Commercial Fishing Fatalities and Injuries Described by Linked Vessel Incidents.

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Journal of Agromedicine Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2023-06-30 DOI:10.1080/1059924X.2023.2229827
Laurel Kincl, Solaiman Doza, Jasmine Nahorniak, Samantha Case, Amelia Vaughan, Viktor Bovbjerg
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: The Risk Information System for Commercial Fishing (RISC Fishing) merged information on fishermen and vessel incident types from various databases. This descriptive study examined linked fisherman injury records (fatal and nonfatal) and vessel incident records in Oregon and Washington from 2000 to 2018 in the RISC Fishing database. The circumstances of incidents and any association with fishermen outcomes were explored to identify injury prevention opportunities.

Methods: The statistical analyses included a descriptive study of incidents related to the injury characteristics and frequency of outcomes by incident type. Further analyses included contingency tables and Pearson Chi-Square tests for selected variables to determine if there were associations between vessel incident outcomes (fatality, nonfatal injury, no injury).

Results: A total of 375 reported incidents with 93 cases of fatalities, 239 nonfatal injuries, and over 6,575 fishermen with no injury were described. Of fatalities, 90% were due to drowning, with only 2% of victims reported donning survival equipment. Deckhands experienced fatal and nonfatal injuries most frequently. The most common factors associated with nonfatal injuries included contact with objects (event), walking on vessel and hauling gear (work activities), and fractures and open wounds (nature). The most common final event leading to a vessel disaster with no injury being reported was sinking (76%). Distributions between the incident outcomes (fatality, nonfatal injury, and no injury) differed by vessel activity/type, fishery/gear, and event leading to the incident.

Conclusion: Linked information of fishermen injury outcomes and vessel incident information showed that events and settings that involve fatalities are qualitatively different from incidents resulting in only nonfatal injuries or uninjured survivors. Vessel-level approaches for mitigating fatalities, such as ensuring vessel stability, improving navigation/operation decisions, and spotlighting survival equipment policies/rescue priorities could have a significant impact. Work task-specific prevention strategies for nonfatal injuries related to the larger vessels (catcher/processors and processors) and smaller vessels (with pot/trap gears) are paramount. The use of linked information provided in reports can provide a fuller incident picture to advance efforts to improve the working conditions of commercial fishermen.

关联船舶事件所描述的商业捕鱼死亡和伤害。
目标:商业捕鱼风险信息系统(RISC Fishing)合并了来自各种数据库的渔民和船只事故类型的信息。这项描述性研究检查了RISC渔业数据库中2000年至2018年俄勒冈州和华盛顿州的相关渔民伤害记录(致命和非致命)和船只事故记录。调查了事件的情况以及与渔民结果的任何关联,以确定预防伤害的机会。方法:统计分析包括按事件类型对与伤害特征和结果频率相关的事件进行描述性研究。进一步的分析包括对所选变量的列联表和Pearson Chi Square检验,以确定船舶事故结果(死亡、非致命伤害、无伤害)之间是否存在关联。结果:共报告了375起事故,其中93起死亡,239起非致命伤害,6575多名渔民未受伤。在死亡人数中,90%是溺水造成的,只有2%的受害者报告说他们穿戴了救生设备。甲板工遭遇致命和非致命伤害的频率最高。与非致命性伤害相关的最常见因素包括接触物体(事件)、在船上行走和搬运设备(工作活动)、骨折和开放性伤口(性质)。导致船只失事且无人员受伤报告的最常见的最后事件是沉船(76%)。事故结果(死亡、非致命性伤害和无伤害)之间的分布因船舶活动/类型、渔业/渔具和导致事故的事件而异。结论:渔民受伤结果和船只事故信息的关联信息表明,涉及死亡的事件和环境与仅导致非致命伤害或未受伤幸存者的事件有质的不同。减少死亡人数的船舶级方法,如确保船舶稳定性、改进航行/操作决策以及突出救生设备政策/救援优先事项,可能会产生重大影响。针对与较大容器(捕集器/处理器和处理器)和较小容器(带罐/捕集器)相关的非致命性伤害的工作任务特定预防策略至关重要。使用报告中提供的相关信息可以提供更全面的事件情况,以推动改善商业渔民工作条件的努力。
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来源期刊
Journal of Agromedicine
Journal of Agromedicine PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
20.80%
发文量
84
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Agromedicine: Practice, Policy, and Research publishes translational research, reports and editorials related to agricultural health, safety and medicine. The Journal of Agromedicine seeks to engage the global agricultural health and safety community including rural health care providers, agricultural health and safety practitioners, academic researchers, government agencies, policy makers, and others. The Journal of Agromedicine is committed to providing its readers with relevant, rigorously peer-reviewed, original articles. The journal welcomes high quality submissions as they relate to agricultural health and safety in the areas of: • Behavioral and Mental Health • Climate Change • Education/Training • Emerging Practices • Environmental Public Health • Epidemiology • Ergonomics • Injury Prevention • Occupational and Industrial Health • Pesticides • Policy • Safety Interventions and Evaluation • Technology
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