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Farm tractors, and the use of seat belts and roll-over protective structures

โœ Scribed by Timothy W. Kelsey; John J. May; Paul L. Jenkins


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1996
Tongue
English
Weight
450 KB
Volume
30
Category
Article
ISSN
0271-3586

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โœฆ Synopsis


Roll-over protective structures (ROPS) on farm tractors could significantly reduce the rate of fatal occupational injury on farms, but comparatively few tractors have them. Many of the policy discussions have focused on trying to identib the percentage of tractors that do not have ROPS, even though such a focus probably does not accurately represent effective protection by ROPS. This study investigates whether including differences in hours of usage, tractor activities, and seat belt use affects estimates of farm operators' protection by ROPS. In general, tractors used more hours a year were more likely to have ROPS. ROPS status also varied by tractor activity. When adjusting for seat belt use, effective ROPS protection is much less than when considering just ROPS status. Measures of the effective coverage of ROPS and policy responses should reflect these differences in hours, activities, and seat belt use.


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## Background: Roll-over protective structures (rops) are proven to prevent fatalities from agricultural tractor overturns, accounting for more than one-third of all production agriculture-related fatalities in the united states. in 1997, there were approximately 1.2 million rops-retrofittable trac