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  8. Women Experience Fewer Job-related Injuries and Deaths Than Men

Women Experience Fewer Job-related Injuries and Deaths Than Men

File(s)
Women_Experience_Fewer_Job_related_Injuries_and_Deaths.pdf (137.64 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/78951
Collections
Federal Publications
Publications of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Author
Bureau of Labor Statistics
Abstract

[Excerpt] Women incurred less than one tenth of the job-related fatal injuries and about one-third of the nonfatal injuries and illnesses that required time off to recuperate in 1992-96. During this period women accounted for just under 50 percent of the Nation's workforce. One explanation for this large discrepancy is that women are employed in relatively less dangerous jobs such as teaching or service occupations. Few women work in the construction trades or in other high-risk jobs where work is generally performed outdoors. But if more women enter high-risk occupations their risk of injury or death may increase.

Date Issued
1998-07-01
Keywords
workplace accidents
•
death
•
fatalities
•
gender
•
male
•
female
•
occupational injuries
Type
government record

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