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The 10 most dangerous jobs in America

Posted: 2003-10-15 04:59pm
by Soontir C'boath
Original Link
The workplace death rate continued to fall in 2002, but some jobs remain staggeringly risky.

By Kim Khan

Loggers and fishermen faced the most daunting odds of dying at work in 2002, but the highways remained the most dangerous place for American workers.

On-the-job accidents and homicides claimed the lives of 5,524 Americans last year, down 6.6% from 2001. The Bureau of Labor Statistics says the workplace death rate is the lowest it has seen since recordkeeping began in 1992.

Of that 5,524, only 104 were timber-cutters, but those fatalities represent a death rate nearly 30 times that of a typical workplace. Loggers died at a rate of 117.8 per 100,000 workers, the BLS said, with most of them killed by falling trees. The death rate for American workplaces as a whole was 4 per 100,000. (That's among occupations with more than 30 fatalities in 2002 and more than 45,000 employed.)

Fishing was the second most dangerous occupation, with 71.1 deaths for every 100,000 workers, followed by pilots and navigators, 69.8, structural metal workers, 58.2, and, perhaps surprisingly, drivers-sales workers, which include pizza delivery drivers at 37.9.

Roofing is another dangerous job, with 37 deaths for every 100,000 workers. Electric power installers, farm occupation, construction laborer and truck drivers also made the top 10.

The 10 most dangerous jobs
Occupation Fatalities per 100,000
Timber cutters 117.8
Fishers 71.1
Pilots and navigators 69.8
Structural metal workers 58.2
Drivers-sales workers 37.9
Roofers 37
Electrical power installers 32.5
Farm occupations 28
Construction laborers 27.7
Truck drivers 25
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics; survey of occupations with minimum 30 fatalities and 45,000 workers in 2002

Mining tops list of dangerous industries
Going underground is still one of the most dangerous jobs. Mining is the most perilous industry as a whole to work in, according to the BLS.

There were 23.5 deaths in mining for every 100,000 workers in 2002, the BLS said. That was just slightly ahead of agriculture, forestry and fishing, where there were 22.7 deaths for every 100,000 workers. But deaths in mining are still down 22% from the 2001 rate.

Overall, the number of deaths occurring in the workplace dropped 6.6% from the year before to 5,524, the lowest number since the workplace fatality census was started in 1992, excluding the Sept. 11 attacks. Following mining and agriculture, construction saw 12.2 deaths per 100,000 workers. Transportation, which includes trucking and air travel, saw 11.3 work-related deaths per 100,000 workers.

“In addition to the new all-time lows in total workplace fatalities and fatality rates, it is especially encouraging to see a 6% decrease in fatalities among Hispanic workers after seeing increases every year since 1995,” Labor Secretary Elaine Chow said. “The Department's outreach efforts, such as the Hispanic Task Force on Worker Safety, our Spanish-language Web sites and hiring of Spanish-speaking OSHA employees, will continue to make Hispanic workers safer.”

On-the-job killers
Type of incident 2002 deaths
Aircraft accidents 192
Caught in running equipment 110
Drowning 60
Electrocution 289
Exposure to substances 98
Falls from ladder 126
Falls from roof 143
Fires/explosions 165
Highway collisions 635
Assaults/violence 840
Jackknifed or overturned truck 312
Overturned farm/industrial equipment 164
Struck by falling/flying object 506
Struck by vehicle 356
Suicides 199

Workplace murders fall
Homicides in the workplace fell to 609 in 2002. The total is slightly lower than the 643 in 2001, but well below the in high of workplace homicides of 1,080 in 1994. Nearly nine out of 10 retail cashiers who died on the job last year were murdered.

Restaurant and hotel management also saw a high percentage of workplace murders, with homicides accounting for 80% of workplace deaths. Cab and limousine drivers were also targeted. Fifty-nine percent of drivers and chauffeurs killed on the job were murdered, much higher than the percentage killed in highway accidents.

But highway accidents were the biggest overall killer in 2002, accounting for a quarter of all worker deaths. Falls killed 13%. Men were still, by far, the most likely to be killed on the job. Ninety-two percent of all workplace fatalities were male.

Among the 441 women who died on the job, though, the chief cause of death was homicide.

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:01pm
by Joe
Hmm, I'm surprised "West Coach Rapper" isn't on there.

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:03pm
by Zaia
Bah, I was looking for middle school teacher stats.

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:08pm
by Gil Hamilton
Zaia wrote:Bah, I was looking for middle school teacher stats.
Well, I understand that middle school and high school teachers have a high suicide rate, if it helps. :D

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:10pm
by Zaia
Gil Hamilton wrote:
Zaia wrote:Bah, I was looking for middle school teacher stats.
Well, I understand that middle school and high school teachers have a high suicide rate, if it helps. :D
*sits on sill of open window* Indeed, we do; it's just too hard...to....too hard...to...to....--*prolonged yell and soft thud*

:P

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:14pm
by Gil Hamilton
Zaia wrote:*sits on sill of open window* Indeed, we do; it's just too hard...to....too hard...to...to....--*prolonged yell and soft thud*

:P
Good thing you fell backwards onto the soft pillows on the floor beneath your window. :)

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:16pm
by El Moose Monstero
*leans in through the window*
Not to mention the fact that we're on the first floor...
*picks glass out of skull, as he realises that the window had slammed shut in the gap between posts*

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:16pm
by Captain Cyran
Zaia wrote:
Gil Hamilton wrote:
Zaia wrote:Bah, I was looking for middle school teacher stats.
Well, I understand that middle school and high school teachers have a high suicide rate, if it helps. :D
*sits on sill of open window* Indeed, we do; it's just too hard...to....too hard...to...to....--*prolonged yell and soft thud*

:P
*wimpers, as he's been fallen on.*

And you have it wrong Zaia...Middle/High school teachers have the highest rating of homicide.

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:30pm
by Zaia
Captain_Cyran wrote:And you have it wrong Zaia...Middle/High school teachers have the highest rating of homicide.[/i]
That was actually my original thought, honestly, with the school shootings and such... :|

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:33pm
by Captain Cyran
Zaia wrote:
Captain_Cyran wrote:And you have it wrong Zaia...Middle/High school teachers have the highest rating of homicide.[/i]
That was actually my original thought, honestly, with the school shootings and such... :|
Err, homicide means you're the one offing the brats. And it's...funny? Maybe not?...ok...*sulks*

Posted: 2003-10-15 05:47pm
by Zaia
Captain_Cyran wrote:
Zaia wrote:
Captain_Cyran wrote:And you have it wrong Zaia...Middle/High school teachers have the highest rating of homicide.[/i]
That was actually my original thought, honestly, with the school shootings and such... :|
Err, homicide means you're the one offing the brats. And it's...funny? Maybe not?...ok...*sulks*
Errr, if it's the most dangerous professions, and we're talking about homicide (which is just another word for murder, no?), then it would be the students murdering the teachers.....right?

Posted: 2003-10-15 07:13pm
by Alyeska
That list is technicaly incorrect. The most dangerous profession in the United States is crab fishing. You can only do it in Alaska in a two week period in the worst weather imaginable. There are no more then a thousand people working this job in a two week time span and they ALWAYS loose a boat and at least a half dozen people every year.

Posted: 2003-10-15 07:16pm
by Asst. Asst. Lt. Cmdr. Smi
You mean "gansta" isn't a legitimate career track? Unless it's safer than I thought, there goes my plans for the future.

Posted: 2003-10-15 10:18pm
by EmperorMing
Asst. Asst. Lt. Cmdr. Smi wrote:You mean "gansta" isn't a legitimate career track? Unless it's safer than I thought, there goes my plans for the future.
Should be "Gangsta producer". :P

Posted: 2003-10-15 10:24pm
by The Dark
I'm surprised clinical psychologist isn't on there just due to the suicide rate. Last I'd heard they were still the most suicide-prone of all occupations. And after working for a counseling center for three years, I can understand why. Some of the stuff that comes through here...:wtf:

Posted: 2003-10-15 10:38pm
by Darth Wong
I'm sure they only profiled common professions. "Drug courier" seems like a rather risky career choice, but I don't see it there :)

Posted: 2003-10-15 10:43pm
by Gil Hamilton
I'm pretty sure that bit martial arts character in a 70s Kung-Fu film is the most deadly profession there is.

*someone whispers something to him*

YOU MEAN THOSE AREN'T DOCUMENTARIES?!

Posted: 2003-10-16 01:41am
by Gandalf
I think the most dangerous occupation is being a student at highschool, the teachers can retraeat to the staff rooms and such, the students need camo and good hiding techniques.

Posted: 2003-10-16 02:07am
by TrailerParkJawa
Darth Wong wrote:I'm sure they only profiled common professions. "Drug courier" seems like a rather risky career choice, but I don't see it there :)
Especially if you are one of those guys that swallow the drugs wrapped in condoms. :)

Posted: 2003-10-16 03:35am
by jenat-lai
I wonder what type of pilots they mean. Airline only? Airline and military? Airline military and hobbyists? I ceartainly don't find 62 airline crashes a year in the US alone to be accurate, unless you include things like dead-heading off-duty pilots on aircraft included in statistics, or having the Flight Instructors and students in fatal accidents included also

Posted: 2003-10-16 06:14am
by Peregrin Toker
I thought that the most dangerous job was to be a warzone-correspondent (sp??) journalist.

Posted: 2003-10-16 06:34am
by Robert Treder
Simon H.Johansen wrote:I thought that the most dangerous job was to be a warzone-correspondent (sp??) journalist.
The article's about the most dangerous job in America, though. ;)

Posted: 2003-10-16 07:29am
by Spyder
Robert Treder wrote:
Simon H.Johansen wrote:I thought that the most dangerous job was to be a warzone-correspondent (sp??) journalist.
The article's about the most dangerous job in America, though. ;)
Eh, give it another century or two.

Posted: 2003-10-16 04:10pm
by CmdrWilkens
Well that's fatalities though i wonder if Retail still tops the list for total violent incidents against co-workers. That was a study the USPS did in order to prove that "going postal" wasn't really the right metaphor.

Posted: 2003-10-16 04:39pm
by beyond hope
I'm surprised that law enforcement (especially process server) didn't make the list.