FALLS IN CONSTRUCTION - INJURY RATES FOR OSHA-INSPECTED EMPLOYERS BEFORE AND AFTER CITATION FOR VIOLATING THE WASHINGTON-STATE FALL PROTECTION STANDARD
Na. Nelson et al., FALLS IN CONSTRUCTION - INJURY RATES FOR OSHA-INSPECTED EMPLOYERS BEFORE AND AFTER CITATION FOR VIOLATING THE WASHINGTON-STATE FALL PROTECTION STANDARD, American journal of industrial medicine, 31(3), 1997, pp. 296-302
This study examined the relationship between Washington's fall protect
ion standard and injuries in construction workers. Workers' compensati
on claim rates for falls were examined for employers that were cited f
or violating the standard over the 1991-1992 period. Fall injury rates
for the periods before and after inspections were compared. Claims fo
r a control group of employers that had not been cited were also exami
ned. For tile 784 cited employers, the claim rate for compensable fall
injuries decreased from 1.78 to 1.39 per 200,000 hours worked for the
one-year periods before and after inspection. For the control group (
n = 8,301), the claim rate decreased from 1.04 to 0.95 per 200,000 hou
rs. Cited employers were 2.3 times as likely as control employers (p <
0.0001) to experience a claim rate reduction, after adjustment for em
ployer size and type of business. Results suggested that industry-wide
fall injury rates might be expected to decrease if more employers wer
e inspected. (C) 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.