Sm. Barreto et al., A NESTED CASE-CONTROL STUDY OF FATAL WORK-RELATED INJURIES AMONG BRAZILIAN STEEL WORKERS, Occupational and environmental medicine, 54(8), 1997, pp. 599-604
Objectives-To estimate the relative risk of death from work related in
jury in a steelworks, associated with exposure to various occupational
hazards, sociodemographic factors, and medical history. Material and
methods-The study was a nested case-control design. It was based on a
cohort of men employed in the steel plant of USIMINAS, Brazil between
January 1977 and August 1990, who were followed up to November 1992. T
he cases were defined as all workers in the cohort who died from injur
y in the study period and whose death had been notified to the Brazili
an Ministry of Labour as being related to work. Four controls per case
, matched to cases on year of birth, were randomly selected from among
workers employed in the plant at the time of death of the matching ca
se. Data on potential risk factors for occupational injury were extrac
ted hom company records; for the controls these data were abstracted f
or the period preceding the death of the matching case. Results-There
were 37 deaths related to work injuries during the study period. Four
surviving workers were selected as controls for each case, but for eig
ht the personnel records were incomplete, leaving 140 controls in all.
Significantly increased risk of fatal injury related to work was asso
ciated with exposure to noise, heat, dust and fumes, gases and vapours
, rotating shift work, being a manual worker, and working in the steel
mill, coke ovens, blast furnaces, and energy and water supply areas.
Risk of fatal injury related to work increased with intensity of expos
ure to noise (P (trend) = 0.004) and heat (P<0.001), and increased gre
atly with a hazard score that combined information on noise, heat, dus
t, and gas exposure (P<0.001). Number of years of schooling (P=0.03) a
nd salary level (P=0.03) were both negatively associated with risk. In
a multivariate analysis including all these significant factors, only
hazard score and area of work remained associated with death from inj
ury related to work. The highest risks were for men exposed to all fou
r environmental hazards (odds ratio (OR) 19.4; 95% confidence interval
(95% CI) 1.1 to 352.1) and those working in the energy supply area (O
R 18.0; 1.6 to 198.1). Conclusions-The study identified parts of the s
teelworks and types of hazard associated with greatly increased risk o
f fatal accident. Research and measures to prevent accidents need to c
oncentrate on these areas and the people working in them. The use of a
hazard score was successful in identifying high risk, and similar sco
ring might prove useful in other industrial situations.