Three perspectives on work-related injury surveillance systems
β Scribed by Gary S. Sorock; Gordon S. Smith; Gordon R. Reeve; John Dement; Nancy Stout; Larry Layne; Susan T. Pastula
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 142 KB
- Volume
- 32
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0271-3586
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This paper reviews surveillance approaches for occupational injuries and evaluates three emerging methodologies for the enhancement of work-related injury surveillance: (1) narrative data analysis, (2) data set linkage, and (3) comprehensive company-wide surveillance systems. All three methods are the result of new applications of computer hardware and software that have apparent strengths and limitations. A major strength is the improved description of work exposures and related injuries leading to better understanding of injury etiology. This understanding, however, is limited by the data quality and completeness entered on records at the time of the injury. We recommend (1) more widespread inclusion of narrative text in databases, analyses of which can be a valuable supplement to injury coded data; ( ) the increased use of data set linkage studies to combine injury and work-history data; and (3) the development of comprehensive company-wide surveillance systems to expedite the use of epidemiologic data for occupational injury prevention activities. Further development of these methods and others is encouraged, especially in light of technological advancements in data capture, analysis and presentation. Only through such efforts can we best apply epidemiologic principles to preventing injuries in the workplace.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Combined data sources, including union administrative records and workers' compensation claims, were used to construct event histories for a dynamic cohort of union carpenters from Washington State during the period 1989-1992. Person-time at risk and the events of interest were stratified by age, se
Historically, Alaska has had an occupational fatality rate five times greater than that for the United States. This article reports recent surveillance results for hospitalized nonfatal work-related injuries in Alaska, using the population-based Alaska Trauma Registry (ATR) from 1991 through 1995. T
Equality relationships, connecting the work performed in a non-equilibrium driven process of an isothermal system with the difference of equilibrium thermodynamic potentials, have been established by various authors since Jarzynski's work of 1997, mostly based on a classical phase-space description.