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Journal Article

Citation

Davies H, Koehlmoos TP, Courtice MN, Ahmad SA. Int. J. Occup. Environ. Health 2011; 17(3): 214-222.

Affiliation

World Health Organization Bangladesh. hugh.davies@ubc.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Maney Pub.)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

21905389

Abstract

Occupational injuries are estimated to cause over 300,000 deaths per year worldwide. Many low- and middle-income countries often lack effective injury surveillance systems. We attempted to utilize household surveys to collect occupational injury data to develop more accurate injury incidence data. We undertook a pilot study of this approach in the rural area of Mirsarai, Bangladesh. Surveys were administered to 2,017 males and 120 females. Sixty-five percent were self-employed and over 80% worked in work places with less than six employees; over 60% worked seven days per week. Just over 50% of subjects reported at least one injury at work in the prior year. Incidence of lost-time injuries was 31%. The median number of work days lost was 7. The injury rates were higher than ILO estimates for Bangladesh, perhaps because of our study's focus on a rural population. We recommend expanding to larger and a more representative sample of the Bangladesh working community.


Language: en

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