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Traumatic injury rates in meatpacking plant workers
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Traumatic injury rates in meatpacking plant workers

Kennith Culp, Mary Brooks, Kerri Rupe and Craig Zwerling
Journal of Agromedicine, Vol.13(1), pp.7-16
03/01/2008
DOI: 10.1080/10599240801985373
PMID: 19042688

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Abstract

This was a 3-year retrospective cohort study of traumatic injuries in a midwestern pork meatpacking plant. Based on n = 5410 workers, this was a diverse workforce: Caucasian (56.6%), Hispanic (38.9%), African American (2.7%), Asian (1.1%) and Native American (0.8%). There were n = 1655 employees with traumatic injuries during this period. At 6 months of employment, the probability of injury was 33% in the harvest workers who were responsible for slaughter operations. The overall incidence injury rate was 22.76 per 100 full-time employees per year. Women experienced a higher incidence for injury than men. The risk ratio (RR) for traumatic injury was significantly lower in Hispanic workers compared to Caucasians (RR = 0.54, 95% CI = 0.49DS0.60) and nonsignificantly higher in African American and Native American workers after adjusting for age, gender, work section assignment, and experience (RR = 1.33, 95% CI = 1.21DS1.47). These findings suggest that either Hispanics are very safe employees or they underreport injuries. We make the case for the latter in the discussion.

Nursing Statistics Trauma Blacks Hispanics Regression Blue Collar Workers Meat Wounds and Injuries Adult Asians Confidence Intervals Cox Proportional Hazards Model Employment Female Kaplan-Meier Estimator Male Middle Age Midwestern United States Native Americans Prospective Studies Retrospective Design Time Factors Whites Human

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