Occupational Accidents with Agricultural Machinery in Austria

J Agromedicine. 2016;21(1):61-70. doi: 10.1080/1059924X.2015.1075451.

Abstract

The number of recognized accidents with fatalities during agricultural and forestry work, despite better technology and coordinated prevention and trainings, is still very high in Austria. The accident scenarios in which people are injured are very different on farms. The common causes of accidents in agriculture and forestry are the loss of control of machine, means of transport or handling equipment, hand-held tool, and object or animal, followed by slipping, stumbling and falling, breakage, bursting, splitting, slipping, fall, and collapse of material agent. In the literature, a number of studies of general (machine- and animal-related accidents) and specific (machine-related accidents) agricultural and forestry accident situations can be found that refer to different databases. From the database Data of the Austrian Workers Compensation Board (AUVA) about occupational accidents with different agricultural machinery over the period 2008-2010 in Austria, main characteristics of the accident, the victim, and the employer as well as variables on causes and circumstances by frequency and contexts of parameters were statistically analyzed by employing the chi-square test and odds ratio. The aim of the study was to determine the information content and quality of the European Statistics on Accidents at Work (ESAW) variables to evaluate safety gaps and risks as well as the accidental man-machine interaction.

Keywords: Accidents; agricultural machinery; data analysis.

MeSH terms

  • Accidents, Occupational / mortality
  • Accidents, Occupational / statistics & numerical data*
  • Adult
  • Agricultural Workers' Diseases / epidemiology
  • Agriculture / instrumentation*
  • Agriculture / statistics & numerical data*
  • Austria / epidemiology
  • Databases, Factual
  • Farmers / statistics & numerical data
  • Female
  • Forestry / statistics & numerical data
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Odds Ratio
  • Workplace
  • Wounds and Injuries / epidemiology