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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