Program in Epidemiology, Oregon State University College of Public Health and Human Sciences, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
Program in Environmental and Occupational Health, Oregon State University College of Public Health and Human Sciences, Corvallis, Oregon, USA.
J Agromedicine. 2019 Oct;24(4):316-323. doi: 10.1080/1059924X.2019.1638860. Epub 2019 Jul 23.
: Non-fatal injuries in the high risk US Dungeness crab fishery have been under-documented, despite their potential for lost work time and income, long-term disability, and early unwanted retirement. The Fishermen Led Injury Prevention Program (FLIPP) characterized injuries in this fishery, in order to identify work hazards and inform injury control measures.: The FLIPP injury survey was completed by 426 fishermen in 23 Washington, Oregon, and California fishing ports prior to the 2015-2016 Dungeness crab season; 413 (97%) provided injury information for this analysis. Participants indicated whether they had been injured in the previous 12 months, described the injury, any treatments received, and whether the injury limited their ability to work.: Participants were mostly male (98%), more than half (56.6%) worked as deckhands, and reported considerable fishing experience (median = 14 years, interquartile range 5-27). Eighty-nine fishermen (21.5%) reported an injury incident in the past year, of which 49 (55.1%) were limiting. The 89 incidents yielded 102 injuries, of which nearly two-thirds were sprains/strains (23, 22.5%), surface wounds/bruises (17, 15.0%), cuts (18, 17.6%), or punctures (11, 10.8%). More severe injuries, including eight fractures, were rare. The majority of injuries received either no treatment (27, 26.5%) or first aid (35, 34.3%); clinical care was less common (22, 21.6%), and emergency care rare (3, 2.9%).: One in five Dungeness crab fishermen reported an injury incident in the previous year. Most injuries were not severe and did not result in clinical care, but approximately half were work-limiting. Control measures must account for the remote and resource-limited workplace in commercial fishing.
美国高危珍宝蟹渔业的非致命性伤害记录不足,尽管这些伤害可能导致工作时间和收入损失、长期残疾和提前非自愿退休。渔民主导的伤害预防计划(FLIPP)对该渔业的伤害进行了描述,以便确定工作危害并为伤害控制措施提供信息。
在 2015-2016 年珍宝蟹捕捞季之前,FLIPP 伤害调查在华盛顿、俄勒冈和加利福尼亚的 23 个渔港完成,426 名渔民参与了调查;其中 413 人(97%)提供了此次分析的伤害信息。参与者表示他们是否在过去 12 个月内受伤,描述了受伤情况、接受的任何治疗以及受伤是否限制了他们的工作能力。
参与者主要是男性(98%),超过一半(56.6%)是甲板工人,并且有相当丰富的捕鱼经验(中位数=14 年,四分位距 5-27)。89 名渔民(21.5%)报告在过去一年中发生了伤害事件,其中 49 人(55.1%)受到限制。这 89 起事件导致 102 起伤害,其中近三分之二是扭伤/拉伤(23 起,22.5%)、表面伤口/瘀伤(17 起,15.0%)、割伤(18 起,17.6%)或刺伤(11 起,10.8%)。更严重的伤害,包括 8 例骨折,很少见。大多数伤害要么没有接受治疗(27 起,26.5%),要么只接受了急救(35 起,34.3%);接受临床治疗的情况较少(22 起,21.6%),接受紧急治疗的情况更为罕见(3 起,2.9%)。
五分之一的珍宝蟹渔民报告在过去一年中发生了伤害事件。大多数伤害并不严重,也不需要临床治疗,但大约一半的伤害限制了工作。控制措施必须考虑到商业捕鱼偏远和资源有限的工作场所。