Medicine Hat News

Older people dying on job at higher rate than all workers

- MARIA INES ZAMUDIO AND MICHELLE MINKOFF

Older people are dying on the job at a higher rate than workers overall, even as the rate of workplace fatalities decreases, according to an Associated Press analysis of federal statistics.

It’s a trend that’s particular­ly alarming as baby boomers reject the traditiona­l retirement age of 65 and keep working. The U.S. government estimates that by 2024, older workers will account for 25 per cent of the labour market.

Getting old — and the physical changes associated with it — “could potentiall­y make a workplace injury into a much more serious injury or a potentiall­y fatal injury,” said Ken Scott, an epidemiolo­gist with the Denver Public Health Department.

Gerontolog­ists say those changes include gradually worsening vision and hearing impairment, reduced response time, balance issues and chronic medical or muscle or bone problems such as arthritis.

In 2015, about 35 per cent of the fatal workplace accidents involved a worker 55 and older — or 1,681 of the 4,836 fatalities reported nationally.

William White, 56, was one of them. White fell 25 feet while working at Testa Produce Inc. on Chicago’s South Side. He later died of his injuries.

“I thought it wouldn’t happen to him,” his son, William White Jr., said in an interview. “Accidents happen. He just made the wrong move.”

The AP analysis showed that the workplace fatality rate for all workers — and for those 55 and older — decreased by 22 per cent between 2006 and 2015. But the rate of fatal accidents among older workers during that time period was 50 per cent to 65 per cent higher than for all workers, depending on the year.

The number of deaths among all workers dropped from 5,480 in 2005 to 4,836 in 2015. By contrast, on-the-job fatalities among older workers increased slightly, from 1,562 to 1,681, the analysis shows.

During that time period, the number of older people in the workplace increased by 37 per cent. That compares with a 6 per cent rise in the population of workers overall.

Beware of stereotypi­ng

Ruth Finkelstei­n, co-director of Columbia University’s Aging Center, cautions against stereotypi­ng. She said older people have a range of physical and mental abilities and that it’s dangerous to lump all people in an age group together because it could lead to discrimina­tion.

She said she’s not sure that older workers need much more protection than younger workers, but agreed there is a need for all workers to have more protection. “We are not paying enough attention to occupation­al safety in this country,” she said.

The AP analysis is based on data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Census for Fatal Occupation­al Injuries and from one-year estimates from the American Community Survey, which looks at the working population. It excludes cases where the cause of death was from a “natural cause,” including a heart attack or stroke.

AP also examined the number and types of accidents in which older workers died between 2011, when the bureau changed the way it categorize­d accidents, to 2015:

—Fall-related fatalities rose 20 per cent.

—Contact with objects and equipment increased 17 per cent.

—Transporta­tion accidents increased 15 per cent.

—Fires and explosions decreased by 8 per cent.

“We expect that there will be more older workers increasing each year and they will represent a greater share (of the fatalities) over the last couple of decades,” said Scott, the Denver epidemiolo­gist. “This issue of elevated risk is something we should be paying close attention to.”

More difficult

An Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research poll found in 2013 that 44 per cent of older Americans said their job required physical effort most or almost all of the time, and 36 per cent said it was more difficult to complete the physical requiremen­ts of their jobs than it was when they were younger.

William White Jr. said his father had been working in the same Chicago-based warehouse for over a decade and was a manager when he fell to his death on Sept. 24, 2015.

“He went up to get an item for the delivery driver and the next thing you know he made a wrong move and fell. The job is fast-pace and everybody is rushing,” the 26-year-old Chicago resident said.

Thomas Stiede, principal officer for Teamsters Local 703, said White knew the safety procedures and he can’t understand why White didn’t wear a safety harness. “He was a very conscienti­ous employee,” he said, his voice cracking with emotion.

Testa Inc. was fined $12,600 by the U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion for failing to provide safety training. The company declined to comment for this story.

The same year White died, the fatal accident rate in Illinois for older workers was 4.5 per 100,000 workers, 60 per cent higher than the comparable rate for all workers.

In most states, the fatal accident rates for older workers were consistent­ly higher than comparable rates for all workers.

Nevada, New Jersey and Washington had the greatest per cent increase in fatal accident rates for older workers between 2006 and 2015.

The three states with the biggest per cent decrease were Hawaii, Oregon and Vermont.

Eight states saw their overall workplace fatality rate drop, even as the rate for older workers increased: Massachuse­tts, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New York, Texas, Utah and Washington.

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