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Evaluation of the characteristics of injured workers and employer compliance with OSHA's reporting requirement for work-related amputations.

Mary Jo ReillyLing WangKenneth D Rosenman
Published in: American journal of industrial medicine (2024)
Michigan employers reported less than half of the work-related amputations required by OSHA's reporting regulation. Noncompliance was greatest in small employers, and agriculture, forestry, fishing, and hunting; construction; arts, entertainment, and recreation; accommodation and food services; and retail and other service industries. Inspections found that over half of the employers had not corrected the hazard that caused the amputation at the time of the inspection's initial opening date; in these cases, abatement of any hazards identified would have occurred after the inspection. Improved compliance in employer reporting of work-related amputations will identify hazards posing a high risk of recurrence of injury to other workers from the same injury source. Greater compliance can also help target safety-related preventive and intervention efforts in industries that might otherwise be overlooked.
Keyphrases
  • randomized controlled trial
  • adverse drug
  • climate change
  • emergency department
  • quality improvement