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1 OCCUPATIONAL INJURIES AND DISEASES IN ALBERTA Lost-Time Claims, Disabling Injury Claims and Claim Rates Alberta Construction Safety Association Industries 2002 to 2006 Summer 20072 TABLE OF CONTENTS Highlights Introduction Provincial Summary Industry Sector Summary Industry Sector Analysis Demographics of Injured Workers Injury and Disease Analysis Occupational Fatalities Certificate of Recognition Employers References...43 Appendix A: Terms, Definitions and Formulas Appendix B: ACSA WCB Industry Codes Contact Information3 HIGHLIGHTS Lower lost-time claims and disabling injury rates in 2006 The lost-time claim rate for the Alberta Construction Safety Association (ACSA) industries decreased by 3.9%, from 2.73 per 100 person-years in 2005 to 2.63 in 2006, as proportionally, there were fewer injury claims. The average lost-time claim rate for all sectors of the province was 2.35 per 100 person-years. The disabling injury rate decreased by 1.1%, from 5.48 per 100 person-years to 5.42 in The average rate for all sectors of the province was 4.14 per 100 personyears. The fall in the lost-time and disabling injury rates was the result of the number of injury claims increasing at a lesser rate than the person-years (workers). The personyears grew by 9.5% in The number of lost-time claims and disabling injury claims increased by 5.3% and 8.3% respectively. The ACSA industries accounted for 14.8% of person-years, 16.5% of lost-time claims, 20.2% of modified work claims, and 19.4% of disabling injury claims in the province. Three of the ACSA sub-sectors had lost-time claim rates below the average rate for all sectors of the province. No sub-sector had lower disabling injury rates than the average for all sectors of the province. The Roadbuilders sub-sector had the lowest lost-time claim rate of the ACSA industries at 2.03 per 100 person-years. The Masonry industry had the highest rate at 7.13 per 100 person-years. The Construction Trade Services sub-sector had the lowest disabling injury rate at 4.47 per 100 person-years. The Glaziers sub-sector had the highest at 9.03 per 100 person-years, followed by the Masonry industry, 8.95 per 100 person-years. The duration rate for the ACSA industries was 88 days-lost per 100 person-years compared to the average for all sectors of the province of 54. Thirty-two percent of lost-time claims in the ACSA industries resulted in 31 or more days-lost from work compared to 24.3% from all sectors of the province. The fatality rate in 2006 was 173 per million person-years, the lowest rate in the last five years. In the ACSA industries, employers with 10 to 19 person-years had the highest losttime claim rate, 3.46 per 100 person-years. Employers with 100 or more person- 24 HIGHLIGHTS years had the highest disabling injury rate, 6.40 per 100 person-years. Approximately 93% of employers had no lost-time claims and 91% had no disabling injury claims. This means that the injuries and diseases happening in the ACSA industries are the result of incidents occurring at the operations of less than 10% of employers. These employers translate to approximately 42% and 34% of the total person-years in the ACSA industries respectively. Over the last five years, the ACSA industries have experienced a 33.6% drop in its lost-time claim rate. The average lost-time claim rate for all sectors of the province fell by 19.6% between 2002 and Over the same period, the lost-time claim rate for the ACSA industries fell by 33.6%. The fall is the result of the number lost-time claims fluctuating around a similar level (around 6,000 claims), while the person-years (workers) increased, 43.8%. Meaning that despite a large increase in the number of people working in ACSA industries, the number of lost-time claims has not increased. The growth in the person-years figures was a result of growth in most sub-sectors. The largest sub-sector, Industrial Construction, accounting for approximately 29% of the person-years in 2006, increased by 9.4% from The second largest subsector, Roadbuilders, accounting for approximately 22% of the person-years displayed growth of 15.4% from Lost-time claim rates have fallen in all sub-sectors over the last five years. The Glaziers sub-sector had the largest decrease in the lost-time claim rate over the last five years, 52.2%, followed by the Mechanical, Electrical and Insulation sub-sector, 42.1% and the Industrial Construction sub-sector, 40.8%. 35 HIGHLIGHTS Occupational Injuries and Diseases in Alberta Alberta Construction Safety Association Industries 2002 to 2006 Employment, Immigration and Industry (EII) prepares this annual report to provide analysis of workplace health and safety in the Alberta Construction Safety Association industries to meet the demand from industry and safety associations, labour organizations, employers and workers for incorporating this information into their strategic plans for enhancing workplace health and safety. This includes: Descriptions of programs and initiatives undertaken by EII in pursuit of its workplace health and safety mission and goals; Analysis of provincial occupational injury and disease information against a national picture; Estimations of the risk of injury or disease at the provincial, industry sector and subsector level as well as general descriptions about the incidents and injured workers; and Analysis of workplace injury and disease literature in Alberta The Occupational Injury and Diseases in Alberta reports present analysis of aggregate injury claim data to allow for the tracking of workplace health and safety performance over time. This is important for evaluating past and present performance, and in providing strategic information for the direction of workplace health and safety policy. The analysis contained in this report provides a comprehensive picture of workplace injuries in the province, allowing for a prevention focus to be made based on injury probabilities, rather than possibilities. A few notes about this report: This report presents 2006 data beside 2005 data to help with comparisons. Additional historical data are presented where possible. Information presented in this report is based on incidents that occurred during 2006 and accepted as lost-time or modified-work claims by WCB as of March 31, About 80% of employed persons in Alberta are covered by WCB. This report focuses on all industry activity in Alberta covered by the WCB and by the provincial legislation for occupational health and safety. Most industry sectors are included but notable exceptions consist of the Government of Canada, and parts of the agriculture and finance sectors. Several professional groups (i.e. the teaching and medical professions) are also excluded as are some industries where WCB coverage is not compulsory. Injury claim rates based on a small number of person-years are too volatile to make 46 HIGHLIGHTS valid comparisons over time. Therefore, claim rates are not calculated when there are fewer than 40 person-years. Duration rates are also volatile when based on a small number of lost-time claims. Duration rates are not calculated when there are fewer than 30 lost-time claims. Estimates of year-on-year change for rates presented in this report are calculated using unrounded figures and may not match those produced from rounded figures. Percentages displayed in tables may also not sum to a hundred, due to rounding. Throughout the report, the lost-time claim rate is the number of lost-time claims per 100 person-years, the disabling injury rate is the number of disabling injury claims per 100 person-years and the duration rate is the number of days-lost per 100 person-years. Fatality rates are expressed as the number of fatalities per million person-years. Analyses by industry are based on WCB industry classification and aggregation. For more information, see the WCB premium rates manual, Analyses by occupation group are based on the 2001 National Occupation Classification (NOC). The NOC 2001 provides a standardized framework reflecting the Canadian labour market. For further information please see Occupational injuries and diseases listed throughout this report are based on the Z Coding of Work Injury or Disease Information produced by the Canadian Standards Association (CSA) standards for categorizing occupational injury and disease. For further information see Terms, definitions and formulas used throughout this report are described in Appendix A. 57 1 INTRODUCTION Government of Alberta The Government of Alberta Strategic Business Plan sets out the vision, long-term strategic plan, government priorities and three-year business plan that outlines the government s goals, strategies, and measures necessary to track results in the shorter term. The plan is built on the principles of fiscal discipline and achieving results for today and the future. Overall it is focused on key outcomes for Albertans: a better quality of life and a chance to share in the province s good fortune. To achieve these outcomes, government has set out five priorities, which are to: Govern with integrity and transparency; Manage growth pressures; Improve Albertans quality of life; Build a stronger Alberta; and Provide safe and secure communities. The Ministry of Employment, Immigration and Industry s business plan fully supports the government s vision of a vibrant and prosperous province. Role of Alberta Employment, Immigration and Industry The Ministry of Employment, Immigration and Industry includes the Department of Employment, Immigration and Industry (EII), the Alberta Economic Development Authority (AEDA), the Alberta Labour Relations Board, Appeals Commission for Alberta Workers' Compensation, Northern Alberta Development Council (NADC) and the Workers' Compensation Board Alberta (WCB). The Ministry's major responsibilities include: Promoting initiatives to attract investment in Alberta, and improve company capacity, competency, competitiveness, innovation and productivity; Strengthening industry, regional and rural economic development to increase connectivity and economic and social capacity; Ensuring Albertans have fair, safe and healthy work environments; Advancing women's equality in areas such as the prevention of violence and Aboriginal women's issues; Attracting and retaining international immigrants (including temporary foreign 68 INTRODUCTION 1 workers and foreign students) and inter-provincial migrants to Alberta; Helping Albertans to acquire the knowledge, skills, and resources needed to participate in current and future job opportunities; Providing financial and health benefits, child support services and employment training support to Albertans in need; and Marketing Alberta as the best place to live, work and do business. EII strategic priorities, core businesses, goals, and strategies support seven of the ten goals in the Government of Alberta Strategic Business Plan. Two key government priorities are Building a Stronger Alberta and Managing Growth Pressures. Sustainable economic growth is the foundation to support these priorities. Sustainable economic growth EII promotes safe, healthy and productive workplaces, as well as fair, equitable and stable labour relations to ensure a fair, safe and healthy work environment for Alberta's workers. Work is central to people s lives, to the stability of families and societies. People want work that provides them with an acceptable standard of living. It is important that workers enter an environment where their health and safety is protected, where they are treated with respect and they are compensated fairly for the job they are doing. This will result in an attractive workplace that will further the position of Alberta employers to be competitive in the global economy (see Note 1.1). Alongside the human cost of occupational injuries and diseases and the impact on families and society, the economic costs are numerous. In 2006, direct compensation payments for occupational injury and disease by WCB totaled $877 million. 1 These costs are Note 1.1 Research by the International Institute for Management Development and the World Economic Forum suggests that the safest-working countries also have the best competitiveness ratings (International Labour Organization, Safety in Numbers pointers to a global safety culture at work, 2003). ultimately paid by employers through premium payments, and impact the costs of running a business as well as the final cost of delivering products and services. Further costs associated with occupational injuries and diseases would include the material damage to equipment and premises, the additional cost of hiring staff to cover for injured workers, and the lost productivity resulting from the absence. Additional impacts of poor health and safety for employers include higher absenteeism and the lower morale of employees, loss of skilled experienced employees, loss of the company's investment in training, and difficulty recruiting high-quality employees due to the loss of image and custom (particularly in the case of subcontractors to larger companies) all leading to losses in productivity and underutilization of production (see Note 1.2). 1 See the Workers Compensation Board Alberta 2006 Annual Report: Working Progress 679 INTRODUCTION 1 Other costs borne by the economy and society, due in part to work-related injuries and diseases include early retirements, unemployment and poorer households. The International Labour Organization (ILO) estimates that in high-income countries, around 40% of all retirements (before Note 1.2 The International Labour Organization (ILO) estimates that approximately 4% of Gross Domestic Product is lost due to occupational injuries and diseases (ILO, Safety in Numbers pointers to a global safety culture at work, 2003). statutory age) are caused by disability. This is equivalent to around 14% of the lifetime working capacity of the employed labour force. 2 Occupational injuries and diseases also affect unemployment and household income levels. Workers with an impairment of capacity can reduce their re-employability and impact household income. Workplace injuries and diseases typically reduce the overall earnings of households and in certain cases, family members have to give up jobs in order to care for an injured worker. Sustainable economic growth creates the prosperity needed to sustain quality of life and ensures a higher standard of living. Sustainable economic performance can be achieved if growth pressures are properly addressed. The economy can also only be sustained if Alberta has the right people with the right skills at the right time to do the work. 2 See the International Labour Organization report: Safety in numbers pointers for a global safety culture at work 810 2 PROVINCIAL SUMMARY The positive trend continues: there were more workers covered and lower lost-time claim rates in A total of 36,701 injuries and diseases that required workers to recuperate away from work (beyond the day of incident) were accepted by WCB during This is an increase of 3.5% from In contrast, the person-years figures increased 6.1% to 1,560,078. This means that proportionally, there were fewer injury claims. Expressed as a lost-time claim rate, the data translates into a rate of 2.35 per 100 person-years, a decrease of 2.5% from 2005, (see Table 2.1). Table 2.1 Provincial Figures Alberta: 2005 and % Change Person-years 1,470,321 1,560, % Lost-time claims 35,460 36, % Lost-time claim rate % Modified-work claims 35,505 41, % Lost-time claims involving modified-work 11,820 13, % Disabling injury claims 59,145 64, % Disabling injury rate % Duration rate % Days lost (LTC) 837, , % Compensation payments (LTC) $189,951,321 $202,598, % The total number of modified-work claims submitted in 2006 was 41,390. There were 13,566 claims involving both lost-time and modified-work, producing 64,525 disabling injury claims. Both modified-work claims and the lost-time claims involving modifiedwork, displayed increases of 16.6% and 14.8% from The 2006 disabling injury rate increased by 2.8% in 2006, from 4.02 to 4.14 per 100 person-years. Tables 2.1 and 2.2 display the lost-time claim and disabling injury figures and rates for the province, and also for the major industry sectors in Alberta. The data provides a useful setting for analyzing the health and safety performance of the ACSA industries. 911 PROVINCIAL SUMMARY 2 Table 2.2 Lost-Time Claim and Disabling Injury Rates by Major Industry Sector Alberta: 2005 and Major Industry Sector Lost-Time Claim Rate Disabling Injury Rate Lost-Time Claim Rate Disabling Injury Rate Alberta Agriculture and Forestry Business, Personal and Professional Services Construction and Construction Trade Services Manufacturing, Processing and Packaging Mining and Petroleum Development Public Administration, Education and Health Services Transportation, Communication and Utilities Wholesale and Retail ACSA Industries The lost-time claim rate for the ACSA industries decreased by 3.9%, from 2.73 per 100 person-years in 2005, to 2.63 in The lost-time claim rate is higher than four of the major industry sectors (see Table 2.2). The disabling injury rate for the ACSA industries decreased by 1.1%, from 5.48 per 100 person-years in 2005 to 5.42 in 2006, and is higher than all major industry sectors except for the Manufacturing, Processing and Packaging sector. ACSA is a non-profit organization funded and directed by industry. Approximately twothirds of the industries included in the Construction and Construction Trade Services sector are also included in the ACSA industries. ACSA industries also includes the Transit Mix Operators industry and the Welding industry, categorized in the Manufacturing, Processing and Packaging sector, as well as the Boring, Horizontal or Angular industry and the Machinery or Equipment NEC, Sale/Service/Repair industry which are grouped in the Mining and Petroleum sector and the Wholesale and Retail sector. 1012 3 INDUSTRY SECTOR SUMMARY The 2006 lost-time claim rate for the ACSA industries was 2.63 per 100 person-years and the disabling injury rate was 5.42 per 100 person-years. In 2006, improvements were made to the analysis of Workers Compensation Board Alberta (WCB) claim information allowing for modified-work claims to be analyzed alongside lost-time claims. Using modified-work claim data in addition to lost-time claim data ensures a more comprehensive picture of workplace injuries, and allows for greater insight into incident prevention. A lost-time claim is a claim submitted to the WCB for an occupational injury or disease that causes a worker to have time away from work, beyond the day of injury. Included are claims receiving reimbursement of full or partial lost wages due to occupational illness or injury, or payment for permanent loss of function (for example, hearing loss claims). A modified-work claim is submitted for an occupational injury or disease where workers have their normal work duties altered enabling them to remain working without losing time from work. Included in the figures are claims where injured workers are helped back into the workplace with modified duties after time lost due to injury or disease, and cases where workers were provided modified duties prior to time lost because of an injury or disease. Note 3.1 The lost-time claim rate represents the probability or risk of an injury or disease to a worker requiring time away from work, during a period of one year of work. The disabling injury rate represents the probability or risk of a disabling injury. Modifying an injured workers duties, can be beneficial for both an employer and an employee. For the employer, the financial cost of an absent worker can be high and returning an injured employee to work as soon as it is medically possible is important for properly managing compensation, disability claims and productivity levels. For the employee, returning to work as soon as medically possible is beneficial both physically and psychologically, and is linked to quicker recovery rates and promotion of selfesteem. Long absences from the workplace are also linked to falls in labour market attachment. 1113 INDUSTRY SECTOR ANALYSIS 3 The number of disabling injury claims combine both the lost-time and modified-work concepts and produces an overall figure where an occupational injury or disease disables a worker causing either time-lost from work or for normal work duties to be modified. In 2006, a total of 36,701 injuries and diseases that required workers to recuperate away from work (beyond the day of incident) were accepted by WCB during This is an increase of 3.5% from In contrast, the person-years figures increased by 6.1% to 1,560,078 between 2005 and In 2006, there were 6,053 lost-time claims in the ACSA industries, representing 16.5% of the total lost-time claims in the province. The ACSA industries lost-time claim rate was 2.63 per 100 person-years, a decrease of 3.9% from 2005, as the number of losttime claims increased by a lesser amount than the person-years (workers) as proportionally, there were fewer injury claims. The average rate for all sectors of the province in 2006 was 2.35 per 100 person-years. The disabling injury rate for the ACSA industries decreased by 1.1% in 2006, from 5.48 per 100 person-years to 5.42 per 100 person-years (see Table 3.1). The fall in lost-time claim and disabling injury rates for the ACSA industries was a result of the number of injury claims increasing by a lesser amount than person-years (workers), which grew by 9.5% in Lost-time claims grew by 5.3% to 6,053 in 2006, and the number of disabling injury claims rose by 8.3%, to 12,507. Table 3.1 ACSA Industries Alberta: % Change Person-years 210, , % Lost-time claims 5,750 6, % Lost-time claim rate % Modified-work claims 7,584 8, % Lost-time claims involving modified work 1,789 1, % Disabling injury claims 11,545 12, % Disabling injury rate % Duration rate % Days lost (LTC) 195, , % Compensation payments (LTC) $46,491,899 $47,515, % Data Source: 2005 WCB Data, Prepared by Data Development and Evaluation The growth in the person-years figures was a result of growth in most sub-sectors. The largest sub-sector, Industrial Construction, accounting for approximately 29% of the person-years in 2006, increased by 9.4% from The second largest sub-sector, Roadbuilders, accounting for approximately 22% of the person-years, displayed growth of 15.4% from The number of lost-time claims increased in these sub-sectors but by a lesser amount than the person-years, 5.7% and 6.4% respectively. The number of 1214 INDUSTRY SECTOR ANALYSIS 3 lost-time claims fell in two sub-sectors, the Mechanical, Electrical and Insulation subsector and the Other Construction and Construction Trade Service sub-sector. The duration rate displays the severity of the effects of occupational injury and disease as reflected by the number of days off work per 100 person-years. In 2006, the ACSA industries had a duration rate of 88 days-lost per 100 person-years, a 5.2% decrease from the 2005 rate of 93, but 34 days higher then the average for all sectors of the province, 54. The median work days-lost was 15, while the average days-lost per claims was 34. Provincially, the median days-lost was seven and the average days-lost was 23. The average lost-time claim rate for all sectors of the province fell by 19.6% between 2002 and Over the same period, the lost-time claim rate for the ACSA industries fell by 33.6%. The fall is the result of the number lost-time claims fluctuating around a similar level (around 6,000 claims), while the person-years (workers) increased, 43.8%. Meaning that despite a large increase in the number of people working in ACSA industries, the number of lost-time claims has not increased. Chart 3.1 Lost-Time Claim Rate for ACSA Industries Alberta: Lost-Time Claim Rate Data Source: 2005 WCB Data, Prepared by Data Development and Evaluation Rates by Employer Size In the ACSA industries, employers with 10 to 19 person-years had the highest lost-time claim rate of 3.46 per 100 person-years. Employers with 100 or more person-years had the lowest at 1.58 per 100 person-years. This trend is reversed when we look at disabling 1315 INDUSTRY SECTOR ANALYSIS 3 injury rates, with employers with 100 or more person-years displaying the highest rate at 6.40 per 100 person-years and employers with less than 10 person-years had the lowest at 3.87 (see Table 3.2). For all sectors in the province, employers with 40 to 99 person-years and employers with 20 to 39 person-years had the highest lost-time claim rates at 2.72 and 2.58 per 100 person-years respectively. Employers with 100 or more person-years had the highest disabling injury rate at 4.58 per 100 person-years. Table 3.2 Lost-Time Claim Rate by Size 3 of Employer Alberta: 2006 Size of Employer Number of Accounts Person-Years Lost-Time Claims Disabling Injury Claims Lost-Time Claim Rate Disabling injury Rate Less than 10 person-years 39,880 54,049 1,754 2, to 19 person-years 1,458 20, to 39 person-years , , to 99 person-years ,760 1,201 2, or more person-years ,036 1,421 5, Unspecified* N/A N/A * These are employers with no payroll information or with person-years equal to zero. Distribution of injury claims Table 3.3 presents figures for the proportion of employers in the ACSA industries with no lost-time or disabling injury claims in Table 3.4 displays figures for the number of claims submitted by employers. Approximately 93% of employers had no lost-time claims and 91% had no disabling injury claims, meaning the injuries and diseases happening in the ACSA industries are the result of incidents occurring at the operations of less than 10% of employers (see Table 3.3). For all sectors in the province, 92% of employers submitted no lost-time claims and 91% no disabling injury claims. These figures however, are influenced by employer-size. In 2006, the number of employers with no lost-time or disabling injury claims translates to approximately 42% and 34% of the total person-years in the ACSA industries respectively (see Table 4.11). 3 Size is measured in terms of person-years. 1416 INDUSTRY SECTOR ANALYSIS 3 Table 3.3 Proportion of Employers with no Lost-Time or Disabling Injury Claims ACSA Industries: 2006 Proportion of Employers With no Lost-Time Claims With no Disabling Injury Claims ACSA Industries 93% 91% For employers with submitted claims, approximately 68% submitted one lost-time claim, 27% two to five claims and 5% over six lost-time claims. For disabling injury claims, similar proportions exist although the number of employers submitting over six disabling injury claims was 11% (see Table 3.4). Employers that submitted one to five lost-time and disabling injury claims accounted for around 39% and 28% of the total person-years in the ACSA industries respectively. Employers that submitted over 6 lost-time and disabling injury claims accounted for approximately 19% and 38% of the total person-years in the ACSA industries. Table 3.4 Proportion of Employers with Claims ACSA Industries: Lost-Time Claim 2 to 5 Lost- Time Claims 6 to 20 Lost- Time Claims Over 20 Lost- Time Claims 68% 27% 5% 0% 1 Disabling Injury Claim 2 to 5 Disabling Injury Claims 6 to 20 Disabling Injury Claims Over 20 Disabling Injury Claims 61% 28% 9% 2% 11 1517 4 INDUSTRY SECTOR ANALYSIS In 2006, the Masonry industry continued to have the highest lost-time claim rate, and the Glaziers sub-sector the highest disabling injury rate. Between 2002 and 2006, the Masonry industry had the highest lost-time claim rate each year except for 2004, when the Lime, Cement and Concrete Products Manufacturing sub-sector had the highest rate. The Roadbuilders sub-sector had the lowest rate each year (see Table 4.1). Table 4.1 Lost-Time Claim Rate by ACSA Sub-Sector Alberta: Sub-Sector ACSA Construction Trade Services Glaziers Industrial Construction Masonry Mechanical, Electrical and Insulation Roadbuilders Roofers Lime, Cement and Concrete Producers Manufacturing In 2006, the Masonry industry had the highest lost-time claim and the second highest disabling injury rate at 7.13 and 8.95 per 100 person-years respectively. The Glaziers sub-sector had the largest difference between the lost-time claim rate, 3.53 per 100 person-years, and disabling injury rate, 9.03 per 100 person-years. The Roadbuilders sub-sector had the lowest lost-time claim rate at 2.03 per 100 personyears in 2006 and the Construction Trade Services sub-sector the lowest disabling injury rate at 4.47 per 100 person-years, although all sub-sectors displayed disabling injury rates that were higher than the average rate for all sectors of the province (see Chart 4.1)18 INDUSTRY SECTOR ANALYSIS 4 Chart 4.1 Lost-Time Claim and Disabling Injury Claim Rate for the ACSA Industries Alberta: Rate (per 100 person-years) Masonry Lime, Cement and Concrete Producers Manufacturing Roofers Construction Trade Services Glaziers Lost-Time Claim Rate Industrial Mechanical, Roadbuilders Construction Electrical and Insulation Disabling Injury Rate ACSA Industries All Sectors Construction Trade Services In 2006, the Construction Trade Services sub-sector was the third largest sub-sector of the ACSA industries. In 2006, it had a lost-time claim rate of 3.60 per 100 person-years and a disabling injury rate of 4.47 per 100 person-years. Both rates increased from 2005, by 5.9% and 9.9%. The lost-time claim rate for this sub-sector was higher than the average for all ACSA industries, although the disabling injury rate was lower (see Chart 4.1). The duration rate was 126 days-lost per 100 person-years, a decrease of 7.9% from The duration rate was the lowest over the past five years (see Table 4.2) although it is still significantly higher than the average for all ACSA industries, 88 days-lost per 100 person-years, indicative of longer recovery times from injury, for workers in this sub-sector. The Construction Trade Services was one of the few sub-sectors to experience an increase in both lost-time claim and disabling injury rate in 2006, as the number of losttime and disabling injury claims increased at a higher rate than the person-years. 1719 INDUSTRY SECTOR ANALYSIS 4 Over the last five years, the number of lost-time claims has averaged around 1,650, whereas person-years have seen growth of 30.2%, resulting in a decrease in lost-time claim rate of 26.9%. This means that despite an increase in the number of people working in this sub-sector, the number of lost-time claims has remained at a similar level. For all ACSA industries, the average lost-time claim rate fell by 33.6% over this period. For all sectors of the province, the average lost-time claim rate fell by 19.6%. Table 4.2 Construction Trade Services Alberta: % Change Person-years 45,020 48, % Lost-time claims 1,529 1, % Lost-time claim rate % Modified-work claims % Lost-time claims involving modified work % Disabling injury claims 1,832 2, % Disabling injury rate % Duration rate % Days lost (LTC) 61,649 60, % Compensation payments (LTC) $12,404,388 $13,300, % Glaziers The Glaziers sub-sector had a lost-time claim rate of 3.53 per 100 person-years and a disabling injury rate of 9.03 per 100 person-years in The disabling injury rate was the highest of all sub-sectors in the ACSA industries. The duration rate was 60 days-lost per 100 person-years, a decrease of 29.4% from 2005 (see Table 4.3) and the second lowest of all sub-sectors in the ACSA industries. The Glaziers sub-sector experienced an increase in both lost-time claim rate and disabling injury rate in Although the increase in the lost-time claim rate is negligible, 0.3%, the growth in disabling injury claims was greater than the growth in person-years, resulting in an 11.9% increase in the disabling injury rate. Over the last five years, the number of lost-time claims averaged around 240, whereas person-years have seen growth of 33.9% resulting in a decrease in lost-time claim rate of 52.2%, as proportionally, there were fewer injury claims. For all ACSA industries, the average lost-time claim rate fell by 33.6% over this period. For all sectors of the province, the average lost-time claim rate fell by 19.6%. 1820 INDUSTRY SECTOR ANALYSIS 4 Table 4.3 Glaziers Alberta: % Change Person-years 7,734 8, % Lost-time claims % Lost-time claim rate % Modified-work claims % Lost-time claims involving modified work % Disabling injury claims % Disabling injury rate % Duration rate % Days lost (LTC) 6,549 5, % Compensation payments (LTC) $1,165,007 $1,279, % Industrial Construction The Industrial Construction sub-sector is the largest of the ACSA industries. In 2006, the lost-time claim rate decreased by 15.7%, from 2.52 per 100 person-years in 2005, to The disabling injury rate decreased by 5.2%, to 6.41 per 100 person-years in 2006, although it is higher than the average disabling injury rate for the ACSA industries, 5.42 per 100 person-years. The duration rate for this sub-sector decreased from 78 days-lost per 100 person-years in 2005, to 71 in 2006 (see Table 4.4). Between 2002 and 2005, the lost-time claim rate for the Industrial Construction subsector decreased by 40.8%, from 3.59 per 100 person-years in 2002 to 2.12 in The number of lost-time claims fluctuated around 1,470 each year while the person-years increased by 48.7%. This means that despite an increase in the number of people working in this sub-sector, the number of lost-time claims has remained at a similar level. Table 4.4 Industrial Construction Alberta: % Change Person-years 61,383 67, % Lost-time claims 1,547 1, % Lost-time claim rate % Modified-work claims 3,151 3, % Lost-time claims involving modified work % Disabling injury claims 4,147 4, % Disabling injury rate % Duration rate % Days lost (LTC) 47,602 47, % Compensation payments (LTC) $11,739,074 $10,926, % 19 View more
OCCUPATIONAL INJURIES AND DISEASES IN ALBERTA Lost-Time and Disabling Injury Claims Young Workers 2002 to 2006 Summer 2007 TABLE OF CONTENTS Highlights... 2 1. Introduction... 5 2. Young Worker Summary... More information Highlights...2. 1. Industry Sector Summary...4. 2. Industry Sector Analysis...7. 3. Demographics of Injured Workers...13
T A B L E O F C O N T E N T S Highlights... 2 1. Industry Sector Summary... 4 2. Industry Sector Analysis... 6 3. Demographics of Injured Workers... 11 4. Injury and Disease Analysis... 13 5. Occupational More information TABLE OF CONTENTS. Highlights Demographics of Injured Workers References Appendix A: Terms, Definitions and Formulas...
TABLE OF CONTENTS Highlights... 2 1. Industry Sector Summary... 5 2. Industry Sector Analysis... 8 3. Demographics of Injured Workers... 14 4. Injury and Disease Analysis... 15 5. Occupational Fatalities... More information 2010 Occupational Health and Safety Data Analysis
Attachment: Occupational Health and Safety Results 2013 1 Table 1: Injury claims and claim rates, Alberta 2011 to 2013 2011 2012 2013 Change 2011 to 2012 Change 2012 to 2013 Person-Years 1,813,356 1,951,724 More information Highlights... 2. 1. Introduction... 5. 2. Workplace Health and Safety Initiatives... 6. 6. Demographics of Injured Workers... 51. References...
TABLE OF CONTENTS Highlights... 2 1. Introduction... 5 2. Workplace Health and Safety Initiatives... 6 3. Provincial Summary... 9 4. Industry Sector Summary... 14 5. Industry Sector Analysis... 17 6. Demographics More information Highlights... 3. 1. Introduction... 5. 2. Occupational Health and Safety Initiatives... 6. 6. Demographics of Injured Workers... 49. References...
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Manitoba Workplace Injury and Illness Statistics Report 2000-20072007 Index 2.3 Occupations Disease Fatalities... 21 Table 5 - Occupational Disease Fatalities Accepted by the WCB, 2000 to 2007.21 Table More information Australian Workers Compensation Statistics, 2012 13
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