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Journal Article

Citation

Gurcanli GE, Müngen U. Ind. Health 2013; 51(6): 581-595.

Affiliation

Department of Civil Engineering, Technical University of Istanbul, Turkey.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, National Institute of Industrial Health, Japan)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

24077446

Abstract

Construction is one of the world's biggest industry that includes jobs as diverse as building, civil engineering, demolition, renovation, repair and maintenance. Construction workers are exposed to a wide variety of hazards. This study analyzes 1,117 expert witness reports which were submitted to criminal and labour courts. These reports are from all regions of the country and cover the period 1972-2008. Accidents were classified by the consequence of the incident, time and main causes of the accident, construction type, occupation of the victim, activity at time of the accident and party responsible for the accident. Falls (54.1%), struck by thrown/falling object (12.9%), structural collapses (9.9%) and electrocutions (7.5%) rank first four places. The accidents were most likely between the hours 15.00 and 17.00 (22.6%), 10:00-12:00 (18.7) and just after the lunchtime (9.9%). Additionally, the most common accidents were further divided into sub-types. Expert-witness assessments were used to identify the parties at fault and what acts of negligence typically lead to accidents. Nearly two thirds of the faulty and negligent acts are carried out by the employers and employees are responsible for almost one third of all cases.


Language: en

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