Work-Related Fatalities Involving Children in New Zealand, 1999–2014

In high income countries, children under 15 years of age are exposed to workplace hazards when they visit or live on worksites or participate in formal or informal work. This study describes the causes and circumstances of unintentional child work-related fatal injuries (child WRFI) in New Zealand....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rebbecca Lilley, Bronwen McNoe, Gabrielle Davie, Brandon de Graaf, Tim Driscoll
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-12-01
Series:Children
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/8/1/4
id doaj-8e4b10a4d62a4c0da0318cf9bf8322bd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8e4b10a4d62a4c0da0318cf9bf8322bd2021-04-02T16:19:57ZengMDPI AGChildren2227-90672021-12-0184410.3390/children8010004Work-Related Fatalities Involving Children in New Zealand, 1999–2014Rebbecca Lilley0Bronwen McNoe1Gabrielle Davie2Brandon de Graaf3Tim Driscoll4Injury Prevention Research Unit, Otago Medical School, University of Otago, 9054 Dunedin, New ZealandInjury Prevention Research Unit, Otago Medical School, University of Otago, 9054 Dunedin, New ZealandInjury Prevention Research Unit, Otago Medical School, University of Otago, 9054 Dunedin, New ZealandInjury Prevention Research Unit, Otago Medical School, University of Otago, 9054 Dunedin, New ZealandSchool of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, AustraliaIn high income countries, children under 15 years of age are exposed to workplace hazards when they visit or live on worksites or participate in formal or informal work. This study describes the causes and circumstances of unintentional child work-related fatal injuries (child WRFI) in New Zealand. Potential cases were identified from the Mortality Collection using International Classification of Disease external cause codes: these were matched to Coronial records and reviewed for work-relatedness. Data were abstracted on the socio-demographic, employment and injury-related circumstances. Of the 1335 unintentional injury deaths in children from 1999 through 2014, 206 (15%) were identified as dying from a work-related injury: 9 workers and 197 bystanders—the majority involving vehicle crashes or being stuck by moving objects in incidents occurring on farms or public roads. Those at highest risk were males, preschoolers, and those of Māori or European ethnicity. Work made a notable contribution to the burden of unintentional fatal injury in children with most deaths highly preventable, largely by adult intervention and legislation. To address the determinants of child WRFI greater attention on rural farm and transport settings would result in a significant reduction in the injury mortality rates of New Zealand children.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/8/1/4injuryworkchildrenagriculturefarmtransport
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rebbecca Lilley
Bronwen McNoe
Gabrielle Davie
Brandon de Graaf
Tim Driscoll
spellingShingle Rebbecca Lilley
Bronwen McNoe
Gabrielle Davie
Brandon de Graaf
Tim Driscoll
Work-Related Fatalities Involving Children in New Zealand, 1999–2014
Children
injury
work
children
agriculture
farm
transport
author_facet Rebbecca Lilley
Bronwen McNoe
Gabrielle Davie
Brandon de Graaf
Tim Driscoll
author_sort Rebbecca Lilley
title Work-Related Fatalities Involving Children in New Zealand, 1999–2014
title_short Work-Related Fatalities Involving Children in New Zealand, 1999–2014
title_full Work-Related Fatalities Involving Children in New Zealand, 1999–2014
title_fullStr Work-Related Fatalities Involving Children in New Zealand, 1999–2014
title_full_unstemmed Work-Related Fatalities Involving Children in New Zealand, 1999–2014
title_sort work-related fatalities involving children in new zealand, 1999–2014
publisher MDPI AG
series Children
issn 2227-9067
publishDate 2021-12-01
description In high income countries, children under 15 years of age are exposed to workplace hazards when they visit or live on worksites or participate in formal or informal work. This study describes the causes and circumstances of unintentional child work-related fatal injuries (child WRFI) in New Zealand. Potential cases were identified from the Mortality Collection using International Classification of Disease external cause codes: these were matched to Coronial records and reviewed for work-relatedness. Data were abstracted on the socio-demographic, employment and injury-related circumstances. Of the 1335 unintentional injury deaths in children from 1999 through 2014, 206 (15%) were identified as dying from a work-related injury: 9 workers and 197 bystanders—the majority involving vehicle crashes or being stuck by moving objects in incidents occurring on farms or public roads. Those at highest risk were males, preschoolers, and those of Māori or European ethnicity. Work made a notable contribution to the burden of unintentional fatal injury in children with most deaths highly preventable, largely by adult intervention and legislation. To address the determinants of child WRFI greater attention on rural farm and transport settings would result in a significant reduction in the injury mortality rates of New Zealand children.
topic injury
work
children
agriculture
farm
transport
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/8/1/4
work_keys_str_mv AT rebbeccalilley workrelatedfatalitiesinvolvingchildreninnewzealand19992014
AT bronwenmcnoe workrelatedfatalitiesinvolvingchildreninnewzealand19992014
AT gabrielledavie workrelatedfatalitiesinvolvingchildreninnewzealand19992014
AT brandondegraaf workrelatedfatalitiesinvolvingchildreninnewzealand19992014
AT timdriscoll workrelatedfatalitiesinvolvingchildreninnewzealand19992014
_version_ 1721557027687235584