a Northwest Forest Worker Center , Albany , CA , USA.
b Department of Psychosocial & Community Health , Occupational Health Nursing Program, University of Washington School of Nursing , Seattle , WA , USA.
J Agromedicine. 2019 Apr;24(2):186-196. doi: 10.1080/1059924X.2019.1567421. Epub 2019 Feb 8.
Forestry services is a hazardous industry with high job-related injury, illness, and fatality rates. The Northwest workforce is largely Spanish-speaking, Latino, and immigrant, working in poor conditions with insufficient attention paid to safety and health. Institutional racism fundamentally shapes the structural vulnerability of Latino immigrant workers. Given this context, we sought to understand how workplace organizational factors and safety climate affect job-related injuries in this industry.
We developed 23 case studies from personal interviews after selecting from an initial participant survey pool of 99 Latino forest workers in southern Oregon who had been injured at work in the previous 2 years. Workers were recruited through snowball sampling and door-to-door canvassing. Questions spanned work conditions, tasks, employer safety practices, injury experience, medical treatment, and workers' compensation benefits.
Workers reported broken bones, chainsaw lacerations, back pain, heat and pesticide illnesses, and other occupational injuries. One-third of the cases fell into a Systems Functional category in which they reported their injuries to their supervisors and received medical treatment and workers' compensation benefits. The remaining two-thirds experienced System Failures with difficulties in receiving medical treatment and/or workers' compensation benefits, employer direction to not report, being fired, or seeking alternative home remedies.
Workers employed by companies with more indicators of safety climate were more likely to obtain adequate treatment for their injuries and fully recover. Workers for whom interpretation at medical exams was provided by someone unaffiliated with their employers also reported better treatment and recovery outcomes.
林业服务是一个危险的行业,与工作相关的伤害、疾病和死亡率都很高。西北部的劳动力主要是讲西班牙语的、拉丁裔和移民,工作条件差,对安全和健康关注不足。制度性种族主义从根本上塑造了拉丁裔移民工人的结构性脆弱性。考虑到这一背景,我们试图了解工作场所的组织因素和安全氛围如何影响该行业的工作相关伤害。
我们从最初的 99 名在过去 2 年内工作中受伤的南俄勒冈州拉丁裔林业工人的参与者调查中选择了 23 个案例研究,这些工人都是通过滚雪球抽样和挨家挨户走访招募来的。问题涵盖工作条件、任务、雇主安全措施、受伤经历、医疗和工人赔偿福利。
工人报告了骨折、链锯割伤、背痛、热和农药病以及其他职业伤害。三分之一的病例属于系统功能类别,他们向主管报告了受伤情况,并接受了医疗和工人赔偿福利。其余三分之二的病例经历了系统故障,在获得医疗和/或工人赔偿福利、雇主指示不报告、被解雇或寻求替代家庭疗法方面遇到困难。
在安全氛围指标更多的公司工作的工人更有可能获得充分的治疗和完全康复。在医疗检查中由与雇主无关的人提供口译的工人也报告了更好的治疗和康复结果。