Estimating the Nonfatal Injury Undercount in Agriculture from 2004 to 2019

Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.13031/jash.15039
Isabelle Picciotto, Timothy K. M. Beatty, A. Hill
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Abstract

HighlightsGovernment estimates of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses understate the hazards in U.S. agriculture.From 2004 to 2019, government estimates only captured 13% to 26% of the true number of nonfatal injuries.Estimates of nonfatal injuries are more accurate for crop production than for animal production.Estimates are more accurate over time, with a decline in self-employed and unpaid family labor in agriculture.Abstract. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics provides annual estimates of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses by U.S. industry sector. We performed a series of corrections to these estimates for each year from 2004 through 2019 to account for institutional and behavioral drivers of the undercount in the sample used to construct these estimates for the U.S. agricultural industry. Institutional factors consisted of the exclusion of small farms and self-employed and family workers, as well as the employment undercount due to the highly seasonal nature of agricultural work. Behavioral factors consisted of willful and negligent underreporting by employers. We updated the estimates using information on the number of people employed in the excluded portions of the agricultural industry and estimates of the underreporting rate from prior work. Over this period, we show that the government estimates only captured 13% to 26% of the true number of nonfatal injuries and illnesses, missing 74% to 87% of the true case counts each year. The government estimates were more accurate for crop production, missing an average of 77% of cases, than for animal production, missing an average of 83% of cases. Willful and negligent underreporting was the largest contributor to the undercount, followed by the exclusion of self-employed and unpaid family workers. Keywords: Agriculture, Nonfatal injuries and illnesses, Occupational injuries, Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses, Undercount.
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估计2004年至2019年农业非致命伤害漏报情况
政府对非致命性职业伤害和疾病的估计低估了美国农业的危害。从2004年到2019年,政府估计的非致命伤害数量仅占真实数量的13%至26%。对作物生产的非致命伤害的估计比对动物生产的估计更准确。随着时间的推移,随着农业中个体经营和无偿家庭劳动的减少,估计更加准确。美国劳工统计局提供了美国工业部门非致命性职业伤害和疾病的年度估计。从2004年到2019年,我们每年都对这些估计进行了一系列修正,以解释用于构建美国农业估计的样本中低估的制度和行为驱动因素。体制因素包括排除小农场、自营职业者和家庭工人,以及由于农业工作的高度季节性而导致的就业人数不足。行为因素包括雇主故意和疏忽的少报。我们使用被排除在外的农业部门的就业人数信息和先前工作中对低报率的估计更新了估计。在此期间,我们发现政府估计的非致命伤害和疾病的真实数量仅占13%至26%,每年的真实病例数遗漏了74%至87%。政府对农作物生产的估计更为准确,平均遗漏了77%的病例,而对动物生产的估计则平均遗漏了83%。故意和疏忽漏报是造成漏报的最大原因,其次是个体户和无薪家庭工人。关键词:农业,非致命性伤害与疾病,职业伤害,工伤与疾病调查,漏报
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