Occupational Injuries and Fatalities in the Roofing Contracting Industry

The purpose of this paper is twofold: (1) to determine jobs/tasks associated with current injury, illness, and fatality trends in the roofing industry; and (2) to identify current safety practices associated with the prevention of these illnesses, injuries, and fatalities. In order to achieve the pr...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of construction engineering and management 2005-11, Vol.131 (11), p.1233-1240
Hauptverfasser: Fredericks, Tycho K, Abudayyeh, Osama, Choi, Sang D, Wiersma, Mike, Charles, Marcia
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container_end_page 1240
container_issue 11
container_start_page 1233
container_title Journal of construction engineering and management
container_volume 131
creator Fredericks, Tycho K
Abudayyeh, Osama
Choi, Sang D
Wiersma, Mike
Charles, Marcia
description The purpose of this paper is twofold: (1) to determine jobs/tasks associated with current injury, illness, and fatality trends in the roofing industry; and (2) to identify current safety practices associated with the prevention of these illnesses, injuries, and fatalities. In order to achieve the project objectives, a survey was designed and sent to Michigan roofing contractors. To design an adequate survey, the research team first collected background information using U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics online database, published research, and contractor interviews. Of the 48 roofing companies asked to participate, 24 completed the survey. The survey results indicated that hand and finger injuries due to cutting operations and back injuries due to the manual handling of heavy and bulky materials to be the most frequent roofing contracting task/injury combination. Falls from elevations as well as on the same level typically occurred when carrying heavy and bulky materials such as bundles of shingles on slippery and inclined walking/working surfaces. These findings from this study may assist safety professionals in the construction industry in making effective changes for improving safety and productivity.
doi_str_mv 10.1061/(ASCE)0733-9364(2005)131:11(1233)
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source American Society of Civil Engineers:NESLI2:Journals:2014; Business Source Complete
subjects Applied sciences
Buildings
Buildings. Public works
Construction works
Exact sciences and technology
External envelopes
Roof
Site organization
TECHNICAL PAPERS
Work safety
title Occupational Injuries and Fatalities in the Roofing Contracting Industry
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