5,106 2,785 2,089 1,017 7,947 1,225 2,041 1,363 76 167 106 320 25,120 23,695 1,362 62 2,308 111 122 – 1,971 10,761 9,187 152 1,422 – 1,792 95 1,042 628 2,234 1,145 16 202 831 4,351 998 504 346 247 2,190 266 831 500 53 107 54 115 12,041 11,351 671 18 1,248 62 61 20 1,084 4,314 3,541 – 744 – 864 54 505 297 1,138 568 11 128 430 2,140 504 240 155 118 1,108 92 778 579 12 33 34 113 7,450 7,154 268 28 380 14 37 – 307 3,430 3,077 65 288 – 321 – 196 117 678 387 6 43 234 950 159 151 85 63 492 23 164 102 – 10 – 41 3,827 3,544 270 12 454 20 11 – 406 1,773 1,574 – 189 – 361 – 207 149 133 41 – 21 39 776 234 50 49 – 367 165 656 376 10 71 60 138 8,388 8,092 281 15 496 19 11 – 412 1,617 1,373 52 192 – 356 114 161 75 2,256 1,599 13 78 552 1,476 558 161 123 74 536 513 1,186 584 78 74 107 341 9,763 9,132 589 42 1,149 20 45 – 1,027 3,944 3,388 52 504 – 710 140 392 176 2,399 1,661 – 140 547 1,661 526 318 243 75 497 997 471 312 12 41 32 72 4,380 4,214 157 9 222 33 41 – 128 1,347 1,156 – 180 – 167 9 92 62 567 304 – 50 208 622 172 55 74 49 270 515,547 151,921 79,981 39,492 21,306 22,794 71,017 14,841 159,875 46,450 23,689 10,665 8,362 8,342 13,928 4,254 81,472 16,914 3,506 8,462 8,788 5,604 6,096 6,356 16,627 9,119 78,404 3,960 3,662 3,021 38,240 2,598 2,223 3,168 8,611 26,461 4,564 1,402 3,103 1,926 2,350 1,324 1,904 6,867 3,019 19,989 943 947 1,124 9,876 869 398 704 2,150 14,354 2,546 712 1,726 1,055 1,097 789 807 3,862 1,762 9,335 455 300 433 4,561 398 231 375 1,111 5,794 1,144 557 757 370 484 260 574 993 653 4,871 283 212 236 2,251 171 – 172 570 3,964 589 – 324 396 622 170 311 1,188 311 4,397 140 411 408 2,206 218 104 132 310 4,215 427 85 528 633 178 434 642 786 502 4,127 346 169 123 1,739 288 280 212 334 6,881 1,584 133 984 896 354 353 480 1,167 930 7,046 340 528 272 3,516 197 237 262 623 1,740 378 – 232 228 167 184 79 314 141 2,514 89 59 – 1,408 68 – 58 251 See footnotes at end of table. Page 19 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Total Women’s handbags and purses .................... Personal leather goods, n.e.c. ...................... Leather goods, n.e.c. ........................................ 15 39 19 Transportation and public utilities 5 ...................... 63,557 Railroad transportation 5 ........................................ Local and interurban passenger transit ................. Local and suburban transportation .................... Taxicabs ............................................................ Intercity and rural bus transportation ................. Bus charter service ............................................ School buses ..................................................... Trucking and warehousing .................................... Trucking and courier services, except air .......... Public warehousing and storage ....................... Trucking terminal facilities ................................. Water transportation .............................................. Deep sea domestic transportation of freight ...... Water transportation of freight, n.e.c. ............... Water transportation of passengers .................. Water transportation services ............................ Transportation by air .............................................. Air transportation, scheduled ............................. Air transportation, nonscheduled ....................... Airports, flying fields, and services .................... Pipelines, except natural gas ................................. Transportation services ......................................... Passenger transportation arrangement ............. Freight transportation arrangement ................... Miscellaneous transportation services ............... Communications .................................................... Telephone communications ............................... Telegraph and other 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 ............................................... In lifting Repetitive motion – – Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Fires and explosions All other events 6 Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – – – – 1,492 882 610 30,440 89 419 305 39 47 – 21 200 191 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 63 – – 14 24 44 – 14 20 – – 6 9 19 140 119 18 – – – – – – – – – – 18 – – – – 26 – – – – 81 – 24 12 – 38 95 428 308 39 47 – 27 268 254 14 – 11 – – – – 256 236 – – – 10 – – – 189 50 7 16 116 233 87 54 62 – 19 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 201 199 – – – 6 – – – 126 29 – – 92 189 83 40 42 – – 2,060 1,608 914 48 192 106 346 13,250 12,644 585 21 1,054 75 86 144 680 6,067 5,354 164 550 – 841 23 609 202 2,666 1,661 33 103 788 2,887 725 549 406 142 1,048 – – – – – 38,187 4,534 7,770 19,446 1,070 4,854 4,156 160 182 165 192 31,017 29,365 1,563 89 934 89 98 – 634 16,275 14,919 187 1,169 – 1,975 75 1,525 356 2,891 1,583 – 176 1,056 4,487 958 664 470 289 2,047 46 2,921 2,616 60 86 80 78 19,337 18,253 1,040 45 408 23 35 – 310 10,403 9,594 139 670 – 1,160 44 876 236 1,385 702 – 101 526 2,521 473 302 207 143 1,353 55 250 178 – 10 – 57 1,013 903 102 8 42 19 – – 16 706 647 – 57 – 181 84 48 48 1,601 1,463 – 26 107 686 203 84 136 48 215 207 525 349 26 26 21 102 2,042 1,832 190 19 391 10 42 – 333 2,078 1,978 – 94 – 187 17 67 102 1,184 907 – 89 179 1,148 490 162 124 39 321 651 3,082 1,563 494 174 86 765 9,759 9,219 514 26 502 48 22 – 419 2,218 1,937 64 217 – 504 37 345 121 1,231 641 10 96 480 1,495 381 212 94 41 766 Wholesale and retail trade ...................................... 135,371 91,568 12,943 27,066 17,378 946 5,674 4,599 1,074 55,598 27 17 – Assaults and violent acts 22 8 – – – 299 – 24 – – – – – 26 10 Wholesale trade ....................................................... 49,650 32,063 4,197 4,591 9,101 314 544 276 268 18,502 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 ................... 23,554 6,029 1,181 2,387 2,840 1,221 1,958 1,791 4,443 1,704 26,096 1,369 929 859 13,381 494 613 995 3,600 14,290 3,543 641 1,510 1,786 650 1,467 1,128 2,553 1,012 17,773 1,067 787 579 8,865 341 306 674 2,432 2,812 913 96 121 307 149 310 198 417 300 1,385 61 116 82 574 – 81 118 92 2,570 315 130 – 156 148 159 160 668 808 2,021 71 94 58 551 69 179 194 74 4,484 912 166 450 792 235 392 501 442 594 4,617 290 343 – 2,107 108 – – 334 196 63 – – – – – – – – 119 – – – – – – – – 251 – – – – – – – 97 118 294 – – – 161 57 – – – 103 – – – – – – – – – 174 – – – 127 – – – – 148 – – – – – – – – 103 120 – – – – 57 – – – 8,307 1,719 288 616 982 795 977 580 1,383 967 10,195 449 468 440 4,926 403 317 564 1,135 See footnotes at end of table. Page 20 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Miscellaneous nondurable goods ...................... SIC code 3 519 Retail trade .............................................................. Building materials and garden supplies ................. Lumber and other building materials ................. Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores ..................... Hardware stores ................................................ Retail nurseries and garden stores .................... Mobile home dealers ......................................... General merchandise stores ................................. Department stores ............................................. Variety stores ..................................................... Miscellaneous general merchandise stores ...... Food stores ............................................................ Grocery stores ................................................... Meat and fish markets ....................................... Fruit and vegetable markets .............................. Candy, nut, and confectionery stores ................ Dairy products stores ......................................... Retail bakeries ................................................... Miscellaneous food stores ................................. Automotive dealers and service stations ............... New and used car dealers ................................. Used car dealers ............................................... Auto and home supply stores ............................ Gasoline service stations ................................... Boat dealers ...................................................... Recreational vehicle dealers ............................. Motorcycle dealers ............................................ Apparel and accessory stores ............................... Men’s and boys’ clothing stores ........................ Women’s clothing stores ................................... Children’s and infants’ wear stores .................... Family clothing stores ........................................ Shoe stores ....................................................... Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores .... Furniture and homefurnishings stores ................... Furniture and homefurnishings stores ............... Household appliance stores .............................. Radio, television, and computer stores ............. Eating and drinking places .................................... Miscellaneous retail ............................................... Drug stores and proprietary stores .................... Liquor stores ...................................................... Used merchandise stores .................................. Miscellaneous shopping goods stores ............... Nonstore retailers .............................................. Fuel dealers ....................................................... Retail stores, n.e.c. ........................................... 52 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 533 539 54 541 542 543 544 545 546 549 55 551 552 553 554 555 556 557 56 561 562 564 565 566 569 57 571 572 573 58 59 591 592 593 594 596 598 599 Finance, insurance, and real estate ....................... Depository institutions ........................................... Central reserve depositories .............................. Commercial banks ............................................. Savings institutions ............................................ Credit unions ..................................................... Functions closely related to banking ................. Nondepository institutions ..................................... Personal credit institutions ................................. Business credit institutions ................................ Mortgage bankers and brokers .......................... Security and commodity brokers ........................... Security brokers and dealers ............................. Security and commodity exchanges .................. 60 601 602 603 606 609 61 614 615 616 62 621 623 Total cases Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 2,978 1,471 933 468 636 1,072 501 355,672 105,471 56,292 28,827 12,944 14,451 57,089 10,586 24,404 18,378 1,246 2,116 1,812 852 61,262 54,410 3,334 3,518 70,350 65,815 528 434 494 195 2,170 714 43,675 21,260 530 12,210 8,152 641 473 274 8,439 560 1,993 196 3,395 1,474 553 16,896 11,695 1,639 3,562 103,126 27,520 4,674 569 1,428 8,006 5,961 3,098 3,784 9,019 7,197 356 650 509 306 18,005 16,118 896 991 21,315 20,125 253 123 – – 436 202 13,602 7,086 180 4,211 1,578 226 185 – 2,148 92 506 43 926 369 153 4,639 3,600 350 689 30,489 6,255 1,103 106 255 2,235 1,253 552 750 4,991 3,957 166 366 342 161 11,529 10,278 563 687 10,071 9,469 140 72 – – 217 112 6,857 3,373 108 2,335 802 – 93 – 982 52 233 35 432 133 68 2,602 1,992 206 404 15,979 3,282 648 44 152 1,165 614 215 443 2,166 1,723 144 155 77 68 4,176 3,867 166 143 6,434 6,080 90 27 – – 83 76 3,121 1,929 – 729 330 91 – – 665 – 133 – 280 157 48 1,121 831 82 208 9,210 1,934 337 56 42 715 405 189 189 1,182 971 20 95 40 56 1,815 1,592 125 98 4,001 3,829 17 18 – – 92 10 1,162 548 – 241 237 – – – 361 – 134 – 163 37 – 555 476 30 48 3,181 688 65 – 40 295 171 63 – 1,391 915 130 186 113 – 2,725 2,354 220 151 1,740 1,476 16 71 – – 56 95 1,908 656 – 662 511 – – – 830 – 124 51 216 308 75 1,053 540 150 363 2,841 1,964 293 56 227 500 219 376 292 1,584 1,098 138 101 95 152 8,063 7,326 446 291 8,775 8,019 66 46 132 – 407 96 5,139 2,757 – 833 1,348 124 – – 1,265 – 367 14 532 182 46 1,151 668 123 360 28,096 3,017 690 46 91 888 596 384 321 390 310 – 28 38 – 1,954 1,770 94 90 1,971 1,741 14 14 – – 128 – 1,323 740 – 215 324 – – – 273 – 69 – 139 38 23 510 327 32 151 3,375 792 114 – – 165 171 165 156 47,238 8,512 4,522 2,615 676 3,238 7,600 1,507 10,348 254 7,542 1,370 856 256 1,810 724 371 679 1,134 720 82 1,408 60 937 266 80 50 134 – – 52 225 132 26 735 26 555 87 35 28 62 – 13 39 113 63 12 411 18 237 116 16 13 61 – 11 12 72 – 13 158 10 106 – 14 7 – – – – 27 – – 645 9 494 71 61 – 82 – 43 25 56 – 5 1,963 48 1,368 261 208 52 311 98 60 149 259 149 21 270 6 185 33 41 – 98 – 72 18 42 – 8 12,920 See footnotes at end of table. Page 21 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total In lifting Repetitive motion Miscellaneous nondurable goods ...................... 3,855 2,722 250 730 1,294 78 – – Retail trade .............................................................. 85,721 59,505 8,746 22,475 8,276 632 5,129 4,323 806 37,096 Building materials and garden supplies ................. Lumber and other building materials ................. Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores ..................... Hardware stores ................................................ Retail nurseries and garden stores .................... Mobile home dealers ......................................... General merchandise stores ................................. Department stores ............................................. Variety stores ..................................................... Miscellaneous general merchandise stores ...... Food stores ............................................................ Grocery stores ................................................... Meat and fish markets ....................................... Fruit and vegetable markets .............................. Candy, nut, and confectionery stores ................ Dairy products stores ......................................... Retail bakeries ................................................... Miscellaneous food stores ................................. Automotive dealers and service stations ............... New and used car dealers ................................. Used car dealers ............................................... Auto and home supply stores ............................ Gasoline service stations ................................... Boat dealers ...................................................... Recreational vehicle dealers ............................. Motorcycle dealers ............................................ Apparel and accessory stores ............................... Men’s and boys’ clothing stores ........................ Women’s clothing stores ................................... Children’s and infants’ wear stores .................... Family clothing stores ........................................ Shoe stores ....................................................... Miscellaneous apparel and accessory stores .... Furniture and homefurnishings stores ................... Furniture and homefurnishings stores ............... Household appliance stores .............................. Radio, television, and computer stores ............. Eating and drinking places .................................... Miscellaneous retail ............................................... Drug stores and proprietary stores .................... Liquor stores ...................................................... Used merchandise stores .................................. Miscellaneous shopping goods stores ............... Nonstore retailers .............................................. Fuel dealers ....................................................... Retail stores, n.e.c. ........................................... 7,355 5,377 378 681 754 166 19,482 16,962 1,058 1,461 20,554 19,806 108 117 – – 314 131 9,980 3,935 122 3,506 2,104 97 128 – 2,091 171 474 30 960 276 130 6,669 4,576 804 1,290 11,542 8,048 1,597 243 520 2,109 1,875 720 983 4,846 3,529 268 456 479 115 12,998 11,338 709 951 15,112 14,632 92 87 – – 182 90 6,504 2,284 94 2,548 1,416 – 68 – 1,393 134 332 – 627 172 80 4,456 3,176 410 870 8,552 5,644 1,244 213 389 1,577 1,137 396 688 416 316 18 50 32 – 1,423 1,267 82 74 3,475 3,110 – 17 – – 240 34 665 208 – 119 304 – – – 226 – 31 – 119 – – 207 145 11 51 1,244 1,090 198 – – 272 433 – 124 633 464 – 81 51 – 1,574 1,439 101 33 2,555 2,155 20 – – – 318 26 2,057 1,074 – 373 461 – – – 222 16 127 – 63 – 12 175 128 13 34 14,518 741 62 – 46 183 163 188 89 493 355 54 – 31 – 620 531 16 73 925 856 – 10 – – – 26 2,706 1,651 – 733 232 – – – 106 – 31 – 39 19 – 531 435 26 70 1,823 1,074 115 – 46 135 361 202 210 – – – – – – 47 3,032 2,282 136 316 186 112 6,737 6,028 400 308 7,344 6,871 34 31 – – 219 96 5,559 3,028 114 1,416 841 85 – – 1,140 108 260 48 347 240 102 1,811 1,191 119 502 7,577 3,896 392 67 100 1,384 852 392 708 Finance, insurance, and real estate ....................... 10,228 6,035 4,082 2,461 2,709 Depository institutions ........................................... Central reserve depositories .............................. Commercial banks ............................................. Savings institutions ............................................ Credit unions ..................................................... Functions closely related to banking ................. Nondepository institutions ..................................... Personal credit institutions ................................. Business credit institutions ................................ Mortgage bankers and brokers .......................... Security and commodity brokers ........................... Security brokers and dealers ............................. Security and commodity exchanges .................. 1,834 61 1,457 154 127 31 254 – 56 137 241 162 13 1,175 46 925 85 90 25 181 – 39 111 204 138 5 1,312 16 873 205 134 69 284 149 60 67 126 93 – 893 12 804 55 14 – 50 – – – 32 16 – 452 – 308 79 48 14 270 219 – 44 30 – – See footnotes at end of table. Page 22 Total By person All other assaults – 1,494 – – – 63 – – – – – – – – – – – 248 73 – 75 79 – – – 63 60 – – – – – 32 – – – – 159 – – 68 – – 86 – 11 – – 618 550 – 46 1,637 1,601 – – – – – – 489 – – 66 371 – – – 75 – – – 52 15 – 118 62 – 52 1,621 485 109 – 17 130 36 – 151 9 – – 437 374 17 46 1,559 1,528 – – – – – – 430 – – 65 326 – – – 75 – – – 52 15 – 97 45 – 47 1,373 304 109 – – 128 23 – – – – – – – – 181 177 – – 77 73 – – – – – – 59 – – – 45 – – – – – – – – – – – 17 – – 248 181 – – – – 14 – 151 19 776 631 146 6,106 275 – 222 49 – – 74 – – 57 33 17 – 264 – 211 49 – – 70 – – 57 17 17 – 11 1,291 38 887 197 142 27 253 90 – 120 88 70 5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 85 65 All other events 6 – 11 – – – – – – – 16 – – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Security and commodity services ...................... Insurance carriers .................................................. Life insurance .................................................... Medical service and health insurance ............... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ................. Title insurance ................................................... Insurance agents, brokers, and service ................. Real estate ............................................................ Real estate operators and lessors ..................... Real estate agents and managers ..................... Subdividers and developers .............................. Holding and other investment offices .................... Holding offices ................................................... Investment offices .............................................. Trusts ................................................................. Miscellaneous investing ..................................... SIC code 3 Slips or trips without fall Fall to lower level Fall on same level 82 1,424 316 365 643 18 441 3,112 1,980 858 271 89 32 14 29 – 12 226 61 55 102 – 23 809 432 272 104 38 – – 16 – Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 302 8,293 2,214 2,078 3,436 178 2,270 22,000 12,092 7,276 2,562 1,382 804 71 333 175 65 648 191 216 193 – 395 5,376 2,848 1,738 771 326 195 11 67 – 38 294 77 104 85 – 109 3,069 1,752 977 330 140 70 10 53 – – 258 94 88 74 – 230 1,521 654 524 332 61 51 – 10 – – 40 366 216 85 64 – 16 – – – 13 423 102 90 189 – 80 1,846 811 852 156 106 60 – 34 – 475,308 88,764 43,560 27,111 9,824 19,794 65,476 14,940 70 701 703 72 721 722 723 726 729 73 731 732 733 734 735 736 737 738 75 751 752 753 754 76 762 764 769 78 781 782 783 79 792 793 794 36,943 35,869 783 12,676 9,136 448 1,791 761 396 70,723 1,742 568 2,662 20,959 5,094 15,592 4,607 19,499 21,692 4,205 971 11,756 4,760 9,840 2,196 481 7,160 2,488 1,496 69 753 24,167 1,745 482 4,360 8,589 8,360 213 2,679 1,938 73 425 156 65 17,223 341 131 950 3,946 1,628 5,456 568 4,204 6,800 820 191 4,569 1,220 3,881 533 – 3,222 555 354 27 152 7,343 455 167 960 4,234 4,163 63 1,284 776 48 307 88 42 8,145 166 116 349 1,602 930 2,883 324 1,776 3,095 442 66 1,994 593 1,880 221 – 1,594 229 167 13 42 3,699 236 60 635 3,289 3,143 142 672 508 23 109 19 13 4,889 101 13 232 1,324 440 1,154 101 1,525 1,475 224 84 758 409 876 185 – 657 158 81 7 57 2,306 179 62 234 670 660 – 484 461 – – – 6 2,390 42 – 305 189 180 938 125 611 843 96 9 584 154 619 48 – 551 87 32 – 49 462 23 39 47 2,216 2,082 – 450 322 11 40 – 40 4,972 145 45 61 2,162 505 738 137 1,180 1,052 197 61 484 310 453 152 – 300 169 93 – 63 983 104 15 75 7,498 7,269 124 1,487 877 91 302 151 64 9,229 171 154 201 2,802 467 1,919 890 2,626 2,386 542 123 1,034 687 600 144 – 387 410 141 – 246 3,154 128 88 471 1,481 1,433 – 368 269 15 66 – 8 2,375 50 44 17 621 178 310 135 1,019 664 296 38 262 68 155 52 – 99 122 94 – – 907 68 28 98 799 80 801 802 804 805 806 807 808 809 81 17,532 208,982 7,864 649 1,693 82,441 91,870 2,244 17,657 4,543 2,494 5,761 26,486 923 170 224 9,656 13,252 337 1,254 670 248 2,768 13,030 354 – 148 4,770 6,641 234 587 237 161 1,830 9,210 442 110 59 3,398 4,212 79 574 336 79 352 2,702 31 – – 965 1,624 14 33 27 – 789 4,206 450 – – 476 2,045 77 904 187 210 2,461 25,530 1,243 – 129 9,512 11,302 361 2,306 622 289 714 5,538 170 – – 2,072 2,475 65 569 150 76 628 63 631 632 633 636 64 65 651 653 655 67 671 672 673 679 Services .................................................................... Hotels and other lodging places ............................ Hotels and motels .............................................. Camps and recreational vehicle parks .............. Personal services .................................................. Laundry, cleaning, and garment services .......... Photographic studios, portrait ............................ Beauty shops ..................................................... Funeral service and crematories ....................... Miscellaneous personal services ....................... Business services .................................................. Advertising ......................................................... Credit reporting and collection ........................... Mailing, reproduction, stenographic ................... Services to buildings .......................................... Miscellaneous equipment rental and leasing ..... Personnel supply services ................................. Computer and data processing services ........... Miscellaneous business services ...................... Auto repair, services, and parking ......................... Automotive rentals, no drivers ........................... Automobile parking ............................................ Automotive repair shops .................................... Automotive services, except repair .................... Miscellaneous repair services ............................... Electrical repair shops ....................................... Reupholstery and furniture repair ...................... Miscellaneous repair shops ............................... Motion pictures ...................................................... Motion picture production and services ............. Motion picture distribution and services ............ Motion picture theaters ...................................... Amusement and recreation services ..................... Producers, orchestras, entertainers .................. Bowling centers ................................................. Commercial sports ............................................. Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ........................................................... Health services ...................................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors ............... Offices and clinics of dentists ............................ Offices of other health practitioners ................... Nursing and personal care facilities ................... Hospitals ............................................................ Medical and dental laboratories ......................... Home health care services ................................ Health and allied services, n.e.c. ...................... Legal services ........................................................ Total cases See footnotes at end of table. Page 23 56 13 21 21 – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion 61 1,527 346 450 552 54 300 5,675 3,131 1,964 574 396 298 12 57 – 56 985 218 314 348 – 218 2,984 1,793 796 390 288 227 – 40 – – 1,599 370 371 791 – 312 386 124 83 168 63 33 9 18 – 12 263 139 78 47 – 100 1,030 550 328 152 92 – 16 13 – – 778 355 102 281 – 190 901 490 303 109 86 69 – 17 – Services .................................................................... 157,786 91,634 12,178 25,989 16,622 8,517 8,354 129 3,560 3,046 108 157 150 99 16,168 394 47 682 5,947 1,072 3,732 1,132 3,162 4,250 863 122 2,680 585 2,218 661 233 1,321 618 361 16 164 4,250 226 74 525 4,893 4,771 95 1,928 1,622 74 86 74 71 9,582 237 – 477 3,119 729 2,240 681 2,090 2,544 495 93 1,672 284 1,112 254 – 834 419 231 11 108 2,691 132 63 166 628 616 – 896 502 10 346 – 23 2,805 112 104 233 279 – 418 777 830 528 171 – 211 143 196 40 – 152 35 28 – – 428 57 – 125 2,538 2,489 – 1,089 748 32 269 – 15 2,788 80 – 86 1,152 84 536 151 675 1,500 152 29 837 482 949 268 – 665 92 48 – 43 1,250 60 – 74 3,423 97,177 1,828 212 726 44,284 41,046 387 7,304 1,391 436 2,328 55,902 983 151 327 27,168 21,969 306 4,147 850 261 236 3,775 614 – – 716 2,001 144 111 96 722 1,108 10,530 672 – 41 3,198 5,816 88 405 266 77 Security and commodity services ...................... Insurance carriers .................................................. Life insurance .................................................... Medical service and health insurance ............... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ................. Title insurance ................................................... Insurance agents, brokers, and service ................. Real estate ............................................................ Real estate operators and lessors ..................... Real estate agents and managers ..................... Subdividers and developers .............................. Holding and other investment offices .................... Holding offices ................................................... Investment offices .............................................. Trusts ................................................................. Miscellaneous investing ..................................... Hotels and other lodging places ............................ Hotels and motels .............................................. Camps and recreational vehicle parks .............. Personal services .................................................. Laundry, cleaning, and garment services .......... Photographic studios, portrait ............................ Beauty shops ..................................................... Funeral service and crematories ....................... Miscellaneous personal services ....................... Business services .................................................. Advertising ......................................................... Credit reporting and collection ........................... Mailing, reproduction, stenographic ................... Services to buildings .......................................... Miscellaneous equipment rental and leasing ..... Personnel supply services ................................. Computer and data processing services ........... Miscellaneous business services ...................... Auto repair, services, and parking ......................... Automotive rentals, no drivers ........................... Automobile parking ............................................ Automotive repair shops .................................... Automotive services, except repair .................... Miscellaneous repair services ............................... Electrical repair shops ....................................... Reupholstery and furniture repair ...................... Miscellaneous repair shops ............................... Motion pictures ...................................................... Motion picture production and services ............. Motion picture distribution and services ............ Motion picture theaters ...................................... Amusement and recreation services ..................... Producers, orchestras, entertainers .................. Bowling centers ................................................. Commercial sports ............................................. Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ........................................................... Health services ...................................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors ............... Offices and clinics of dentists ............................ Offices of other health practitioners ................... Nursing and personal care facilities ................... Hospitals ............................................................ Medical and dental laboratories ......................... Home health care services ................................ Health and allied services, n.e.c. ...................... Legal services ........................................................ See footnotes at end of table. Page 24 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total – 16 88 61 22 7 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – By person All other assaults – 35 14 19 – – – – 12 285 216 60 – 9 – – – – 10 228 166 56 – – – – – – 896 17,897 16,055 504 412 90 620 400 38 – 131 26 4,202 173 – 173 723 392 468 265 2,004 1,788 662 244 314 569 325 107 – 215 59 50 – – 578 80 – 74 100 97 – 28 28 – – – – 404 – – – 20 69 111 – 204 70 – – – – 54 – – 53 – – – – 17 – – – 241 236 – 115 106 – – – – 1,170 – – 16 143 58 228 29 697 90 19 67 – – 26 7 – 19 51 20 – – 636 33 14 384 200 200 – 94 84 – – – – 928 – – 16 123 58 190 8 533 85 16 67 – – 13 7 – – 33 – – – 206 33 – 56 424 5,102 212 – 69 362 1,041 564 2,529 324 142 17 136 6 – – – – – – – – 168 9,425 83 – – 5,702 2,797 35 456 334 17 72 8,972 71 – – 5,503 2,729 33 306 314 17 16 53 47 All other events 6 57 50 – – – – – – – 11 1,311 265 328 633 50 417 2,572 1,510 814 244 174 84 – 76 – 1,842 54,964 – – – – – – – 243 – – – – – – 21 164 – – – – – 13 – – 13 17 14 – – 430 – – 328 4,631 4,520 88 1,384 900 68 156 99 54 9,386 275 14 242 3,165 591 1,676 523 2,900 2,563 483 92 1,339 649 984 231 – 727 369 305 13 45 4,621 535 78 1,575 96 453 11 – – 199 68 – 150 20 – 2,433 21,078 1,664 – 394 6,369 10,071 185 1,814 503 268 – – – – 21 21 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 558 129 331 16 – – 2,184 354 504 281 807 237 93 54 40 438 206 65 131 – – – 375 85 124 – 115 33 38 25 13 129 Educational services .............................................. Elementary and secondary schools ................... Colleges and universities ................................... Libraries ............................................................. Vocational schools ............................................. Schools and educational services, n.e.c. ......... Social services ....................................................... Individual and family services ............................ Job training and related services ....................... Child day care services ..................................... Residential care ................................................. Social services, n.e.c. ....................................... Museums, botanical, zoological gardens ............... Museums and art galleries ................................ Botanical and zoological gardens ...................... Membership organizations .................................... 82 821 822 823 824 829 83 832 833 835 836 839 84 841 842 86 11,626 4,002 6,366 142 261 856 46,006 9,970 7,461 5,536 19,892 3,148 1,212 782 430 8,224 2,377 797 1,266 46 – 206 6,445 1,217 1,494 716 2,515 503 312 188 124 1,243 1,272 508 661 21 – – 3,420 630 763 413 1,444 170 169 104 64 563 Business associations ....................................... Professional 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 ...................... 861 862 864 866 869 87 871 872 873 874 506 309 4,884 831 1,014 17,803 5,654 1,550 4,246 6,353 – – 32 881 147 80 4,382 1,478 391 1,072 1,440 19 387 47 36 2,278 776 191 572 740 See footnotes at end of table. Page 25 – – 347 54 26 792 248 61 193 289 – – 93 19 11 816 184 106 228 298 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 1,004 257 579 26 – 138 2,223 551 386 323 645 319 154 130 25 588 2,060 786 1,124 32 – 84 8,802 1,773 1,284 1,432 3,717 596 114 80 34 1,582 372 137 191 – – – 1,648 466 296 188 596 101 60 37 22 444 – – – 8 406 45 37 1,103 324 151 191 437 48 1,111 114 193 2,321 833 160 487 841 20 230 14 39 729 166 196 91 275 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1995 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion Educational services .............................................. Elementary and secondary schools ................... Colleges and universities ................................... Libraries ............................................................. Vocational schools ............................................. Schools and educational services, n.e.c. ......... Social services ....................................................... Individual and family services ............................ Job training and related services ....................... Child day care services ..................................... Residential care ................................................. Social services, n.e.c. ....................................... Museums, botanical, zoological gardens ............... Museums and art galleries ................................ Botanical and zoological gardens ...................... Membership organizations .................................... 2,559 627 1,680 23 92 137 12,385 2,755 1,931 1,219 5,777 703 224 139 85 1,840 1,542 299 1,055 14 67 108 7,223 1,480 1,258 995 3,149 341 140 83 57 1,182 316 – 233 – – – 545 97 103 55 166 124 28 16 12 369 579 159 407 – – – 2,284 429 379 490 909 77 122 71 51 424 339 60 195 – – 81 1,939 823 305 173 484 155 9 6 – 229 Business associations ....................................... Professional 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 ...................... – 128 1,055 301 231 3,522 654 154 1,077 1,636 – – – – 231 9 29 1,712 993 – 337 346 – – 125 16 51 765 323 56 125 262 79 721 155 168 2,170 400 106 776 888 37 90 41 46 883 199 122 293 269 1 Days-away-from-work cases include those which result in days away from work with or without restricted work activity. 2 Totals for divisions and 2- and 3-digit codes include data for industries not shown separately. 3 Standard Industrial Classification Manual, 1987 Edition. 4 Excludes farms with fewer than 11 employees. 5 Data conforming to OSHA definitions for mining operators in coal, metal, and nonmetal mining and for employers in railroad transportation are provided to BLS by the Mine Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of Labor; and by the Federal Railroad Administration, U.S. Department of Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 6 – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – 24 – – 10 14 – 35 – – 18 14 Total By person 582 406 99 – – 68 4,914 954 468 171 3,016 305 43 6 37 381 501 402 68 – – – 4,722 913 390 157 2,996 267 – – – 167 127 – 71 – 172 206 60 – 32 112 127 – 30 – – 112 14 – – 95 All other assaults 81 – 31 – – – 192 41 78 – – 38 38 – 35 213 – – All other events 6 1,432 746 586 – – 65 4,820 902 815 769 2,068 265 143 105 38 1,100 – 41 – 172 94 46 – 31 17 32 674 124 134 2,146 622 281 521 722 Transportation. Independent mining contractors are excluded from the coal, metal, and nonmetal industries. 6 Includes nonclassifiable responses. NOTE: Dashes indicate data that are not available or data that do not meet publication guidelines. Because of rounding, data may not sum to totals. n.e.c. = not elsewhere classified. Page 26 SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor
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