Loomis Dana, Schulman Michael D, Bailer A John, Stainback Kevin, Wheeler Matthew, Richardson David B, Marshall Stephen W
School of Public Health, MS-274, University of Nevada, Reno, NV 89557-0274, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2009 Aug;99(8):1400-8. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2007.131409. Epub 2009 Jun 18.
We investigated the extent to which the political economy of US states, including the relative power of organized labor, predicts rates of fatal occupational injury.
We described states' political economies with 6 contextual variables measuring social and political conditions: "right-to-work" laws, union membership density, labor grievance rates, state government debt, unemployment rates, and social wage payments. We obtained data on fatal occupational injuries from the National Traumatic Occupational Fatality surveillance system and population data from the US national census. We used Poisson regression methods to analyze relationships for the years 1980 and 1995.
States differed notably with respect to political-economic characteristics and occupational fatality rates, although these characteristics were more homogeneous within rather than between regions. Industry and workforce composition contributed significantly to differences in state injury rates, but political-economic characteristics of states were also significantly associated with injury rates, after adjustment accounting for those factors.
Higher rates of fatal occupational injury were associated with a state policy climate favoring business over labor, with distinct regional clustering of such state policies in the South and Northeast.
我们调查了美国各州的政治经济状况,包括工会组织的相对力量,对致命职业伤害发生率的预测程度。
我们用6个衡量社会和政治状况的背景变量来描述各州的政治经济:“工作权利”法、工会会员密度、劳工申诉率、州政府债务、失业率和社会工资支付情况。我们从国家创伤职业死亡监测系统获取了致命职业伤害的数据,并从美国全国人口普查中获取了人口数据。我们使用泊松回归方法分析了1980年和1995年的相关关系。
各州在政治经济特征和职业死亡率方面存在显著差异,尽管这些特征在区域内部而非区域之间更为同质化。行业和劳动力构成对各州伤害率的差异有显著影响,但在对这些因素进行调整后,各州的政治经济特征也与伤害率显著相关。
致命职业伤害发生率较高与一种有利于企业而非劳工的州政策环境相关,此类州政策在南部和东北部有明显的区域聚集。