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, 1993 Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Private industry 5 ............................................... 2,252,591 614,630 Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 5 ........................ Agricultural production 5 ............................................ Agricultural production—crops .............................. Field crops, except cash grains ......................... Vegetables and melons ..................................... Fruits and tree nuts ............................................ Horticultural specialties ...................................... General farms, primarily crop ............................ Agricultural production—livestock ......................... Livestock, except dairy and poultry ................... Dairy farms ........................................................ Poultry and eggs ................................................ Animal specialties .............................................. Agricultural services .............................................. Crop services ..................................................... Veterinary services ............................................ Farm labor and management services .............. Landscape and horticultural services ................ Forestry ................................................................. Timber tracts ...................................................... Forest products .................................................. Forestry services ............................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping ............................... Hunting, trapping, game propagation ................ 01-02 01 013 016 017 018 019 02 021 024 025 027 07 072 074 076 078 08 081 083 085 09 097 Mining 6 .................................................................... Metal mining .......................................................... Iron ores ............................................................ Copper ores ....................................................... Lead and zinc ores ............................................ Gold and silver ores ........................................... Miscellaneous metal ores .................................. Coal mining ............................................................ Bituminous coal and lignite mining .................... Oil and gas extraction ............................................ Crude petroleum and natural gas ...................... Oil and gas field services ................................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels ........................ Dimension stone ................................................ Crushed and broken stone ................................ Sand and gravel ................................................ Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals .............. Chemical and fertilizer minerals ........................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals .................. 10 101 102 103 104 109 12 122 13 131 138 14 141 142 144 145 147 149 Construction ............................................................ General building contractors .................................. Residential building construction ....................... Operative builders ............................................. Nonresidential building construction .................. Heavy construction, except building ...................... Highway and street construction ....................... Heavy construction, except highway ................. Special trade contractors ....................................... Plumbing, heating, air-conditioning ................... Painting and paper hanging ............................... Electrical work ................................................... Masonry, stonework, and plastering .................. Carpentry and floor work ................................... Roofing, siding, and sheet metal work ............... Concrete work ................................................... 15 152 153 154 16 161 162 17 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 294,177 161,753 98,846 111,266 244,115 83,078 44,826 14,956 7,377 3,915 2,102 3,636 3,985 1,919 21,560 15,608 2,096 2,345 4,854 4,439 1,682 5,952 1,618 1,241 2,075 834 22,318 4,525 1,779 2,997 12,076 579 260 27 292 369 6 7,357 5,223 906 794 1,615 1,187 626 2,134 567 479 663 376 7,268 1,352 186 999 4,532 203 119 6 78 128 – 3,551 2,530 520 397 746 554 281 1,020 300 208 292 205 3,616 476 63 470 2,464 152 85 6 60 58 – 1,897 1,312 162 140 438 340 208 586 129 116 170 156 1,960 434 103 345 1,042 26 15 – 11 31 – 1,074 757 142 155 203 162 73 318 94 83 119 7 992 296 – 97 584 12 10 – – 24 – 1,721 1,349 60 123 648 300 193 372 170 66 81 37 1,875 540 – 572 686 36 17 – 15 – – 2,154 1,540 172 218 464 603 77 615 150 135 254 50 1,707 388 178 192 892 79 19 – 59 44 – 1,030 834 150 141 200 233 89 196 45 38 78 28 800 202 15 177 394 31 – – 26 58 – 21,090 8,239 4,434 1,797 1,775 1,756 1,874 369 1,108 291 285 73 380 66 7,715 7,563 8,597 1,685 6,859 3,670 210 1,820 982 258 204 196 374 76 110 27 135 19 3,327 3,271 3,210 436 2,763 1,328 88 612 423 78 66 61 188 22 66 9 73 14 1,750 1,722 1,812 240 1,566 684 60 311 221 34 30 28 131 46 25 10 45 – 921 908 422 55 363 323 8 156 105 17 18 19 53 6 19 8 17 99 20 31 5 40 82 24 21 – 617 602 794 121 673 311 19 139 94 27 18 14 – 589 573 586 159 426 482 19 247 139 28 27 22 26 8 595 578 894 193 696 303 13 172 58 25 18 17 – – – – – – – – 367 55 298 – – – – – – – 204,769 69,534 35,157 16,734 7,845 23,748 15,464 6,936 44,682 22,849 654 21,180 30,005 9,909 20,095 130,082 28,729 5,715 19,846 20,049 9,532 13,418 10,478 16,234 8,623 162 7,449 10,735 3,221 7,514 42,564 9,692 1,289 6,225 5,969 3,592 3,579 3,711 8,640 4,616 97 3,927 5,899 1,725 4,174 20,618 4,128 597 3,129 2,623 2,021 1,764 1,996 4,038 2,268 51 1,720 1,986 603 1,383 10,710 2,715 444 1,617 1,757 776 986 747 1,574 719 – 850 1,592 482 1,110 4,679 1,038 59 487 683 412 329 407 6,071 3,664 101 2,306 2,251 711 1,540 15,425 2,871 1,125 2,345 2,956 1,246 2,346 758 3,531 1,746 73 1,712 2,200 595 1,604 9,733 1,724 507 1,621 1,671 840 853 942 1,425 711 41 673 1,050 371 679 4,462 1,196 225 738 480 204 380 414 See footnotes at end of table. Page 1 – 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion In lifting Repetitive motion Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 380,418 94,308 111,524 71,336 Industry 2 Total Private industry 5 ............................................... 635,802 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions All other events 4 Total By person All other assaults 4,794 26,906 21,254 5,653 254,832 Agriculture, forestry, and fishing 5 ........................ 8,588 5,170 799 2,373 1,846 99 1,809 82 1,727 4,816 Agricultural production 5 ............................................ Agricultural production—crops .............................. Field crops, except cash grains ......................... Vegetables and melons ..................................... Fruits and tree nuts ............................................ Horticultural specialties ...................................... General farms, primarily crop ............................ Agricultural production—livestock ......................... Livestock, except dairy and poultry ................... Dairy farms ........................................................ Poultry and eggs ................................................ Animal specialties .............................................. Agricultural services .............................................. Crop services ..................................................... Veterinary services ............................................ Farm labor and management services .............. Landscape and horticultural services ................ Forestry ................................................................. Timber tracts ...................................................... Forest products .................................................. Forestry services ............................................... Fishing, hunting, and trapping ............................... Hunting, trapping, game propagation ................ 3,988 2,983 328 454 912 960 310 1,006 241 154 438 141 4,446 955 277 414 2,643 105 54 11 39 48 – 2,468 1,856 202 280 535 656 169 612 139 102 257 89 2,618 636 166 254 1,460 54 30 10 13 30 – 381 248 30 27 41 116 – 132 22 17 74 20 406 159 30 28 165 7 – – – 6 – 1,207 869 97 141 230 280 119 338 68 65 181 18 1,106 189 62 116 711 43 21 – 22 17 – 834 662 125 81 174 202 65 173 74 10 87 – 983 187 37 155 584 22 – – 19 7 – 58 43 477 101 31 6 35 10 19 377 103 133 19 104 1,324 12 926 40 59 5 – – 5 – – 29 16 448 85 25 – 30 7 19 363 99 128 15 102 1,277 12 922 37 43 – – – – – – 2,352 1,757 197 357 512 535 151 595 172 146 194 58 2,362 507 64 304 1,403 47 21 – 24 55 – Mining 6 .................................................................... 6,058 2,387 177 997 406 25 1,120 Metal mining .......................................................... Iron ores ............................................................ Copper ores ....................................................... Lead and zinc ores ............................................ Gold and silver ores ........................................... Miscellaneous metal ores .................................. Coal mining ............................................................ Bituminous coal and lignite mining .................... Oil and gas extraction ............................................ Crude petroleum and natural gas ...................... Oil and gas field services ................................... Nonmetallic minerals, except fuels ........................ Dimension stone ................................................ Crushed and broken stone ................................ Sand and gravel ................................................ Clay, ceramic, and refractory minerals .............. Chemical and fertilizer minerals ........................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic minerals .................. 488 161 105 38 150 32 2,754 2,708 1,531 258 1,268 1,285 79 645 293 110 71 87 138 33 33 18 44 10 1,092 1,079 758 124 632 399 30 186 88 36 27 32 – – – – – – 16 16 143 75 69 15 – 5 – – – – 19 – 287 273 475 116 344 194 8 108 46 13 14 5 Construction ............................................................ 46,444 27,199 3,053 8,866 General building contractors .................................. Residential building construction ....................... Operative builders ............................................. Nonresidential building construction .................. Heavy construction, except building ...................... Highway and street construction ....................... Heavy construction, except highway ................. Special trade contractors ....................................... Plumbing, heating, air-conditioning ................... Painting and paper hanging ............................... Electrical work ................................................... Masonry, stonework, and plastering .................. Carpentry and floor work ................................... Roofing, siding, and sheet metal work ............... Concrete work ................................................... 9,542 4,329 127 5,086 6,107 2,029 4,078 30,795 7,022 1,258 4,569 5,094 2,360 2,901 2,331 5,672 2,740 67 2,865 3,366 1,074 2,292 18,161 4,146 838 2,166 3,199 1,685 1,675 1,235 687 386 14 287 351 137 214 2,015 414 83 274 471 161 200 186 1,225 393 29 803 1,722 585 1,138 5,919 1,281 366 882 493 120 1,278 460 See footnotes at end of table. Page 2 41 – 13 – 5 – – – – – 47 46 343 137 205 11 – 5 – – – – – – 23 14 – 15 6 – 7 – 40 34 – – – – – – – – – 59 – – – – – – – – – – – – – 14 – – – – 47 – – – 16 5 – – 5 – – 34 – – – – – – – – 57 10 47 9 – – – – – – – – 34 26 8 – – – – – – – – 9 16 5 – – 6 – 25 21 98 96 956 220 736 50 – 26 17 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 5,495 783 443 213 230 24,003 841 478 16 347 1,695 865 830 2,958 783 93 356 274 90 214 481 118 32 20 66 131 51 80 534 153 8 143 28 – 80 14 101 51 – 49 91 42 48 252 70 – 29 83 12 15 – 38 63 45 4,907 2,434 71 2,402 3,672 1,301 2,370 15,424 3,523 758 2,664 2,530 901 1,573 1,177 – – – – – – – – – – – 30 42 21 22 133 18 – 19 66 10 8 – 19 48 22 26 119 52 – 10 17 – 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases Total Water well drilling .............................................. Miscellaneous special trade contractors ....................................................... Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 178 1,098 448 322 12 80 63 64 25 179 21,216 8,060 4,037 1,656 1,185 1,716 1,513 799 Manufacturing .......................................................... 583,841 191,265 78,671 44,908 46,848 17,693 42,790 17,533 Durable goods ......................................................... 352,910 124,195 53,060 28,519 26,889 10,116 22,191 10,026 9,570 2,470 2,089 1,724 311 54 2,393 921 602 178 89 603 909 41 778 90 1,123 801 322 587 96 69 421 3,281 1,934 789 503 264 300 26 52 354 165 190 209 625 352 273 159 44 115 3,292 75 295 124 171 337 36 175 107 21 40 7 184 64 12 16 48 3,610 288 931 662 248 22 1,256 472 391 88 72 233 314 29 238 48 497 368 129 324 29 46 249 1,649 926 475 214 65 136 16 19 174 110 64 91 298 153 145 160 47 113 1,794 62 231 121 110 191 16 94 55 18 20 – 162 31 6 9 42 3,623 296 1,274 1,005 247 22 1,100 452 292 120 78 157 416 29 328 59 182 112 70 356 58 36 261 1,629 914 378 268 98 127 14 29 158 94 64 125 341 212 128 91 28 63 1,744 22 180 109 70 118 65 132 48 61 17 5 124 12 16 6 45 1,496 279 347 294 46 7 298 81 56 31 22 109 85 9 60 16 392 278 113 95 21 37 36 386 212 89 61 9 40 – 11 33 22 11 42 78 41 37 21 11 10 1,153 – 86 59 28 22 55 37 14 12 7 – 35 10 – – 17 2,476 531 610 506 95 9 560 244 94 79 34 108 135 15 106 15 408 322 85 233 29 44 160 970 600 210 168 37 140 13 33 101 44 57 80 140 70 70 48 35 14 1,642 25 249 151 98 96 30 110 61 31 12 5 118 39 5 6 40 1,199 184 347 304 37 6 335 118 80 28 21 88 24 – 23 – 224 176 48 85 16 26 43 362 186 84 44 12 38 – – 38 28 10 27 86 50 36 26 20 6 810 9 73 48 25 27 22 52 14 16 21 – 38 21 – – 10 Lumber and wood products ................................... Logging .............................................................. Sawmills and planing mills ................................. Sawmills and planing mills, general ............... Hardwood dimension and flooring mills ......... Special product sawmills, n.e.c. ................... 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 ................................................ Nailed wood boxes and shook ....................... Wood pallets and skids .................................. Wood containers, n.e.c. ................................ 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 ............................. Cement, hydraulic .............................................. Structural clay products ..................................... Brick and structural clay tile ........................... Ceramic wall and floor tile ............................. Clay refractories ............................................ Structural clay products, n.e.c. ..................... Pottery and related products ............................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures ............................. Vitreous china table and kitchenware ............ Semivitreous table and kitchenware .............. Porcelain electrical supplies .......................... 24 241 242 2421 2426 2429 243 2431 2434 2435 2436 2439 244 2441 2448 2449 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 323 324 325 3251 3253 3255 3259 326 3261 3262 3263 3264 40,139 5,874 10,244 8,260 1,758 226 12,431 5,100 3,301 1,098 670 2,262 3,197 219 2,591 386 4,867 3,578 1,289 3,526 421 486 2,619 19,536 10,855 4,071 3,329 1,118 1,861 153 322 2,178 1,047 1,131 1,714 3,596 1,863 1,733 1,192 526 666 22,698 513 2,532 1,212 1,321 1,886 483 1,373 622 414 290 46 1,801 519 155 122 484 18,287 3,233 4,699 3,726 869 104 5,265 2,074 1,416 422 263 1,090 1,765 110 1,437 218 1,923 1,368 555 1,401 213 168 1,020 7,262 4,171 1,796 1,138 472 603 56 106 748 402 345 492 1,406 801 605 446 126 320 7,675 181 766 375 391 722 126 447 240 110 84 14 529 116 37 40 146 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Total Water well drilling .............................................. Miscellaneous special trade contractors ....................................................... In lifting 304 193 4,957 3,026 Manufacturing .......................................................... 156,780 Repetitive motion – Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – Total By person All other assaults – – – All other events 4 29 50 223 1,010 616 100 32 12 21 2,189 88,705 49,621 31,363 9,347 1,152 1,357 752 605 64,940 258 288 40,400 29 56 36 3,869 634 989 817 148 24 1,106 508 274 83 57 185 240 17 193 29 516 405 111 384 48 38 298 2,057 1,086 362 383 128 168 21 24 246 153 94 211 383 186 198 130 83 47 2,694 73 300 136 163 209 63 170 66 52 45 7 212 56 22 15 64 Durable goods ......................................................... 93,937 52,888 28,220 17,982 4,479 818 546 Lumber and wood products ................................... Logging .............................................................. Sawmills and planing mills ................................. Sawmills and planing mills, general ............... Hardwood dimension and flooring mills ......... Special product sawmills, n.e.c. ................... 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 ................................................ Nailed wood boxes and shook ....................... Wood pallets and skids .................................. Wood containers, n.e.c. ................................ 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 ............................. Cement, hydraulic .............................................. Structural clay products ..................................... Brick and structural clay tile ........................... Ceramic wall and floor tile ............................. Clay refractories ............................................ Structural clay products, n.e.c. ..................... Pottery and related products ............................. Vitreous plumbing fixtures ............................. Vitreous china table and kitchenware ............ Semivitreous table and kitchenware .............. Porcelain electrical supplies .......................... 9,659 538 2,565 2,104 399 62 3,687 1,594 960 356 199 578 786 54 644 88 1,166 834 331 918 77 108 733 6,138 3,428 1,150 1,160 264 708 46 98 706 314 393 547 1,112 609 504 344 144 200 5,911 120 629 244 385 556 111 440 182 147 102 8 643 233 52 42 159 5,229 188 1,089 851 203 35 2,168 986 641 121 62 359 553 41 452 60 734 522 212 496 45 46 404 3,801 2,154 690 756 174 453 17 65 432 199 232 339 658 400 258 219 82 137 3,307 78 280 114 166 378 48 220 78 69 65 8 392 146 31 25 94 1,426 51 306 203 93 9 679 283 271 47 34 43 75 13 52 10 95 65 30 221 – 14 205 1,587 791 268 305 90 101 10 16 230 58 172 238 192 56 135 137 92 45 952 40 219 75 144 165 – 57 15 27 12 – 150 22 30 12 32 869 142 220 169 51 – 256 90 83 44 24 16 38 – 31 6 95 89 6 118 5 38 75 494 223 70 38 62 38 – 13 52 12 40 64 131 32 99 24 6 18 1,054 24 147 93 54 67 55 27 13 12 – – 53 13 – – 14 698 240 117 103 9 – 217 95 60 7 14 40 37 – 34 – 37 29 8 51 9 10 31 239 128 25 32 37 20 – 14 20 10 10 12 66 19 47 12 9 – 687 15 50 24 27 21 – 34 18 8 6 – 22 10 – – – 74 8 34 26 8 85 36 11 8 See footnotes at end of table. Page 4 – – – 9 5 – – – – – – – – – – – – 6 6 – – 19 8 7 – – – 12 – 8 – 11 – 7 5 19 – – 16 17 14 11 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 103 22 10 – 6 – 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 25 16 7 – – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – 5 – – – – – – – – – – – – 18 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 9 5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 – – – – – 13 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 108 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Pottery products, n.e.c. ................................. Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ........... Concrete block and brick ............................... Concrete products, n.e.c. ............................. Ready-mixed concrete ................................... Gypsum products .......................................... Cut stone and stone products ............................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ..... Abrasive products .......................................... Asbestos products ......................................... Minerals, ground or treated ........................... Mineral wool .................................................. Nonclay refractories ....................................... 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 ....................................... Copper foundries ........................................... Nonferrous foundries, n.e.c. ......................... Miscellaneous primary metal products .............. Metal heat treating ......................................... Primary metal products, n.e.c. ...................... Fabricated metal products ..................................... Metal cans and shipping containers .................. Metal cans ..................................................... 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 ........................ 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 3269 327 3271 3272 3273 3275 328 329 3291 3292 3295 3296 3297 3299 33 331 3312 3315 3316 3317 332 3321 3322 3324 3325 333 3331 3334 3339 334 335 3351 3353 3354 3356 520 10,843 1,076 4,583 4,904 156 618 2,649 667 253 291 692 382 365 33,625 10,784 7,119 989 901 1,647 8,293 5,472 446 601 1,773 1,412 181 845 387 1,085 5,551 898 439 1,088 468 190 3,865 458 1,935 1,362 59 164 876 252 104 97 218 83 122 12,234 3,949 2,421 398 391 709 3,333 2,182 148 202 801 363 49 212 102 407 1,763 310 150 371 202 45 1,763 186 997 551 14 91 336 100 36 37 71 33 59 5,067 1,741 1,081 182 166 300 1,368 841 49 69 409 148 23 87 38 182 654 118 46 156 96 73 822 86 416 301 – 38 178 33 22 43 52 12 17 2,426 830 546 77 67 128 592 420 12 54 105 74 9 49 16 108 333 59 25 58 28 45 852 156 373 279 27 16 234 79 16 12 60 30 36 2,888 910 475 114 122 198 603 392 38 41 131 76 10 41 26 83 610 107 54 141 52 – 802 61 203 522 7 35 77 20 7 19 10 14 6 1,059 519 416 27 24 48 226 172 – 19 32 40 8 28 – 39 144 30 15 28 10 29 776 82 316 363 10 57 179 33 7 29 56 26 29 2,079 881 652 50 80 99 318 212 6 20 80 121 12 69 40 77 389 78 42 96 14 – 478 19 164 292 – 27 85 12 – 10 36 16 8 1,017 447 328 22 31 59 170 119 13 9 29 52 8 26 18 15 169 33 11 19 – 3357 336 3363 3364 3365 3366 3369 339 3398 3399 34 341 3411 3412 342 3421 3423 3425 3429 343 3431 3432 3433 344 3441 3442 3443 3444 3446 3448 2,478 5,228 2,278 641 1,665 423 221 1,273 846 427 59,144 1,854 1,261 593 4,190 291 1,259 181 2,459 1,787 532 569 686 20,926 4,714 3,051 5,790 4,542 1,288 953 655 1,937 826 215 664 151 81 482 327 156 23,501 614 376 238 1,411 123 484 46 759 620 174 189 258 9,329 2,338 1,220 2,421 2,153 554 406 215 805 351 82 280 64 28 170 120 50 9,554 237 130 108 495 32 200 8 254 220 51 52 117 4,257 1,115 569 1,109 916 239 226 151 392 163 44 144 35 6 98 45 52 5,164 171 130 41 365 56 76 18 215 122 42 46 34 1,724 332 315 427 456 94 54 231 468 190 55 160 29 34 138 108 31 5,640 149 74 75 412 31 163 14 204 201 63 78 60 1,804 476 207 400 457 108 83 54 56 30 14 6 148 203 97 32 59 6 8 90 76 14 3,152 141 104 38 262 17 70 16 159 101 39 33 29 1,046 250 160 273 231 58 51 102 140 71 10 46 9 – 23 8 15 1,525 96 82 14 84 – 16 5 61 36 – 14 11 477 165 46 153 53 22 26 See footnotes at end of table. Page 5 – – 34 8 26 1,427 84 62 22 47 6 11 – 29 23 – – 13 630 126 77 173 157 48 36 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Pottery products, n.e.c. ................................. Concrete, gypsum, and plaster products ........... Concrete block and brick ............................... Concrete products, n.e.c. ............................. Ready-mixed concrete ................................... Gypsum products .......................................... Cut stone and stone products ............................ Miscellaneous nonmetallic mineral products ..... Abrasive products .......................................... Asbestos products ......................................... Minerals, ground or treated ........................... Mineral wool .................................................. Nonclay refractories ....................................... 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 ....................................... Copper foundries ........................................... Nonferrous foundries, n.e.c. ......................... Miscellaneous primary metal products .............. Metal heat treating ......................................... Primary metal products, n.e.c. ...................... Fabricated metal products ..................................... Metal cans and shipping containers .................. Metal cans ..................................................... 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 ........................ Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion 158 2,402 253 1,156 942 37 247 762 152 64 67 199 160 120 8,502 2,563 1,619 270 226 416 2,174 1,449 106 206 412 310 40 187 82 239 1,616 254 98 333 118 97 1,305 152 587 533 24 147 460 86 21 29 122 103 100 4,151 1,082 625 118 118 210 1,144 740 60 118 225 124 21 63 40 140 745 102 51 197 48 54 125 21 60 36 8 33 159 77 13 8 37 16 8 1,526 270 154 36 30 48 480 286 49 62 84 91 18 48 24 22 256 32 – 36 – 25 534 19 207 281 7 15 131 48 25 24 12 – 20 2,639 638 449 52 28 104 665 418 42 36 170 137 18 72 46 130 323 57 24 50 55 6 511 40 67 380 5 – 28 6 – 12 – – – 472 147 84 38 12 8 105 78 – – 22 40 8 24 8 27 86 6 20 15 6 778 1,263 492 187 388 142 54 338 210 128 15,883 487 340 147 1,193 59 335 61 737 572 165 166 240 5,307 955 1,012 1,428 1,121 352 265 327 691 241 120 210 95 25 225 145 80 9,125 259 172 88 773 32 240 36 465 333 85 99 150 3,003 489 602 790 635 214 171 170 369 184 45 88 28 24 37 33 – 3,818 95 65 29 583 49 218 18 298 166 83 50 32 768 110 175 219 174 44 19 121 664 297 110 179 52 26 82 60 22 3,300 75 26 48 171 12 36 – 120 83 – 42 37 1,225 291 70 463 230 95 49 24 37 23 See footnotes at end of table. Page 6 – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – 46 9 – All other assaults – – – 13 – – 35 – – 11 6 – – – – – 221 85 77 – – – 50 32 – – 11 15 5 5 – 13 32 12 – 9 – 9 16 – – 11 – – Total By person – – 13 – – – – – – – – – 6 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 10 – 541 24 19 – 38 – 9 – 30 7 – – – 165 36 30 29 29 25 9 – 103 – – – – – – – – – – – – 40 7 – 26 – – – 5 – – – – – 34 15 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 13 – – 7 – – – – – – – – 48 – – – – – – – – – – – – 15 13 – – – 6 9 – – 41 – – – – – – – – 27 9 16 9 – – – – – – – – – – – 43 9 – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 89 – – – – – – – – 6 – – – – – – – – – – 14 8 11 31 28 7 46 15 14 – – – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 16 – – 11 – – – All other events 4 55 1,292 113 473 679 20 35 340 61 29 24 118 61 48 3,830 1,268 904 96 78 150 764 519 74 39 133 243 13 173 57 115 767 88 72 131 56 414 530 245 26 208 30 22 141 83 58 5,805 236 183 53 400 24 82 29 265 164 34 66 63 1,896 428 256 589 383 87 88 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 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 ................................... Crowns and closures ..................................... Metal stampings, n.e.c. ................................. Metal services, n.e.c. ........................................ Plating and polishing ..................................... Metal coating and allied services ................... Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c. .................... Small arms ammunition ................................. Ammunition, except for small arms, n.e.c. .... Small arms ..................................................... Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c. ................ Miscellaneous fabricated metal products .......... Industrial valves ............................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .............. Steel springs, except wire .............................. Valves and pipe fittings, n.e.c. ...................... Wire springs ................................................... Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ......... Metal foil and leaf .......................................... 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 ................ Machine tools, metal forming types ............... Industrial patterns .......................................... Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ............... Machine tool accessories .............................. Power-driven handtools ................................. Rolling mill machinery .................................... Welding apparatus ......................................... Metalworking machinery, n.e.c. .................... Special industry machinery ................................ Textile machinery .......................................... Woodworking machinery ............................... Paper industries machinery ........................... 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 .................................... SIC code 3 3449 345 3451 3452 346 3462 3463 3465 3466 3469 347 3471 3479 348 3482 3483 3484 3489 349 3491 3492 3493 3494 3495 3496 3497 3498 3499 35 351 3511 3519 352 3523 3524 353 3531 3532 3533 3534 3535 3536 3537 354 3541 3542 3543 3544 3545 3546 3547 3548 3549 355 3552 3553 3554 3555 3556 3559 356 3561 3562 3563 3564 3565 Total cases 587 3,366 1,819 1,547 9,965 1,644 321 4,455 198 3,347 5,942 3,456 2,486 1,052 146 506 318 82 10,061 886 813 288 1,106 576 2,578 191 1,144 2,479 55,342 2,049 858 1,191 4,160 3,040 1,121 8,795 2,897 794 1,432 397 1,466 327 1,482 8,593 927 624 263 3,956 1,116 678 186 632 210 4,808 451 380 602 515 977 1,883 7,661 854 1,109 645 1,301 420 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 239 1,478 819 660 3,861 714 100 1,508 53 1,488 2,005 1,094 911 239 27 92 100 20 3,943 297 269 91 432 299 952 88 497 1,016 21,390 559 247 313 1,511 1,142 369 3,883 1,119 371 620 139 666 119 848 3,754 333 237 136 1,942 482 197 89 254 83 1,894 153 166 248 170 360 796 2,691 282 321 174 467 182 84 489 219 270 1,360 287 36 484 16 536 929 577 352 79 8 38 23 9 1,488 132 85 34 202 115 300 37 162 420 9,029 145 69 76 690 538 152 1,779 420 153 298 49 329 69 460 1,396 112 90 76 701 146 90 46 97 38 847 62 97 102 69 178 338 1,069 115 106 74 185 61 46 357 215 142 990 116 20 443 16 395 558 269 289 86 – 37 41 – 792 57 68 10 62 46 215 22 117 194 4,854 102 51 52 329 212 117 765 340 56 111 13 118 8 119 1,007 113 68 20 552 138 26 20 57 12 404 37 16 62 52 95 142 670 55 81 35 138 68 72 489 292 197 1,030 139 35 428 14 414 337 176 161 57 13 13 29 – 1,159 63 78 22 121 106 360 22 133 254 4,139 180 76 104 258 203 55 648 145 69 112 39 119 20 144 834 58 53 26 380 147 59 16 75 20 294 32 22 43 29 39 128 554 54 107 30 92 30 See footnotes at end of table. Page 7 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 12 63 27 35 232 36 6 129 – 57 99 55 44 17 – 13 – – 232 26 – – 25 – 74 10 26 61 1,144 60 17 44 88 70 18 200 62 17 43 24 32 13 8 188 23 19 – 91 13 10 7 14 8 85 – 12 8 21 11 29 156 11 22 25 21 10 24 125 62 63 520 95 20 235 13 158 374 232 142 94 13 58 18 6 488 43 59 6 33 20 155 10 56 107 3,110 169 85 84 209 169 40 402 145 36 72 17 85 16 32 441 50 27 15 204 61 33 8 39 6 290 76 28 24 28 59 76 449 53 103 50 70 34 12 84 33 51 288 37 7 134 – 109 194 99 94 20 – 11 – – 246 22 23 8 17 8 65 7 27 67 1,428 92 40 51 78 64 14 256 112 7 31 9 22 19 57 225 22 19 6 84 34 21 7 25 8 118 13 5 9 41 12 39 186 12 40 23 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 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 ................................... Crowns and closures ..................................... Metal stampings, n.e.c. ................................. Metal services, n.e.c. ........................................ Plating and polishing ..................................... Metal coating and allied services ................... Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c. .................... Small arms ammunition ................................. Ammunition, except for small arms, n.e.c. .... Small arms ..................................................... Ordnance and accessories, n.e.c. ................ Miscellaneous fabricated metal products .......... Industrial valves ............................................. Fluid power valves and hose fittings .............. Steel springs, except wire .............................. Valves and pipe fittings, n.e.c. ...................... Wire springs ................................................... Miscellaneous fabricated wire products ......... Metal foil and leaf .......................................... 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 ................ Machine tools, metal forming types ............... Industrial patterns .......................................... Special dies, tools, jigs and fixtures ............... Machine tool accessories .............................. Power-driven handtools ................................. Rolling mill machinery .................................... Welding apparatus ......................................... Metalworking machinery, n.e.c. .................... Special industry machinery ................................ Textile machinery .......................................... Woodworking machinery ............................... Paper industries machinery ........................... 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 .................................... Total In lifting Repetitive motion 174 940 551 389 2,577 409 95 1,145 67 862 1,605 941 664 258 28 137 68 25 2,945 296 272 118 381 127 753 44 332 621 15,018 588 244 344 1,132 812 320 2,019 540 209 372 133 411 84 269 2,303 255 172 48 1,057 273 220 30 180 68 1,437 130 123 169 119 304 590 2,293 300 341 207 408 108 102 624 389 236 1,294 165 31 574 45 479 964 517 447 158 14 82 49 14 1,717 146 192 47 268 72 426 32 166 368 8,836 281 138 143 690 507 183 1,141 315 89 190 76 258 55 158 1,389 151 72 28 655 167 154 11 106 46 810 70 72 91 63 171 343 1,310 175 215 137 204 67 26 157 93 64 848 64 35 505 7 238 332 170 163 225 46 95 77 7 643 56 68 15 53 45 172 – 47 187 3,596 214 75 139 224 114 110 411 241 19 38 15 33 14 50 418 55 24 9 127 70 84 – 39 5 182 12 6 37 41 32 53 478 44 92 36 83 9 See footnotes at end of table. Page 8 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 27 165 74 91 412 92 19 200 11 90 640 450 189 42 – 29 11 – 488 32 31 10 65 16 150 9 55 119 2,702 72 10 61 372 303 69 470 145 47 82 21 69 24 82 303 43 27 25 110 39 32 8 14 5 214 21 18 12 18 71 74 364 35 52 38 49 17 7 14 – 10 137 19 – 91 – 23 89 56 34 13 6 6 – – 54 8 – – 7 – 14 – 9 13 564 31 – 31 40 30 10 59 20 – 12 – 12 – 12 75 18 – – 25 8 8 – 8 – 63 14 – – 14 10 25 82 7 9 9 16 12 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – Total – 5 – – 30 22 – – – – 6 – 14 5 – – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 90 – – – – – 9 – – – – 5 – – – – – – – – – 17 – – – – – 13 23 – – 12 – – 26 9 – 6 9 10 5 23 8 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 58 9 – – – – – – 10 – – – – – 17 – By person 5 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 32 – – – 7 – 5 9 5 – – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other events 4 65 335 155 180 1,048 156 36 497 41 318 581 356 225 136 22 64 38 13 1,009 105 83 35 94 53 241 21 93 283 6,242 255 137 118 489 328 162 1,061 504 79 148 36 136 34 123 878 128 97 16 313 135 74 29 59 27 505 25 20 96 63 115 187 931 110 128 69 166 44 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Speed changers, drives, and gears ............... Industrial furnaces and ovens ........................ Power transmission equipment, n.e.c. .......... General industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............. Computer and office equipment ........................ Electronic computers ..................................... Computer storage devices ............................. Computer peripheral equipment, n.e.c. ........ Office machines, n.e.c. ................................. Refrigeration and service machinery ................. Automatic vending machines ......................... Commercial laundry equipment ..................... Refrigeration and heating equipment ............ Measuring and dispensing pumps ................. Service industry machinery, n.e.c. ................ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............................... Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves ................ Fluid power cylinders and actuators .............. Fluid power pumps and motors ..................... Scales and balances, except laboratory ........ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ........................... Electronic and other electric equipment ................ Electric distribution equipment ........................... Transformers, except electronic .................... Switchgear and switchboard apparatus ......... Electrical industrial apparatus ............................ Motors and generators .................................. 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 ............. 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 .......................... SIC code 3 Total cases Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 3566 3567 3568 3569 357 3571 3572 3577 3579 358 3581 3582 3585 3586 3589 359 3592 3593 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 365 3651 3652 366 3661 3663 3669 367 3671 3672 3674 3675 3676 3677 3678 3679 550 572 720 1,490 3,003 1,353 370 564 519 6,166 318 315 4,109 209 1,215 10,106 742 701 843 207 7,613 32,025 2,100 1,162 938 3,738 2,278 226 1,068 167 4,135 479 834 498 768 408 1,148 4,642 454 1,572 635 612 627 415 329 1,556 1,086 470 2,915 1,087 1,442 386 9,435 873 1,848 2,444 282 194 505 402 2,888 175 194 312 584 508 169 43 102 150 2,016 67 133 1,303 62 451 4,574 188 263 255 77 3,790 8,949 653 350 303 1,106 638 58 363 47 1,159 178 201 108 212 73 387 1,474 128 430 277 222 189 120 108 510 370 140 784 202 471 111 2,245 232 499 379 77 44 154 138 721 82 95 117 234 238 64 28 50 68 862 20 66 536 13 227 2,005 58 108 91 41 1,708 3,708 249 140 109 386 228 13 126 19 515 94 68 41 82 51 180 497 46 136 95 95 55 37 32 266 184 82 463 113 304 46 988 106 210 152 23 19 50 71 358 30 31 109 122 176 72 11 29 50 508 22 36 305 13 133 893 51 48 73 12 708 2,074 157 101 56 223 103 10 97 12 277 55 76 25 57 – 62 355 24 108 38 46 70 23 46 92 64 29 156 32 86 38 537 69 128 123 16 9 43 15 134 34 41 47 119 58 16 – 14 26 428 19 14 322 20 52 885 63 50 22 20 730 2,178 139 62 77 396 232 32 118 14 241 22 33 32 49 15 90 452 40 139 115 57 29 48 25 108 88 20 98 34 54 10 436 30 93 59 30 12 39 44 129 369 3691 3692 3694 3,503 643 304 1,625 1,019 180 74 481 344 62 26 162 277 35 22 121 310 78 17 150 See footnotes at end of table. Page 9 Fall to lower level 11 34 9 12 74 30 18 22 Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall – 132 – – 80 – 45 162 6 7 14 7 128 748 53 29 24 73 45 12 16 – 96 16 40 9 14 10 – 111 14 47 9 6 9 17 9 35 23 12 90 33 54 – 238 26 39 84 – – 6 7 71 33 22 44 40 285 144 28 49 42 414 52 12 266 17 67 452 42 29 21 10 351 2,215 84 65 19 177 92 28 47 10 260 42 43 48 60 27 40 374 20 166 48 38 48 37 18 70 56 14 258 112 120 25 758 53 169 202 28 20 38 8 238 18 8 10 48 82 46 12 11 14 150 – 8 121 – 16 239 36 30 37 – 136 809 35 19 16 78 48 – 24 – 107 – 36 25 14 16 12 125 19 44 23 14 13 10 – 53 35 18 51 12 30 9 263 31 56 79 13 – 17 14 53 53 10 8 18 234 39 16 104 97 23 10 48 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Speed changers, drives, and gears ............... Industrial furnaces and ovens ........................ Power transmission equipment, n.e.c. .......... General industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............. Computer and office equipment ........................ Electronic computers ..................................... Computer storage devices ............................. Computer peripheral equipment, n.e.c. ........ Office machines, n.e.c. ................................. Refrigeration and service machinery ................. Automatic vending machines ......................... Commercial laundry equipment ..................... Refrigeration and heating equipment ............ Measuring and dispensing pumps ................. Service industry machinery, n.e.c. ................ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ............................... Carburetors, pistons, rings, valves ................ Fluid power cylinders and actuators .............. Fluid power pumps and motors ..................... Scales and balances, except laboratory ........ Industrial machinery, n.e.c. ........................... Electronic and other electric equipment ................ Electric distribution equipment ........................... Transformers, except electronic .................... Switchgear and switchboard apparatus ......... Electrical industrial apparatus ............................ Motors and generators .................................. 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 ............. 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 .......................... Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion 178 177 205 368 1,013 446 126 181 185 1,708 103 103 1,094 82 325 2,526 217 205 253 64 1,787 8,528 660 360 300 1,088 636 60 328 64 1,041 99 189 118 180 97 357 1,222 101 443 124 130 197 116 111 459 322 136 856 383 358 115 2,271 239 482 625 94 42 88 82 618 96 110 115 191 627 270 79 124 93 1,032 70 76 640 49 197 1,554 110 133 151 44 1,117 5,165 361 204 156 632 348 34 212 39 536 38 98 66 112 45 177 697 47 253 64 90 91 69 84 287 204 83 585 262 232 91 1,495 158 318 443 60 22 59 58 377 24 38 41 111 394 204 36 71 70 654 33 14 508 21 78 622 122 60 113 8 318 4,489 209 113 96 607 452 15 128 12 671 44 95 102 146 140 144 588 94 198 60 47 103 63 23 184 155 30 382 155 170 57 1,339 129 102 317 28 42 119 56 544 37 17 34 86 138 62 23 35 12 290 13 19 181 – 78 478 49 36 33 18 343 1,990 103 78 25 189 108 10 59 13 134 14 23 19 36 – 35 197 32 61 34 24 16 15 15 47 25 22 120 54 52 13 997 73 308 320 16 11 24 33 211 932 213 83 410 572 122 48 272 508 47 59 287 203 37 23 85 See footnotes at end of table. Page 10 7 – 7 15 33 22 – – – 55 – – 47 – 6 125 – 6 9 – 106 318 11 6 – 33 6 13 9 6 54 13 19 – 7 – 15 66 – 18 11 8 – – 21 24 13 11 30 11 10 9 72 11 22 7 – – 8 – 22 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 9 – – – – 11 – 6 – – 5 75 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 31 10 9 10 – – – – – 22 8 – 16 – 5 8 28 7 Total By person 14 6 – – – – – – 136 – – – – – – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 119 – – 9 – – – – 109 – – – – 5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – – – 9 – – – – 6 – – – – – – 37 – – – – – – – – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 99 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 27 – – – – – – – 92 – – 9 – – – – 27 – – – – 82 – – – – All other events 4 64 75 56 218 472 226 83 87 43 736 43 22 507 23 142 915 77 61 107 22 648 3,770 291 143 148 384 251 25 93 15 600 69 189 68 98 35 142 477 40 163 45 118 50 37 23 172 84 88 339 121 172 45 1,102 68 161 411 22 30 50 61 299 404 77 30 162 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Magnetic and optical recording media ........... Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c. ..... Transportation equipment ...................................... Motor vehicles and equipment ........................... Motor vehicles and car bodies ....................... Truck and bus bodies .................................... Motor vehicle parts and accessories ............. Truck trailers .................................................. Motor homes .................................................. Aircraft and parts ............................................... Aircraft ........................................................... Aircraft engines and engine parts .................. Aircraft parts and equipment, n.e.c. .............. Ship and boat building and repairing ................. Ship building and repairing ............................ Boat building and repairing ............................ Railroad equipment ........................................... Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts ........................ Guided missiles and space vehicles .............. Space vehicle equipment, n.e.c. ................... Miscellaneous transportation equipment ........... Travel trailers and campers ........................... 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 ............................. Ophthalmic goods .............................................. Miscellaneous manufacturing industries ................ Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ................. Jewelry, precious metal ................................. Silverware and plated ware ........................... Musical instruments ........................................... Toys and sporting goods ................................... Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............ Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. ............... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies ............... 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. .................... Nondurable goods ................................................... SIC code 3 3695 3699 37 371 3711 3713 3714 3715 3716 372 3721 3724 3728 373 3731 3732 374 375 3761 3769 379 3792 3799 38 381 382 3821 3822 3823 3824 3825 3826 3827 3829 384 3841 3842 3843 3844 3845 385 39 391 3911 3914 393 394 3944 3949 395 3951 3952 3953 3955 396 3961 3965 399 3991 3993 3995 3996 3999 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 284 647 67,081 38,291 15,721 2,044 17,330 2,356 838 12,642 7,074 2,129 3,440 10,459 8,165 2,293 1,449 1,126 985 186 1,737 883 704 12,776 2,161 4,370 305 890 754 252 882 446 423 417 4,068 1,522 1,815 266 104 361 461 10,543 985 629 225 346 3,250 1,221 1,993 751 124 256 169 202 639 324 315 4,572 546 1,889 294 154 1,689 87 196 18,068 10,240 3,457 713 4,791 954 325 3,070 1,627 487 956 2,975 2,260 715 566 314 153 41 679 329 290 3,250 396 1,169 135 218 230 98 143 123 105 117 1,023 403 468 58 18 76 127 3,577 389 229 96 153 903 359 535 244 21 114 60 49 253 154 99 1,636 202 710 105 36 584 32 62 6,997 3,696 1,292 344 1,482 427 150 1,206 654 214 339 1,296 964 332 213 132 103 – 329 147 172 1,182 145 521 63 35 140 38 78 54 64 51 296 112 129 20 14 22 39 1,379 134 48 69 46 348 116 228 78 – 23 34 15 72 42 30 700 54 346 54 6 239 25 73 5,319 2,840 1,221 139 1,218 172 90 1,161 670 164 328 939 747 192 125 43 26 20 160 112 35 900 120 269 24 62 46 26 34 38 17 23 272 107 121 13 – 28 31 729 46 20 – 33 207 89 118 67 8 35 8 16 52 21 32 325 60 142 13 11 99 27 38 3,219 2,213 466 120 1,440 161 26 299 99 62 138 394 271 123 115 89 14 – 88 30 23 827 75 252 32 100 20 31 16 16 16 21 340 127 175 17 – 19 37 1,002 137 96 15 64 223 92 130 80 6 46 12 16 114 81 33 384 61 106 28 17 172 6 11 2,177 797 287 78 309 72 52 566 367 66 133 612 541 72 57 26 32 – 67 50 9 280 81 72 – 14 8 – 26 9 – – 82 36 25 10 – 7 21 244 32 29 – – 58 19 39 7 – – – – 10 – 6 132 12 85 7 7 21 26 49 4,574 2,447 938 146 1,251 72 39 1,045 619 188 237 718 530 188 73 80 89 7 94 61 16 1,308 271 415 17 105 67 18 76 57 10 66 363 144 140 19 – 56 52 665 83 62 10 19 216 74 137 52 15 8 22 7 69 43 26 227 14 112 14 – 83 12 – 2,282 1,199 526 59 535 50 29 549 363 80 106 309 230 78 62 23 74 – 56 35 11 357 92 82 – 12 23 7 25 – – 11 148 76 42 6 5 20 12 238 9 – – – 61 27 33 33 – – 9 19 11 6 5 120 10 42 8 6 54 230,931 67,070 25,610 16,388 19,959 7,577 20,599 7,507 See footnotes at end of table. Page 11 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1993 — 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 Magnetic and optical recording media ........... Electrical equipment and supplies, n.e.c. ..... Transportation equipment ...................................... Motor vehicles and equipment ........................... Motor vehicles and car bodies ....................... Truck and bus bodies .................................... Motor vehicle parts and accessories ............. Truck trailers .................................................. Motor homes .................................................. Aircraft and parts ............................................... Aircraft ........................................................... Aircraft engines and engine parts .................. Aircraft parts and equipment, n.e.c. .............. Ship and boat building and repairing ................. Ship building and repairing ............................ Boat building and repairing ............................ Railroad equipment ........................................... Motorcycles, bicycles, and parts ........................ Guided missiles and space vehicles .............. Space vehicle equipment, n.e.c. ................... Miscellaneous transportation equipment ........... Travel trailers and campers ........................... 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 ............................. Ophthalmic goods .............................................. Miscellaneous manufacturing industries ................ Jewelry, silverware, and plated ware ................. Jewelry, precious metal ................................. Silverware and plated ware ........................... Musical instruments ........................................... Toys and sporting goods ................................... Games, toys, and children’s vehicles ............ Sporting and athletic goods, n.e.c. ............... Pens, pencils, office, and art supplies ............... 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. .................... 46 181 18,312 10,004 3,884 534 4,815 539 230 3,550 1,771 697 1,081 3,220 2,681 539 414 322 252 55 441 232 187 3,197 516 1,115 99 240 198 52 240 73 121 92 1,066 418 464 59 40 85 71 2,790 174 113 37 49 1,028 409 617 168 21 57 32 59 152 58 94 1,218 131 454 105 60 469 27 104 9,564 5,093 1,565 313 2,840 271 104 2,054 1,117 400 537 1,537 1,226 311 237 162 130 39 281 135 134 2,046 369 696 59 122 135 29 140 59 85 67 683 266 296 42 18 60 34 1,664 98 51 26 29 573 251 320 119 15 49 20 35 90 36 55 755 82 267 61 21 324 41 74 7,742 5,631 3,008 108 2,341 108 65 1,273 721 231 321 360 231 129 70 177 90 20 108 60 37 1,885 311 624 21 148 64 36 160 54 77 62 651 196 374 43 6 32 108 1,200 115 66 43 62 420 148 257 113 30 33 11 40 46 31 15 444 93 77 31 10 234 24 34 3,578 2,106 684 130 939 339 15 505 219 118 168 668 458 210 61 39 61 18 105 28 74 772 183 296 10 71 22 15 47 88 29 14 155 51 86 – – 13 43 585 104 89 – 13 186 36 149 40 13 – 19 – 50 10 39 192 20 71 7 – 91 – – 712 546 240 10 274 18 – 56 – 16 17 44 – 12 12 12 – – 28 16 11 142 16 72 – 17 – – 34 – – 11 43 11 15 7 – 10 – 107 – – – – 35 24 12 8 – – – – 7 – – 54 – 32 – 6 14 – – 107 49 – 6 25 – 6 – – – – – – 7 14 – – – 6 – – 13 – 6 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 15 – – – – – – – 12 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – Nondurable goods ................................................... 62,844 35,818 21,400 13,381 4,868 335 See footnotes at end of table. Page 12 Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – 46 25 – – 36 25 – – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 24 11 – – – – – – – – – 12 – 7 – – – – 16 11 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 19 – – – – 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – – 8 – 6 – – – – 12 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 810 494 317 10 8 – – – – 8 8 All other events 4 41 94 9,482 5,248 2,676 258 2,039 203 72 2,010 1,355 237 418 1,523 1,183 340 120 129 231 37 151 69 66 1,547 283 519 15 65 134 21 130 42 73 40 520 184 189 60 22 64 27 1,103 73 30 32 39 332 117 211 75 7 31 11 26 37 9 27 547 64 305 18 22 138 24,540 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Food and kindred products .................................... Meat products .................................................... Meat packing plants ....................................... Sausages and other prepared meats ............ Poultry slaughtering and processing ............. Dairy products ................................................... Creamery butter ............................................. Cheese, natural and processed ..................... Dry, condensed, evaporated products ........... Ice cream and frozen desserts ...................... Fluid milk ....................................................... Preserved fruits and vegetables ........................ Canned specialities ....................................... Canned fruits and vegetables ........................ Dehydrated fruits, vegetables, soups ............ Pickles, sauces, and salad dressings ............ Frozen fruits and vegetables ......................... Frozen specialities, n.e.c. ............................. Grain mill products ............................................. Flour and other grain mill products ................ Cereal breakfast foods .................................. 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 ............................................. Cane sugar refining ....................................... Beet sugar ..................................................... Candy and other confectionery products ....... Chocolate and cocoa products ...................... Chewing gum ................................................. Salted and roasted nuts and seeds ............... Fats and oils ...................................................... Cottonseed oil mills ....................................... Soybean oil mills ............................................ Vegetable oil mills, n.e.c. .............................. Animal and marine fats and oils .................... Edible fats and oils, n.e.c. ............................. Beverages ......................................................... Malt beverages .............................................. Malt ................................................................ 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 ......... Canned and cured fish and seafoods ............ Fresh or frozen prepared fish ........................ Roasted coffee .............................................. Potato chips and similar snacks .................... Manufactured ice ........................................... Macaroni and spaghetti ................................. Food preparations, n.e.c. .............................. Tobacco products .................................................. Cigarettes .......................................................... Cigars ................................................................ Chewing and smoking tobacco .......................... Tobacco stemming and redrying ....................... Textile mill products ............................................... SIC code 3 20 201 2011 2013 2015 202 2021 2022 2023 2024 2026 203 2032 2033 2034 2035 2037 2038 204 2041 2043 2044 2045 2046 2047 2048 205 2051 2052 2053 206 2061 2062 2063 2064 2066 2067 2068 207 2074 2075 2076 2077 2079 208 2082 2083 2084 2085 2086 2087 209 2091 2092 2095 2096 2097 2098 2099 21 211 212 213 214 22 Total cases 80,203 22,325 9,250 5,498 7,576 9,244 148 1,853 817 1,355 5,071 9,554 524 3,475 1,036 803 2,031 1,686 5,438 781 687 245 934 249 738 1,804 9,100 6,659 2,024 417 3,772 680 260 569 1,602 353 115 193 1,379 240 282 53 494 310 10,953 1,327 97 791 247 7,884 606 8,439 501 2,744 340 1,789 310 467 2,288 722 240 57 74 352 13,768 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 22,268 6,768 3,050 1,648 2,070 2,217 29 396 209 402 1,180 2,703 118 1,021 251 215 617 481 1,389 194 181 73 239 40 222 441 2,596 1,843 635 118 1,106 255 49 156 459 113 37 37 372 98 66 11 106 92 2,615 292 24 195 66 1,901 138 2,502 134 941 97 358 129 156 687 235 40 23 25 146 4,173 9,388 3,339 1,665 752 922 889 10 168 85 124 501 999 55 383 92 73 257 139 530 59 49 31 88 10 89 204 889 655 210 24 430 158 20 82 120 29 9 12 134 26 14 – 59 32 1,104 87 6 61 14 880 57 1,073 67 446 49 129 77 57 249 85 8 6 8 64 1,556 5,443 1,395 635 314 446 562 12 92 51 77 331 672 24 256 36 82 157 116 322 48 57 14 41 7 52 104 662 470 155 38 300 75 13 26 139 24 5 18 95 22 20 – 23 28 816 112 13 88 30 528 45 619 28 269 19 104 19 34 146 65 15 – 12 36 957 5,801 1,478 442 494 542 660 7 124 58 192 280 806 33 293 54 49 175 203 441 78 64 19 86 21 63 111 862 583 237 42 309 – 10 30 185 56 20 – 103 39 20 – 14 24 498 62 – 29 17 358 30 643 32 178 23 82 28 55 245 59 13 15 – 27 1,336 See footnotes at end of table. Page 13 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 3,535 700 286 154 261 512 – 84 49 47 329 587 9 265 34 56 157 66 423 59 23 25 51 23 32 210 327 241 66 20 182 39 15 43 47 15 – 19 85 11 21 – 38 11 376 50 – 23 12 263 25 344 22 95 9 83 9 12 114 56 39 – – 15 407 8,402 2,040 738 490 813 1,086 13 172 68 166 666 1,186 54 362 141 131 326 171 481 70 80 18 78 30 63 141 1,036 710 276 50 410 42 44 60 202 31 9 22 171 16 16 11 86 42 991 137 9 91 33 639 81 1,000 62 380 30 195 27 23 283 56 10 – – 43 1,219 3,200 702 263 207 232 530 13 61 37 80 339 419 39 156 24 20 111 69 213 14 28 23 30 6 41 72 411 306 84 20 121 21 15 29 33 12 6 5 66 9 23 – 24 7 460 73 7 28 12 304 36 279 18 66 22 72 10 15 78 15 7 – – – 348 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Food and kindred products .................................... Meat products .................................................... Meat packing plants ....................................... Sausages and other prepared meats ............ Poultry slaughtering and processing ............. Dairy products ................................................... Creamery butter ............................................. Cheese, natural and processed ..................... Dry, condensed, evaporated products ........... Ice cream and frozen desserts ...................... Fluid milk ....................................................... Preserved fruits and vegetables ........................ Canned specialities ....................................... Canned fruits and vegetables ........................ Dehydrated fruits, vegetables, soups ............ Pickles, sauces, and salad dressings ............ Frozen fruits and vegetables ......................... Frozen specialities, n.e.c. ............................. Grain mill products ............................................. Flour and other grain mill products ................ Cereal breakfast foods .................................. 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 ............................................. Cane sugar refining ....................................... Beet sugar ..................................................... Candy and other confectionery products ....... Chocolate and cocoa products ...................... Chewing gum ................................................. Salted and roasted nuts and seeds ............... Fats and oils ...................................................... Cottonseed oil mills ....................................... Soybean oil mills ............................................ Vegetable oil mills, n.e.c. .............................. Animal and marine fats and oils .................... Edible fats and oils, n.e.c. ............................. Beverages ......................................................... Malt beverages .............................................. Malt ................................................................ 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 ......... Canned and cured fish and seafoods ............ Fresh or frozen prepared fish ........................ Roasted coffee .............................................. Potato chips and similar snacks .................... Manufactured ice ........................................... Macaroni and spaghetti ................................. Food preparations, n.e.c. .............................. Tobacco products .................................................. Cigarettes .......................................................... Cigars ................................................................ Chewing and smoking tobacco .......................... Tobacco stemming and redrying ....................... Textile mill products ............................................... Total In lifting Repetitive motion 20,917 4,650 1,761 1,412 1,476 2,694 40 616 251 251 1,535 2,059 152 720 209 156 375 446 1,585 238 178 62 304 72 207 525 2,553 1,944 505 103 905 124 66 142 394 88 21 70 321 53 93 7 105 64 4,031 382 30 278 73 3,091 178 2,120 103 595 109 457 90 160 606 227 91 11 26 98 3,866 11,283 2,414 893 724 797 1,355 28 326 116 120 766 1,140 87 437 88 99 190 239 911 169 73 47 170 30 88 334 1,342 952 318 71 516 76 36 72 219 51 7 55 171 25 48 – 48 47 2,205 174 14 139 50 1,703 124 1,230 77 384 41 263 50 74 340 120 45 9 20 46 1,974 6,328 3,707 1,579 810 1,318 329 7 152 16 71 83 474 24 91 75 37 70 177 228 18 24 – 65 – 45 73 472 274 178 20 227 – 15 – 153 18 22 12 22 – – – – 16 258 69 – 18 15 115 40 612 53 167 13 263 – 8 109 15 – – 6 – 1,416 See footnotes at end of table. Page 14 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 4,973 1,473 684 210 580 622 9 143 94 147 229 880 48 308 188 87 135 115 294 41 33 16 54 48 17 84 318 228 62 28 303 87 17 60 114 10 9 5 178 14 23 8 92 42 336 76 – 28 6 160 61 571 55 268 10 74 – 15 146 7 – – – 7 712 2,130 327 113 65 148 221 – 15 – 44 159 282 12 150 28 29 53 11 126 14 21 6 12 7 15 52 354 323 30 – 92 44 9 9 14 12 – – 34 13 – 5 11 – 465 10 – 25 – 402 23 229 5 61 15 33 19 14 83 27 – – – 22 136 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions 115 17 – – 8 6 – – – – – 16 – 6 – – – – 10 – – – – – – – 16 16 – – 6 – – – – – – – 12 – – – – – 21 – – – – 18 – 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – Total 296 143 108 10 24 38 – 7 – 7 24 11 – – – – – – 10 – – – – – – – 34 31 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 33 – – – – 26 – 22 – – – 10 – – – – – – – – 19 By person 164 46 24 – 18 26 – 7 – – 14 7 – – – – – – 8 – – – – – – – 30 27 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 29 – – – – 26 – 14 – – – 7 – – – – – – – – 13 All other assaults 132 97 84 7 6 12 – – – – 11 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 8 – – – – – – – – – – – – 6 All other events 4 8,038 1,797 662 488 647 989 31 206 87 141 524 937 64 395 82 72 177 146 678 131 118 20 99 20 92 197 984 744 185 56 421 63 32 62 185 55 6 19 114 21 30 – 26 33 1,367 236 19 101 21 966 24 749 48 166 32 243 20 64 176 83 42 18 10 13 1,467 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 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 ...................... 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 .......................................... Cordage and twine ........................................ Textile goods, n.e.c. ..................................... Apparel and other textile products ......................... Men’s and boys’ suits and coats ........................ Men’s and boys’ furnishings .............................. Men’s and boys’ shirts ................................... Men’s and boys’ underwear and nightwear ..................................................... Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............. Men’s and boys’ work clothing ....................... Men’s and boys’ clothing, n.e.c. ................... Women’s and misses’ outerwear ....................... Women’s and misses’ blouses and shirts ...... Women’s, junior’s, and misses’ dresses ........ Women’s and misses’ suits and coats ........... Women’s and misses’ outerwear, n.e.c. ........ Women’s and children’s undergarments ........... Bras, girdles, and allied garments ................. Hats, caps, and millinery ................................... Girls’ and children’s outerwear .......................... Girls’ and children’s dresses, blouses ........... Girls’ and children’s outerwear, n.e.c. .......... Miscellaneous apparel and accessories ............ Waterproof outerwear .................................... Miscellaneous fabricated textile products .......... Curtains and draperies .................................. Housefurnishings, n.e.c. ............................... Textile bags ................................................... Canvas and related products ......................... Pleating and stitching .................................... Automotive and apparel trimmings ................ 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 ............................. 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 221 222 223 224 225 2251 2252 2253 2254 2257 2258 226 2261 2262 2269 227 228 2281 2282 2284 229 2295 2296 2297 2298 2299 23 231 232 2321 513 957 352 665 5,501 453 1,045 989 1,239 876 852 1,916 820 676 420 959 1,058 612 323 123 1,846 447 199 224 298 678 24,086 1,052 9,122 1,677 182 324 81 232 1,274 93 226 244 196 223 280 684 312 217 155 259 365 204 121 40 770 226 106 76 105 257 6,205 231 1,966 448 40 125 33 92 471 41 76 90 59 82 118 308 146 84 77 114 100 66 20 14 271 77 58 24 36 76 2,173 77 691 155 34 47 18 42 335 26 58 71 44 49 82 95 43 36 16 58 112 47 57 7 215 72 17 15 43 68 1,726 90 590 130 95 117 27 89 334 17 40 74 69 77 56 243 109 91 43 65 119 79 28 11 247 68 23 34 23 100 1,848 55 548 123 16 38 6 12 149 22 30 34 6 26 30 60 20 21 19 29 53 36 14 – 45 14 – 8 – 19 383 16 106 17 75 54 33 77 436 80 57 48 88 86 64 212 95 75 42 126 74 38 27 8 132 32 9 22 20 50 1,859 71 592 102 16 38 11 8 139 6 7 50 17 28 30 37 22 11 – 32 18 9 5 – 50 7 5 – – 36 411 7 164 18 2322 2325 2326 2329 233 2331 2335 2337 2339 234 2342 235 236 2361 2369 238 2385 239 2391 2392 2393 2394 2395 2396 2399 26 261 262 263 265 2652 2653 2655 2656 2657 1,174 3,007 1,830 1,359 4,344 431 463 771 2,678 1,147 283 654 1,202 398 804 1,009 153 5,554 609 1,444 316 745 318 1,232 762 20,155 343 3,488 1,289 6,684 306 3,877 427 354 1,719 202 589 416 270 1,234 119 134 231 750 272 76 215 311 134 177 298 36 1,677 199 370 94 270 119 366 195 6,986 125 1,080 448 2,296 146 1,325 168 106 551 87 209 135 82 444 22 50 98 276 100 37 66 111 45 66 104 18 577 94 88 34 101 43 134 68 2,359 48 399 182 717 46 388 55 59 169 48 177 139 84 338 24 30 60 224 79 15 49 90 37 53 75 6 415 52 98 20 54 39 79 40 1,458 27 223 102 531 40 313 20 23 135 50 157 127 85 363 56 38 57 213 70 15 88 92 48 44 97 10 535 35 128 30 95 34 119 80 2,724 43 375 138 877 51 525 68 20 213 25 30 19 15 68 12 10 11 35 21 10 6 14 66 180 106 130 365 37 58 98 173 106 23 44 108 44 64 89 16 486 44 159 45 42 34 99 45 1,352 16 277 98 456 9 261 28 39 119 36 42 35 34 83 13 15 13 42 24 See footnotes at end of table. Page 15 – 12 10 – 143 9 18 14 44 19 28 6 545 6 149 63 163 – 95 11 – 52 – 14 10 – 8 8 – 100 6 31 5 6 11 28 13 732 7 191 56 259 6 186 7 – 57 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 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 ...................... 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 .......................................... Cordage and twine ........................................ Textile goods, n.e.c. ..................................... Apparel and other textile products ......................... Men’s and boys’ suits and coats ........................ Men’s and boys’ furnishings .............................. Men’s and boys’ shirts ................................... Men’s and boys’ underwear and nightwear ..................................................... Men’s and boys’ trousers and slacks ............. Men’s and boys’ work clothing ....................... Men’s and boys’ clothing, n.e.c. ................... Women’s and misses’ outerwear ....................... Women’s and misses’ blouses and shirts ...... Women’s, junior’s, and misses’ dresses ........ Women’s and misses’ suits and coats ........... Women’s and misses’ outerwear, n.e.c. ........ Women’s and children’s undergarments ........... Bras, girdles, and allied garments ................. Hats, caps, and millinery ................................... Girls’ and children’s outerwear .......................... Girls’ and children’s dresses, blouses ........... Girls’ and children’s outerwear, n.e.c. .......... Miscellaneous apparel and accessories ............ Waterproof outerwear .................................... Miscellaneous fabricated textile products .......... Curtains and draperies .................................. Housefurnishings, n.e.c. ............................... Textile bags ................................................... Canvas and related products ......................... Pleating and stitching .................................... Automotive and apparel trimmings ................ 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 ............................. Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment Total In lifting Repetitive motion 99 294 101 178 1,630 126 297 342 296 307 251 544 211 207 127 261 265 152 86 27 494 90 53 46 104 201 6,761 225 2,634 553 34 106 33 112 939 80 129 224 181 168 151 257 89 124 43 173 74 47 18 8 246 52 14 26 63 92 4,310 152 1,733 396 79 22 59 65 947 78 204 62 511 70 18 29 – 13 11 62 83 53 26 – 69 14 – 5 25 22 4,825 286 2,290 309 6 24 24 36 262 7 46 75 30 44 58 219 90 82 47 41 45 12 20 14 54 14 – – 8 28 1,083 60 440 26 388 823 476 380 1,196 116 134 209 736 322 82 109 402 142 260 306 52 1,566 146 508 64 199 67 329 238 5,595 56 873 306 1,873 56 1,132 109 111 465 262 459 335 272 743 74 98 150 420 230 49 51 276 117 160 172 25 954 78 264 39 112 49 225 180 2,924 29 324 116 1,000 29 558 78 71 265 218 854 575 330 674 72 36 100 467 198 52 187 217 30 187 179 26 794 123 150 32 56 34 193 197 1,289 19 127 33 423 50 193 30 32 118 143 180 51 40 278 32 29 33 185 25 7 26 29 – 24 25 – 200 10 49 14 14 – 85 21 715 48 176 68 216 – 103 18 – 87 See footnotes at end of table. Page 16 – 10 8 – 62 – – 25 – 9 19 17 8 7 – 20 7 5 – – 8 – – – – – 110 7 18 – – 9 – – 17 – – – – – – – 10 7 – – – 52 10 11 – 16 7 5 – 347 14 68 26 120 – 79 9 – 29 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – Total By person – – – – – – – – 11 – – – – – 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – – 10 – – – – – – – 8 – – – – 15 – – – – 7 – – 32 – 14 – 15 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 12 – – – – – – – – – – 8 – – – – 10 – – – – 6 – – 30 14 13 11 – – – 28 – – 15 – – – 58 5 29 15 – – – – 16 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 59 – 11 7 7 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 73 8 30 15 – – – – – – – – – 7 – – – – – All other assaults – – – – – – – All other events 4 36 152 29 54 591 38 171 108 91 83 95 109 57 42 10 126 145 98 23 24 223 48 18 64 34 60 2,365 141 882 191 90 288 150 155 417 29 40 73 275 175 30 51 90 28 62 92 12 517 62 143 44 96 16 95 45 2,504 51 523 181 860 32 487 45 54 241 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 Miscellaneous converted paper products .......... Paper coated and laminated, packaging ....... Paper coated and laminated, n.e.c. .............. Bags: plastics, laminated, and coated ........... Bags: uncoated paper and multiwall .............. Die-cut paper and board ................................ Sanitary paper products ................................ Envelopes ...................................................... Stationery products ........................................ Converted paper products, n.e.c. ................. Printing and publishing .......................................... Newspapers ....................................................... Periodicals ......................................................... Books ................................................................. Book publishing ............................................. Book printing .................................................. Miscellaneous publishing ................................... Commercial printing ........................................... Commercial printing, lithographic .................. Commercial printing, gravure ........................ Commercial printing, n.e.c. ........................... Manifold business forms .................................... Greeting cards ................................................... Blankbooks and bookbinding ............................. Blankbooks and looseleaf binders ................. Bookbinding and related work ....................... Printing trade services ....................................... 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 ......................... Synthetic rubber ............................................ 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 ....................... Surface active agents .................................... Toilet preparations ......................................... Paints and allied products ................................. Industrial organic chemicals .............................. Cyclic crudes and intermediates .................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. .............. Agricultural chemicals ........................................ Nitrogenous fertilizers .................................... Phosphatic 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 .............................. SIC code 3 267 2671 2672 2673 2674 2675 2676 2677 2678 2679 27 271 272 273 2731 2732 274 275 2752 2754 2759 276 277 278 2782 2789 279 2796 28 281 2812 2816 2819 282 2821 2822 2824 283 2833 2834 2835 2836 284 2841 2842 2843 2844 285 286 2865 2869 287 2873 2874 2875 2879 289 2891 2892 2893 2899 29 291 295 2951 2952 Total cases 8,351 716 1,116 1,212 651 749 894 810 330 1,874 31,689 10,123 1,571 2,167 980 1,187 1,014 12,878 8,318 671 3,889 1,260 443 1,817 769 1,047 416 264 16,946 1,759 168 334 1,070 1,867 1,137 252 271 3,620 308 2,881 184 247 3,534 1,152 688 117 1,576 1,537 1,460 456 969 1,061 220 107 406 329 2,109 571 185 489 837 2,400 1,141 804 412 392 Total Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 3,036 229 397 544 254 309 285 284 106 627 9,353 2,576 375 612 – 411 265 4,238 2,733 204 1,300 409 118 634 215 418 127 88 4,036 411 – 120 251 469 299 71 54 782 83 620 31 49 898 319 128 26 426 287 372 94 269 310 44 47 133 86 507 122 39 141 198 528 179 229 101 128 1,014 60 131 210 68 75 93 73 37 267 2,941 902 78 207 – 119 79 1,301 875 75 351 163 41 133 45 88 38 – 1,664 162 – 41 100 214 145 42 17 309 25 258 10 16 369 196 41 6 126 146 134 35 95 149 17 32 52 47 182 39 10 42 87 221 64 97 51 46 575 53 68 71 61 58 45 75 25 119 2,209 730 92 169 – 115 65 857 506 36 316 81 41 156 57 99 18 – 1,022 143 – 55 80 119 74 14 9 213 40 154 – 14 205 54 46 6 99 68 102 32 67 60 13 12 25 10 112 38 – 44 28 193 76 70 33 36 1,290 106 185 250 104 152 127 126 37 202 3,560 790 155 183 – 135 114 1,752 1,133 80 539 154 28 314 99 216 70 66 986 70 – 16 48 106 60 13 20 216 17 172 12 15 291 63 40 14 175 39 58 20 37 68 8 – 37 21 137 26 17 42 50 86 24 52 13 39 See footnotes at end of table. Page 17 Fall to lower level 164 20 12 42 13 14 18 – – 37 904 330 49 28 18 10 132 299 201 24 73 19 14 31 28 – – – 809 82 9 11 56 85 54 12 12 138 28 99 – 8 102 23 32 – 44 107 101 27 71 95 13 – 42 35 97 20 14 27 37 140 70 42 23 19 Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall 504 41 65 72 44 48 60 41 18 115 2,856 1,231 156 138 – 67 91 901 640 28 233 78 50 129 42 87 82 – 1,492 185 11 35 110 152 79 14 32 322 27 232 29 34 356 95 66 – 191 90 111 57 52 89 30 – 33 21 186 72 26 34 52 246 138 52 35 17 218 14 26 27 14 29 19 13 – 73 1,016 484 65 52 – 24 14 317 192 17 109 30 24 28 14 13 – – 573 54 20 8 20 94 58 9 15 137 20 103 7 7 104 29 22 – 48 42 53 21 31 22 – – 6 7 66 12 – 22 29 82 47 28 12 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Miscellaneous converted paper products .......... Paper coated and laminated, packaging ....... Paper coated and laminated, n.e.c. .............. Bags: plastics, laminated, and coated ........... Bags: uncoated paper and multiwall .............. Die-cut paper and board ................................ Sanitary paper products ................................ Envelopes ...................................................... Stationery products ........................................ Converted paper products, n.e.c. ................. Printing and publishing .......................................... Newspapers ....................................................... Periodicals ......................................................... Books ................................................................. Book publishing ............................................. Book printing .................................................. Miscellaneous publishing ................................... Commercial printing ........................................... Commercial printing, lithographic .................. Commercial printing, gravure ........................ Commercial printing, n.e.c. ........................... Manifold business forms .................................... Greeting cards ................................................... Blankbooks and bookbinding ............................. Blankbooks and looseleaf binders ................. Bookbinding and related work ....................... Printing trade services ....................................... 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 ......................... Synthetic rubber ............................................ 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 ....................... Surface active agents .................................... Toilet preparations ......................................... Paints and allied products ................................. Industrial organic chemicals .............................. Cyclic crudes and intermediates .................... Industrial organic chemicals, n.e.c. .............. Agricultural chemicals ........................................ Nitrogenous fertilizers .................................... Phosphatic 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 .............................. Total In lifting Repetitive motion 2,487 229 336 311 177 188 277 237 106 624 9,060 2,866 440 718 – 329 278 3,600 2,338 190 1,072 452 103 494 216 278 110 77 4,426 384 – 91 220 492 315 63 72 934 68 731 52 84 828 253 171 24 380 569 300 114 182 212 48 13 92 58 707 157 70 175 296 654 319 199 106 92 1,454 106 221 170 114 102 161 158 68 356 6,122 1,918 279 514 – 224 222 2,397 1,496 105 796 344 53 315 135 180 80 52 2,579 194 14 35 132 192 126 26 30 663 60 508 32 63 538 149 112 17 261 366 116 60 55 106 26 – 49 28 404 80 35 86 198 297 113 109 56 53 687 66 79 82 49 61 84 121 34 109 2,396 558 129 249 – 150 50 1,005 671 77 257 77 82 219 134 86 – – 1,024 154 9 12 57 77 41 7 21 307 13 261 14 18 291 69 57 6 159 30 47 10 29 50 7 15 8 20 68 45 10 – 11 68 43 13 10 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 18 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 207 24 35 36 17 21 19 10 12 34 1,179 428 37 100 – 45 45 397 194 22 180 33 11 94 21 72 35 – 2,069 259 – 26 184 202 122 26 21 461 24 396 23 17 415 170 101 22 122 150 257 82 166 126 20 10 37 58 198 87 – 34 74 296 131 95 42 53 120 – 17 7 10 – 13 17 18 30 1,176 570 78 43 – 18 26 394 332 10 52 26 – 18 14 – 18 – 448 33 – – 21 42 24 8 8 101 – 93 – – 106 32 7 – 65 81 22 – 17 26 10 – 8 – 37 13 – – 21 60 29 31 18 13 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total 13 – – – – – – – – – 16 – – – – – – 14 – 11 – – – – – – – – 90 – – – – 41 21 18 – – – – – – – – – – – – 15 – 15 – – – – – 24 – – – 18 23 – 14 9 5 By person 25 All other assaults 14 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 13 242 65 – – – – 7 163 32 – 130 – – – – – – – 52 6 – – 6 – – – – 15 6 7 – – 6 – – – 6 17 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 8 187 41 – – – – – 141 10 – 130 – – – – – – – 35 5 – – 5 – – – – – – – – – 6 – – – 6 17 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 10 – – – – – – – – – 55 25 – – – – – 22 22 – – – – – – – – – 18 – – – – – – – – 14 6 5 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – All other events 4 888 90 147 86 71 73 113 78 27 204 3,492 1,014 240 222 – 128 106 1,551 984 87 480 136 38 170 84 86 16 – 1,928 188 10 31 145 211 126 24 34 417 34 334 25 23 426 161 104 25 136 162 181 46 135 125 43 – 44 36 217 37 25 49 101 303 179 101 56 45 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 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 cut stock ............................................ Footwear, except rubber .................................... House slippers ............................................... Men’s footwear, except athletic ..................... Women’s footwear, except athletic ................ Footwear, except rubber, n.e.c. .................... Leather gloves and mittens ............................... Luggage ............................................................. Handbags and personal leather goods .............. Personal leather goods, n.e.c. ...................... Leather goods, n.e.c. ........................................ SIC code 3 299 2992 30 301 302 305 3052 3053 306 3061 3069 308 3081 3082 3083 3084 3085 3086 3087 3088 3089 31 311 313 314 3142 3143 3144 3149 315 316 317 3172 319 Transportation and public utilities 6 ...................... Railroad transportation 6 ........................................ Local and interurban passenger transit ................. Local and suburban transportation .................... Taxicabs ............................................................ Intercity and rural bus transportation ................. Bus charter service ............................................ School buses ..................................................... Trucking and warehousing .................................... Trucking and courier services, except air .......... Public warehousing and storage ....................... Water transportation .............................................. 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 ............................... Radio and television broadcasting ..................... Cable and other pay television services ............ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ....................... Electric services ................................................. Gas production and distribution ......................... 40 41 411 412 413 414 415 42 421 422 44 448 449 45 451 452 458 46 47 472 473 478 48 481 483 484 49 491 492 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 456 356 36,796 2,312 382 2,391 1,280 1,111 4,501 2,428 2,072 27,210 1,849 1,008 868 840 1,210 1,710 901 604 18,219 4,166 954 222 2,031 131 1,046 602 253 100 273 251 203 333 120 99 12,128 631 95 824 401 423 1,376 723 653 9,201 762 410 269 337 457 584 291 178 5,914 1,159 303 44 472 24 248 127 72 11 105 88 65 136 60 57 4,788 238 35 336 204 132 572 293 279 3,607 289 136 102 162 152 208 101 83 2,374 435 108 13 150 5 78 38 30 – 49 36 30 75 47 30 3,048 99 24 158 45 113 286 158 128 2,481 168 124 56 70 128 175 98 33 1,630 267 70 14 127 8 61 34 24 – 13 24 15 16 10 9 3,178 232 30 266 122 144 430 232 198 2,219 243 124 59 65 139 157 57 45 1,331 380 115 14 154 – 92 42 16 – 41 24 18 29 29 26 742 46 29 45 18 28 75 29 46 548 30 24 16 24 18 40 30 7 358 56 23 – 20 – 9 7 – – – 6 – 6 56 52 2,863 122 19 178 111 66 245 127 118 2,300 100 76 71 62 136 139 70 30 1,616 255 62 17 119 11 65 30 14 – 15 21 20 20 7 5 1,068 44 6 71 25 46 128 89 39 820 40 43 24 32 46 42 36 11 546 62 17 – 25 – 16 8 – 7 – – – 8 232,998 52,000 24,494 14,354 6,823 14,095 21,757 10,638 9,926 14,469 9,049 724 1,048 620 2,987 109,057 102,905 5,923 7,925 152 6,016 44,910 39,521 586 4,804 263 5,693 637 3,252 1,694 19,685 13,010 1,339 5,163 21,071 5,660 3,722 1,643 1,993 1,205 62 187 130 400 25,595 23,656 1,865 2,407 56 2,002 10,690 9,144 170 1,376 41 1,512 62 845 568 3,372 2,104 168 1,069 4,746 1,074 719 358 817 473 11 116 53 160 13,046 12,073 934 1,276 25 1,088 4,748 4,024 88 636 23 728 – 400 282 1,477 846 86 527 2,020 503 286 144 605 358 30 48 59 105 6,710 6,306 392 635 11 518 3,256 2,741 52 462 – 362 14 204 127 1,183 884 – 252 1,452 310 284 22 174 113 17 12 7 25 3,314 3,011 288 362 18 310 1,710 1,498 20 192 12 239 – 171 61 338 179 – 147 653 151 99 187 588 362 7 41 18 160 8,300 7,977 292 537 13 436 1,038 724 35 280 – 360 – 193 132 1,757 963 97 670 1,326 380 271 641 1,440 719 45 89 115 465 9,750 9,292 429 1,119 16 637 3,556 3,090 67 400 34 620 99 355 156 2,433 1,665 206 543 2,164 635 343 1,437 814 543 48 55 38 129 4,248 4,108 134 456 12 369 1,499 1,320 15 163 8 174 – 92 57 896 608 112 174 1,106 282 264 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, 1993 — 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 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 cut stock ............................................ Footwear, except rubber .................................... House slippers ............................................... Men’s footwear, except athletic ..................... Women’s footwear, except athletic ................ Footwear, except rubber, n.e.c. .................... Leather gloves and mittens ............................... Luggage ............................................................. Handbags and personal leather goods .............. Personal leather goods, n.e.c. ...................... Leather goods, n.e.c. ........................................ 136 99 10,304 1,002 96 726 420 306 1,420 789 631 7,060 525 238 297 247 258 469 191 206 4,629 1,034 284 63 498 24 216 196 61 18 51 55 46 67 75 48 5,754 494 43 401 204 197 702 361 342 4,113 335 154 163 134 185 296 96 120 2,630 454 92 19 228 14 87 102 25 10 26 32 31 47 12 9 3,297 148 67 196 85 111 396 233 163 2,490 79 69 64 30 100 95 73 39 1,941 742 59 51 452 23 199 172 58 47 56 38 37 39 70 43 2,110 54 23 94 47 47 308 144 164 1,632 99 44 45 35 39 98 106 31 1,137 236 62 8 137 6 95 30 6 – – 7 7 17 – – 404 48 – 16 12 – 39 18 21 299 22 6 – 17 10 24 10 12 195 29 10 – 11 – 11 – – – – – – – Transportation and public utilities 6 ...................... 67,471 38,557 5,165 8,098 17,555 278 Railroad transportation 6 ........................................ 1,686 4,192 3,269 121 338 180 273 33,838 31,852 1,945 1,245 22 926 16,522 15,033 143 1,347 88 1,617 176 1,086 340 3,353 2,079 303 939 4,928 1,262 786 59 2,603 2,143 54 187 119 95 19,891 18,713 1,160 532 13 410 10,163 9,262 58 842 56 967 122 626 206 1,558 905 191 440 2,728 680 358 105 184 76 7 21 7 73 1,637 1,580 53 39 – 18 886 776 12 98 – 122 52 48 22 1,641 1,381 120 133 546 213 124 274 406 258 10 29 13 95 2,139 1,974 164 157 – 119 2,581 2,216 46 319 13 198 – 86 85 1,225 827 111 279 1,104 393 166 641 2,958 1,516 320 168 44 907 9,252 8,834 391 521 14 351 1,748 1,563 40 145 26 325 19 183 116 966 531 63 358 1,118 273 205 10 25 Local and interurban passenger transit ................. Local and suburban transportation .................... Taxicabs ............................................................ Intercity and rural bus transportation ................. Bus charter service ............................................ School buses ..................................................... Trucking and warehousing .................................... Trucking and courier services, except air .......... Public warehousing and storage ....................... Water transportation .............................................. Water transportation of 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 ............................... Radio and television broadcasting ..................... Cable and other pay television services ............ Electric, gas, and sanitary services ....................... Electric services ................................................. Gas production and distribution ......................... See footnotes at end of table. Page 20 – – Total By person All other assaults – – – – – – 31 – – – – – – – – 59 – – – – – 6 6 – 24 – – – – – – – – 40 – – – – – – – – 53 – 35 – 6 – – – 6 – – – 12 – – 20 12 9 – – – – – – – – – – – – 16 – – – 100 90 9 16 – 11 – – – – – 11 – 10 – 18 18 – – 91 39 31 19 – – – – – – – – 10 – – 28 7 16 7 17 – – – – – – – – 12 All other events 4 22 18 3,788 214 45 242 162 81 503 266 237 2,784 193 93 79 54 144 205 93 87 1,836 573 124 36 295 39 186 33 36 12 40 27 19 38 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 1,698 898 800 34,244 112 372 240 30 26 10 66 542 521 19 31 – 21 204 184 – 19 – 6 – – – 245 68 – 154 185 51 69 107 331 225 28 24 – 49 278 275 – – – – 94 74 – 19 – 6 – – – 45 17 – 14 35 14 – 5 41 15 3,190 1,496 853 60 94 64 420 13,657 13,020 621 1,397 15 1,125 6,180 5,467 55 658 45 747 169 348 214 3,778 2,766 137 845 3,756 1,058 744 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 6 17 264 246 18 29 – 21 110 110 – – – – – – – 200 52 – 139 150 37 66 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Total cases 493 494 495 496 497 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 ................... Miscellaneous nondurable goods ...................... 50 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 51 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 Retail trade .............................................................. Building materials and garden supplies ................. Lumber and other building materials ................. Paint, glass, and wallpaper stores ..................... Hardware stores ................................................ Retail nurseries and garden stores .................... Mobile home dealers ......................................... General merchandise stores ................................. Department stores ............................................. Variety stores ..................................................... Miscellaneous general merchandise stores ...... Food stores ............................................................ Grocery stores ................................................... Retail bakeries ................................................... Automotive dealers and service stations ............... New and used car dealers ................................. Used car dealers ............................................... Auto and home supply stores ............................ Gasoline service stations ................................... Apparel and accessory stores ............................... Women’s clothing stores ................................... Family clothing stores ........................................ Shoe 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 .................... Miscellaneous shopping goods stores ............... Nonstore retailers .............................................. Fuel dealers ....................................................... Retail stores, n.e.c. ........................................... 52 521 523 525 526 527 53 531 533 539 54 541 546 55 551 552 553 554 56 562 565 566 57 571 572 573 58 59 591 594 596 598 599 Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Struck by object Struck against object Caught in object 450 192 2,283 9 19 238 82 901 – 7 73 32 746 – – 38 36 323 – 6 197 51 414 6 6 317 98 762 – 7 150 31 376 – – 569,524 164,405 87,432 45,337 19,576 24,064 73,765 23,357 160,934 45,345 21,983 11,026 8,047 8,119 12,859 6,129 74,792 13,506 2,978 7,682 8,498 5,654 5,228 5,708 16,133 9,406 86,142 5,568 4,423 2,549 45,966 2,749 2,448 3,412 8,080 10,946 24,125 4,031 620 2,835 1,587 2,538 1,191 1,659 6,031 3,634 21,220 1,676 1,009 793 10,738 969 651 710 1,577 3,097 12,273 2,103 377 1,559 1,009 1,354 471 730 2,948 1,722 9,710 634 549 362 4,630 472 250 350 890 1,572 4,990 665 119 584 398 406 195 428 1,335 858 6,036 612 227 198 3,034 197 192 305 385 887 3,986 464 88 480 126 626 431 203 942 626 4,061 281 191 152 2,438 196 184 – 242 365 3,518 521 74 464 255 126 292 347 878 561 4,601 437 168 91 2,124 362 – 372 390 566 5,183 1,067 273 516 544 348 370 383 783 898 7,677 428 481 159 4,408 202 152 348 602 897 2,340 358 67 262 304 175 171 217 539 246 3,789 91 68 86 2,193 99 164 145 343 600 408,590 119,060 65,449 34,311 11,529 15,945 60,906 17,228 27,257 20,791 1,133 2,125 2,132 1,076 65,634 57,291 4,050 4,293 89,557 84,768 1,846 48,803 22,166 926 12,980 10,827 10,792 2,779 3,818 2,025 15,632 10,878 1,970 2,784 117,845 33,070 6,704 8,556 6,036 3,150 6,686 5,045 3,945 253 337 345 166 11,439 9,946 744 749 14,623 13,811 339 7,967 3,156 247 2,742 1,704 1,337 293 522 204 2,371 1,597 384 390 17,968 4,698 1,004 1,465 470 297 1,143 2,230 1,749 56 219 125 – 4,434 3,830 340 264 7,921 7,594 – 3,527 2,115 – 724 621 718 91 280 211 1,097 776 126 195 12,675 1,708 383 435 383 170 – 971 876 – 29 48 – 1,745 1,560 68 117 3,993 3,760 162 1,326 671 – 393 206 189 17 45 – 374 285 37 52 2,212 719 156 140 170 73 – 1,644 1,295 51 96 88 115 2,986 2,528 233 224 2,485 2,388 – 1,796 769 – 402 351 1,309 288 360 397 762 632 48 83 3,358 1,604 168 461 462 351 – 1,648 1,104 115 102 231 97 8,236 7,149 589 499 10,742 10,244 176 5,226 2,508 – 639 1,861 1,598 631 518 157 1,391 944 81 366 28,539 3,526 860 615 721 377 787 780 501 83 64 115 – 2,511 2,250 99 161 2,961 2,668 217 2,050 1,040 – 448 464 371 72 137 – 395 270 92 – 7,022 1,138 314 111 146 236 257 Total Combination utility services ............................... Water supply ...................................................... Sanitary services ............................................... Steam and air-conditioning supply .................... Irrigation systems .............................................. Fall to lower level 2,784 917 7,876 41 70 8,909 7,030 378 656 575 270 18,404 16,047 1,171 1,186 27,657 26,224 606 15,731 7,523 329 4,833 2,830 2,315 411 867 432 4,130 2,911 555 664 34,067 7,846 1,811 2,138 1,190 610 1,530 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Overexertion Industry 2 Total In lifting 610 224 2,014 13 19 254 82 1,339 9 6 Wholesale and retail trade ...................................... 160,022 107,567 Combination utility services ............................... Water supply ...................................................... Sanitary services ............................................... Steam and air-conditioning supply .................... Irrigation systems .............................................. Repetitive motion 98 31 81 Exposure to harmful Transsubportation stance accidents or environment 225 50 262 – 6 113 39 487 – – 13,214 29,401 – – Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions Total – 27 10 29 7 10 By person All other assaults 7 – 8 All other events 4 20 7 21 593 186 1,159 6 10 – – – – – – – – 16,010 1,576 5,130 4,356 773 58,580 223 18,931 80 17 144 – – – 48 69 – – 10 – 8,209 1,208 225 635 1,588 636 709 565 1,807 836 10,723 840 521 279 5,820 370 221 423 1,118 1,130 Wholesale trade ....................................................... 51,269 32,760 3,918 5,118 8,020 678 547 323 Wholesale trade—durable goods .......................... Motor vehicles, parts, and supplies ................... Furniture and homefurnishings .......................... Lumber and construction materials ................... Professional and commercial equipment ........... Metals and minerals, except petroleum ............. Electrical goods ................................................. Hardware, plumbing and heating equipment ..... Machinery, equipment, and supplies ................. Miscellaneous durable goods ............................ Wholesale trade—nondurable goods .................... Paper and paper products ................................. Drugs, proprietaries, and sundries .................... Apparel, piece goods, and notions .................... Groceries and related products ......................... Farm-product raw materials ............................... Chemicals and allied products ........................... Petroleum and petroleum products ................... Beer, wine, and distilled beverages ................... Miscellaneous nondurable goods ...................... 22,592 4,400 1,502 2,377 2,849 1,342 1,761 2,001 4,354 2,005 28,677 1,682 1,563 896 16,190 428 597 601 3,467 3,252 14,319 2,929 1,120 1,654 1,852 611 1,092 1,164 2,665 1,233 18,440 1,256 1,160 503 10,292 306 352 386 2,261 1,924 1,732 286 67 170 328 84 183 143 294 177 2,186 160 237 117 1,087 – – 45 174 292 2,734 340 – 134 194 133 119 173 968 648 2,384 82 76 69 885 124 442 412 35 258 3,853 1,117 106 275 831 239 395 211 400 279 4,167 165 299 55 2,333 92 – 277 339 531 316 115 – – – 26 – – 59 92 362 – – – – – – – – 302 190 62 – – 16 – – – – 29 356 – – – 180 69 – 45 32 – 110 36 – – – – – – – 12 213 – – – 132 – – – 22 – Retail trade .............................................................. 108,753 74,808 9,295 24,282 7,990 898 4,583 4,033 550 39,649 6,336 4,758 290 643 424 222 15,082 12,995 918 1,168 20,307 19,259 201 8,010 2,823 – 2,864 1,831 1,923 698 630 274 4,360 3,118 494 749 13,026 5,764 1,545 1,936 1,084 335 457 197 151 – 13 19 – 1,510 1,384 80 47 3,786 3,628 – 698 436 – 109 120 239 44 74 60 165 93 38 – 1,707 993 262 166 494 46 – 591 347 – 58 151 – 1,280 1,187 47 46 2,461 2,012 170 2,227 1,005 – 223 799 255 65 96 82 164 104 – 55 15,880 1,425 85 232 152 204 685 915 789 19 27 – – 608 522 40 46 1,351 1,082 210 2,709 1,373 – 606 622 228 – 25 – 585 246 119 220 754 840 240 153 188 150 – 35 152 71 – 15 – – 811 669 100 42 1,597 1,548 – 639 130 – – 373 96 – 43 – 62 – – – 910 315 54 – – 38 – 69 46 83 26 3,117 2,501 91 246 151 128 7,269 6,441 388 440 8,396 8,086 153 5,068 2,447 – 1,374 922 1,575 185 645 532 1,521 1,100 171 250 6,957 5,747 806 1,813 609 443 1,934 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 ................................................... Retail bakeries ................................................... Automotive dealers and service stations ............... New and used car dealers ................................. Used car dealers ............................................... Auto and home supply stores ............................ Gasoline service stations ................................... Apparel and accessory stores ............................... Women’s clothing stores ................................... Family clothing stores ........................................ Shoe 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 .................... Miscellaneous shopping goods stores ............... Nonstore retailers .............................................. Fuel dealers ....................................................... Retail stores, n.e.c. ........................................... 9,268 7,001 364 820 746 337 21,965 19,064 1,303 1,598 27,980 26,789 239 12,388 4,810 – 4,242 2,440 2,801 1,039 1,047 328 6,455 4,537 855 1,063 18,334 9,562 2,104 2,828 2,054 645 1,296 See footnotes at end of table. Page 22 – – 28 – – 53 49 – – 140 98 – 270 124 – 82 – – – – – – – – – 317 74 – – – 50 – – 12 – – 709 580 89 40 1,542 1,499 – 508 121 – – 371 61 – 43 – – – – – 866 256 45 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 102 89 12 – 55 49 – 132 – – – – 34 – – – 40 – – – – 59 – – – 37 – 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, 1993 — Continued Event or exposure leading to injury or illness Contact with objects Industry 2 SIC code 3 Finance, insurance, and real estate ....................... Depository institutions ........................................... Central reserve depositories .............................. Commercial banks ............................................. Nondepository institutions ..................................... Business credit institutions ................................ Mortgage bankers and brokers .......................... Security and commodity brokers ........................... Security brokers and dealers ............................. Security and commodity exchanges .................. Insurance carriers .................................................. Life insurance .................................................... Medical service and health insurance ............... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ................. Insurance agents, brokers, and service ................. Real estate ............................................................ Real estate operators and lessors ..................... Real estate agents and managers ..................... Subdividers and developers .............................. Holding and other investment offices .................... Holding offices ................................................... 60 601 602 61 615 616 62 621 623 63 631 632 633 64 65 651 653 655 67 671 Services .................................................................... Hotels and other lodging places ............................ Hotels and motels .............................................. Personal services .................................................. Laundry, cleaning, and garment services .......... Photographic studios, portrait ............................ Beauty shops ..................................................... Funeral service and crematories ....................... Business services .................................................. Advertising ......................................................... 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 theaters ...................................... Amusement and recreation services ..................... Bowling centers ................................................. Commercial sports ............................................. Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ........................................................... Health services ...................................................... Offices and clinics of medical doctors ............... Offices of osteopathic physicians ...................... Nursing and personal care facilities ................... Hospitals ............................................................ Medical and dental laboratories ......................... 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 60,158 11,509 5,584 3,814 1,371 5,353 9,167 2,121 14,828 350 10,160 1,666 347 871 1,390 805 97 10,975 4,924 2,039 3,440 2,520 27,396 13,962 10,720 2,651 1,384 884 2,814 78 2,068 196 45 123 223 126 30 1,285 437 243 382 138 6,534 3,289 2,519 722 320 221 1,022 47 751 56 16 – 142 74 11 656 96 144 200 85 3,535 1,782 1,389 361 88 37 1,116 20 781 105 11 83 37 22 6 491 286 67 134 – 1,858 860 788 209 172 133 551 7 472 – 12 – 23 21 – 102 – 21 42 – 620 394 136 90 43 33 1,071 10 999 45 8 – 60 37 13 1,087 460 79 339 88 2,944 1,667 1,091 181 58 – 2,420 56 1,861 647 78 478 187 109 19 1,902 852 476 487 367 3,464 1,457 1,630 353 180 106 457 12 275 50 8 – 48 45 – 445 213 79 152 44 1,027 656 289 83 50 20 535,386 102,722 51,029 30,894 12,508 20,920 75,313 20,204 70 701 72 721 722 723 726 73 731 733 734 48,532 47,209 15,026 9,884 1,030 2,849 885 75,377 1,286 4,097 20,658 12,262 11,950 3,393 2,258 – 842 – 18,482 282 919 5,164 6,097 6,019 1,393 826 – 392 – 8,253 88 314 2,506 4,140 4,008 862 705 – – – 5,169 108 179 1,650 1,234 1,157 577 494 – – – 3,482 – 409 544 1,821 1,733 588 319 – – 210 5,496 – 83 1,802 9,591 9,225 1,664 696 – 663 – 9,722 136 393 2,909 2,196 2,163 592 208 – 298 – 3,197 79 55 773 735 736 8,509 14,444 2,074 4,233 822 1,886 618 1,091 408 912 676 628 1,016 1,333 309 480 737 738 75 751 752 753 754 76 762 764 769 78 781 783 79 793 794 4,467 21,392 23,504 4,740 1,064 12,653 5,047 10,582 2,607 346 7,602 2,670 1,259 1,021 25,256 1,061 3,539 673 5,119 8,850 1,182 191 5,466 2,010 3,473 624 157 2,692 576 271 210 6,004 396 860 376 2,246 4,014 571 67 2,333 1,043 1,706 288 112 1,306 307 132 101 3,178 152 548 207 1,314 2,386 362 67 1,324 633 717 171 – 538 160 90 63 1,856 164 208 36 1,141 1,028 100 50 619 259 503 66 34 403 70 – 35 545 74 41 328 1,882 1,010 229 63 347 371 698 295 – 398 191 96 62 1,494 – 222 526 3,242 1,917 585 160 746 426 511 159 – 343 472 134 293 3,354 186 367 126 1,343 964 269 103 332 260 349 142 – 199 164 90 71 1,164 75 95 799 80 801 803 805 806 807 19,232 229,216 6,676 33 89,461 111,961 2,151 4,510 28,488 356 – 10,472 15,403 131 2,341 14,744 183 – 5,220 7,582 86 1,433 8,990 139 – 3,496 5,068 – 413 3,288 – – 1,325 1,807 – 1,059 4,737 205 – 1,380 2,299 96 2,714 31,163 774 – 12,277 13,960 482 910 7,544 226 – 2,787 3,893 106 See footnotes at end of table. Page 23 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1993 — 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 Finance, insurance, and real estate ....................... 12,323 7,509 5,190 2,590 2,879 112 899 724 175 8,017 Depository institutions ........................................... Central reserve depositories .............................. Commercial banks ............................................. Nondepository institutions ..................................... Business credit institutions ................................ Mortgage bankers and brokers .......................... Security and commodity brokers ........................... Security brokers and dealers ............................. Security and commodity exchanges .................. Insurance carriers .................................................. Life insurance .................................................... Medical service and health insurance ............... Fire, marine, and casualty insurance ................. Insurance agents, brokers, and service ................. Real estate ............................................................ Real estate operators and lessors ..................... Real estate agents and managers ..................... Subdividers and developers .............................. Holding and other investment offices .................... Holding offices ................................................... 1,960 96 1,266 166 31 109 405 259 5 1,960 765 338 845 508 6,986 3,749 2,507 724 338 245 1,508 68 916 98 14 76 223 100 – 1,183 392 269 511 268 3,966 2,064 1,414 482 263 212 2,267 33 1,411 164 74 – 81 61 – 1,802 825 353 619 542 248 102 124 17 85 25 445 15 257 46 9 – 27 18 – 520 281 158 79 88 1,425 553 748 124 39 – 624 – 284 178 48 – 22 17 – 882 615 53 196 104 1,030 578 278 160 39 28 – – – – – – 172 – 138 51 – – – – – – – – – 17 614 369 230 15 17 14 145 – 111 – – – – – – – – – – – 534 334 200 – 12 – – – – – 2,593 46 1,595 123 45 – 307 107 24 1,065 463 258 328 624 3,047 1,532 1,253 258 257 179 Services .................................................................... 178,117 103,324 17,090 27,836 17,797 735 15,538 14,220 1,318 59,112 Hotels and other lodging places ............................ 11,893 Hotels and motels .............................................. 11,593 Personal services .................................................. 3,389 Laundry, cleaning, and garment services .......... 2,819 Photographic studios, portrait ............................ – Beauty shops ..................................................... – Funeral service and crematories ....................... 242 Business services .................................................. 18,608 Advertising ......................................................... 312 Mailing, reproduction, stenographic ................... 1,112 Services to buildings .......................................... 4,729 Miscellaneous equipment rental and leasing ............................................................. 3,258 Personnel supply services ................................. 4,632 Computer and data processing services ........................................................... 1,052 Miscellaneous business services ...................... 3,422 Auto repair, services, and parking ......................... 4,591 Automotive rentals, no drivers ........................... 848 Automobile parking ............................................ 133 Automotive repair shops .................................... 2,671 Automotive services, except repair .................... 939 Miscellaneous repair services ............................... 2,480 Electrical repair shops ....................................... 637 Reupholstery and furniture repair ...................... 111 Miscellaneous repair shops ............................... 1,726 Motion pictures ...................................................... 516 Motion picture production and services ............. 290 Motion picture theaters ...................................... 128 Amusement and recreation services ..................... 5,334 Bowling centers ................................................. 132 Commercial sports ............................................. 371 Miscellaneous amusement, recreation services ........................................................... 4,538 Health services ...................................................... 103,327 Offices and clinics of medical doctors ............... 1,602 Offices of osteopathic physicians ...................... 33 Nursing and personal care facilities ................... 46,402 Hospitals ............................................................ 49,379 Medical and dental laboratories ......................... 366 6,387 6,226 2,000 1,612 – – 200 11,531 163 828 3,103 714 693 1,480 629 – 613 – 3,464 – 748 450 3,517 3,453 1,020 969 – – – 3,409 – – 1,550 568 534 627 521 – – – 3,779 128 401 764 49 49 49 15 491 466 74 50 – – – 1,192 – – 145 417 392 43 31 – – – 960 – – 91 73 73 31 19 – – – 232 – – 54 5,431 5,351 2,150 1,401 – 273 307 7,922 216 336 2,373 1,735 2,664 – 502 – 584 454 602 – – 735 2,279 2,609 511 59 1,665 374 1,465 358 94 1,012 375 173 110 3,105 59 142 631 1,018 452 86 9 338 19 225 46 – 174 102 68 – 527 60 103 334 748 1,135 165 10 723 238 842 111 11 720 211 79 131 1,610 78 68 164 1,196 1,748 724 160 528 335 320 96 – 205 51 – – 764 – 34 – 2,693 59,188 917 – 28,456 26,631 306 306 5,440 1,434 – 779 2,820 – 1,449 11,026 400 – 3,254 6,861 71 694 5,697 284 – 208 1,340 569 See footnotes at end of table. Page 24 28 28 – – – – – – 77 – 51 14 – – – – – 106 – – – Total By person – 164 – 13 91 143 – – 121 – 26 5 – 21 – – – 36 – – – 819 205 59 64 77 – 134 52 – 82 42 – – 284 – 88 19 753 178 52 61 59 – 122 48 – 75 42 – – 177 – 38 188 8,429 – – 4,882 2,912 – 130 8,093 – – 4,813 2,839 – 33 81 – – 61 17 – All other assaults 27 49 – – – – – – – – – – 80 – 30 15 85 79 – All other events 4 552 1,273 8 – – – 108 – 50 611 2,511 2,489 589 166 1,303 431 1,525 440 43 1,042 343 201 70 4,683 87 1,330 58 337 – – 69 74 – 2,831 23,283 1,338 – 6,960 13,075 252 67 – 6 – – – 11 – – Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1993 — 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 Fall to lower level Fall on same level Slips or trips without fall Home health care services ................................ Legal services ........................................................ Educational services .............................................. Elementary and secondary schools ................... Colleges and universities ................................... Libraries ............................................................. 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 ...................... 808 81 82 821 822 823 83 832 833 835 836 839 84 841 842 13,991 3,084 16,443 5,402 10,388 162 45,383 9,307 7,354 6,239 19,408 3,074 1,452 827 625 977 324 3,448 1,105 2,186 39 7,358 1,439 1,474 1,312 2,663 470 365 204 161 632 135 1,734 557 1,041 24 4,113 775 851 932 1,249 305 187 110 77 230 145 978 355 608 9 2,302 481 299 302 1,131 89 101 54 47 – – 366 – 310 – 521 82 233 – 113 – 34 24 10 685 182 1,244 544 674 26 1,677 521 220 196 530 209 100 75 25 1,951 677 2,573 651 1,763 9 7,933 1,700 1,265 1,278 3,224 467 226 135 91 395 116 1,026 534 480 – 1,754 405 323 110 773 143 64 48 16 Business associations ....................................... Labor organizations ........................................... Civic and social associations ............................. 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 ...................... Services, n.e.c. ..................................................... 861 863 864 869 87 871 872 873 874 89 899 512 5,490 1,378 20,777 6,758 1,844 4,912 7,263 290 – – 1,166 170 5,286 1,497 124 927 2,737 126 – – 587 73 2,883 1,062 – 458 1,311 65 – – 371 66 1,525 210 – 208 1,048 37 – – 141 – 401 101 – 106 184 20 – – 330 – 844 194 – 300 290 9 237 – 801 308 2,057 854 126 320 757 22 – – 266 53 528 139 – 110 271 – See footnotes at end of table. Page 25 Table R4. Number of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work1 by industry and selected events or exposures leading to injury or illness, 1993 — 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 Home health care services ................................ Legal services ........................................................ Educational services .............................................. Elementary and secondary schools ................... Colleges and universities ................................... Libraries ............................................................. 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 ...................... 4,746 666 3,532 989 2,443 52 13,376 2,738 1,909 1,481 6,708 540 321 176 145 2,263 247 1,913 301 1,540 35 7,994 1,752 1,165 1,100 3,615 362 195 109 86 159 478 859 408 447 – 799 86 141 129 65 378 26 12 14 312 139 825 154 656 – 1,965 186 351 542 738 148 86 39 47 2,997 315 464 152 252 13 2,169 889 334 267 463 216 33 12 22 Business associations ....................................... Labor organizations ........................................... Civic and social associations ............................. 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 ...................... Services, n.e.c. ..................................................... 204 157 1,684 239 5,631 1,949 261 1,433 1,988 48 – 155 1,180 120 3,956 1,398 97 1,039 1,421 33 – – – – 256 74 1,274 521 – 589 131 12 – – 69 82 1,815 342 903 265 305 37 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 Includes nonclassifiable responses. 5 Excludes farms with fewer than 11 employees. 6 Data conforming to OSHA definitions for mining operators in coal, metal, and nonmetal mining and for employers in railroad transportation are provided to BLS by the Mine Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Department of 68 97 863 455 73 143 193 14 Assaults and violent acts Fires and explosions – – 27 – 27 – – – – – – – – – – – – – – 166 – 64 58 – – All other assaults All other events 4 Total By person 387 – 519 305 193 8 3,667 474 504 185 2,293 212 32 12 20 210 – 455 305 131 8 3,474 436 496 184 2,158 201 14 11 – 177 – 64 – 62 – 193 38 – – 135 – 18 – 17 1,380 170 1,927 560 1,266 7 4,663 856 827 739 1,948 293 198 114 84 – – – – – – – 103 91 – – 39 – – 207 – 769 234 2,155 710 184 722 538 16 72 103 158 – – 43 – – 50 – 66 – – – – – Labor; and by the Federal Railroad Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation. Independent mining contractors are excluded from the coal, metal, and nonmetal industries. NOTE: Dashes indicate data that are not available or data that do not meet publication guidelines. Because of rounding, data may not sum to totals. n.e.c. = not elsewhere classified. Page 26 SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor
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