| Literature DB >> 31245265 |
Rebbecca Lilley1, Bronwen McNoe1, Gabrielle Davie1, Simon Horsburgh1, Brett Maclennan1, Tim Driscoll2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Improving New Zealand's poor workplace safety record has become a high priority following high profile workplace fatal incidents in 2010 and 2014. Existing routine official data are unable to reliably inform occupational safety policy and action in New Zealand. This case review study will examine work-related fatal injury (WRFI) to: i) determine their burden, rates and distribution; ii) identify high-risk groups, causes and circumstances; iii) analyse secular trends, and iv) examine the impact of historic occupational safety legislative reform. DESIGN AND METHODS: A comprehensive New Zealand WRFI dataset from 1975 to 2014 will be established using existing data for 1975-1994 combined with new data for 1995-2014 extracted from reviewed coronial case files. Data collection involves: 1) identifying likely cases of WRFI from national mortality records using selected injury external cause codes; 2) linking these to coronial case files, which will be retrieved and reviewed to determine work-relatedness; and 3) coding work-related cases. Annual WRFI frequencies and rates will be calculated and disaggregated by age, sex, employment status, occupation and industry to identify high-risk groups and compared across the time series. The circumstances of the WRFIs will be analysed in-depth. The impact of New Zealand's Health and Safety in Employment 1992 Act, which resulted in deregulation of the previous legislative frameworks for occupational health and safety during a period of rapid labour market restructuring, will be examined by comparing rates before and after implementation of the Act. DISCUSSION: The resulting evidence will serve as the basis for policy development and practical interventions to reduce WRFI, targeting groups of high-risk workers, and for bench-marking of workplace safety performance in New Zealand.Entities:
Keywords: Evaluation; Fatal; Injury; New Zealand; Occupational safety; Occupational safety policy; Road; Work-related; Workplace
Year: 2019 PMID: 31245265 PMCID: PMC6582675 DOI: 10.1186/s40621-019-0193-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inj Epidemiol ISSN: 2197-1714
Fig. 1Flow diagram of methodological processes to establish the coronial-based WRFI dataset
WRFIS-3 study inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Included fatalities | Excluded fatalities |
|---|---|
The primary inclusion criteria are fatal injury of people working for pay, profit or payment-in-kind (such as unpaid family working with a family business) Specific circumstances from this primary category that will be eligible include fatal injuries: • occurring away from the workplace or in a non-work period, but to which work contributed; • to the foreign crew of boats, ships or airplanes, if the injury occurs on NZ soil or within NZ coastal waters or air space; • involving trains and traffic on public or private roads; • of persons who are helping in the family business; • of self-employed persons, as well as employees; and • of those assisting with work activities in unpaid capacity as official volunteers or students. • of persons who are New Zealand or non-New Zealand citizens. The secondary inclusion criteria is fatal injury of bystanders to someone else’s work activity, such as to members of the public. | Individuals less than 18 years of age, or greater than 85 years of age at time of death. Fatal injury of persons performing unpaid home duties. Deaths due to occupational diseases. Deaths due to domestic violence. Specific injury types that will be excluded include deaths due to legal intervention, medical misadventure or complications, suicide and self-inflicted injury, or operations of war. |
Main Coding frames to be used in WRFIS-3
| Variable(s) | Coding frame used |
|---|---|
| Usual place of residence, Socio-economic deprivation (NZdep) | Mortality Collection domicile codes (Ministry of Health |
| Physiological cause of death, mechanism of injury, agent of incident & injury, location of injury | Type of Occurrence Classification System (National Occupational Health and Safety Commission |
| Location of incident | National Data Standards for Injury Surveillance Place of Incident (National Injury Surveillance Unit |
| Occupation, at time of injury & usual | NZ Standard Classification of Occupations 1999 (Statistics New Zealand |
| Industry, at time of injury & usual | Australian & NZ Standard Industrial Classification, 1996 (Statistics New Zealand |