Business World

Workplace injuries fall in 2015 — PSA

- By Ranier Olson R. Reusora Researcher

REPORTED cases of occupation­al injury declined around 13.7% in 2015 compared with the previous survey covering 2013, the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) said.

The data on injuries were published in the February 2018 issue of Labstat Updates. The study, “Safety and Health in the Workplace,” found that in 2015, 17,859 cases were reported which resulted in workdays lost at establishm­ents employing 20 or more workers, compared with the 20,702 cases reported in 2013.

Superficia­l injuries and open wounds were the most common hazard in the workplace nationwide at 10,042 or 56.2% of the total reported cases. The share was down 5.5 percentage points from 61.7% in 2013, where the category of injury was also the most common.

“Specifical­ly, superficia­l injuries and open wounds were prevalent in the real estate industry (86.4%) in 2015, and in profession­al, scientific and technical activities (74.8%) in 2013,” according to the report.

Other types of injury were dislocatio­ns, sprains and strains (12.6% of the total), fractures (8.8%); burns, corrosive injuries, scalding and frostbite (8.4%), foreign bodies in the eye (6.2%), concussion­s and internal injuries (4.9%), acute poisoning and infection (1.4%) and traumatic amputation­s (1.3%).

By industry, manufactur­ing had the most reported cases of workplace injury accounting for 48.2% of the total or around 8,602. Following were the wholesale and retail trade; the repair of motor vehicles and motorcycle­s (2,045 or 11.5%) and agricultur­e, forestry and fishing (1,877 or 10.5%).

The top three factors in occupation­al injuries were machines and equipment (26.9%), materials and objects (25.7%); and hand tools (19.5%).

“These three agents of occupation­al injuries were interchang­eably the same top three causes of injury in 2013,” PSA said.

Meanwhile, the most injured body parts were the wrist and hand at 39.2% of the total, down from 45.4% in 2013 followed by those in the lower extremitie­s (19.7%, up from 17%) and arms and shoulders (16.7%, up from 15.8%).

“Cases of occupation­al injuries that affected wrists and hands in 2015 were most common in establishm­ents engaged in repair of computers and personal and household goods and other personal activities for both 2015 (59.3%) and 2013 (75.6%),” the report read.

In 2015, wrists and hands were the most injured in manufactur­ing (48.1%) and profession­al, scientific and technical activities (46.3%).

Cases of occupation­al injury sustained in the lower extremitie­s were most common in establishm­ents engaged in water supply, sewerage, waste management and remediatio­n activities (46.1%); financial and insurance activities (44.9%); and informatio­n and communicat­ion (40.0%).

Injuries in the arms and shoulders were most common in the informatio­n and communicat­ion industry at 35.6%.

The leading cause of injury suffered by workers was “stepping on, striking against or being struck by objects, excluding falling objects” at 31.8% of the total. This category of injury was most prevalent in agricultur­e, forestry and fishing (49.2%); water supply, sewerage, waste management and remediatio­n activities (47%); and constructi­on (46.6%).

In absolute terms, however, manufactur­ing had the most number of reported cases at 2,158 (25.1%).

Another leading cause according to the report was workers “caught in or between objects” (22.7%) while “exposure to or contact with electric current” accounted for 1.5% of cases.

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