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Found 10 records similar to Disabling Injury Claims, Injury Frequency Rate and Employment by Gender
The table provides the number of people employment and number of disabling injury claims by different age group. With the assumption of person-years worked distribution is identical to employment distribution, the disabling injury frequency rate is calculated.
The table provides the number of people employment and number of lost-time claims by gender. With the assumption of person-years worked distribution is identical to employment distribution, the lost-time injury frequency rate is calculated.
The table provides the number of people employment and number of lost-time claims by different age group. With the assumption of person-years worked distribution is identical to employment distribution, the lost-time injury frequency rate is calculated.
The table provides number of 3 types injury claims, person-years worked as full-time equivalent, and injury rates in the most current 3 years.
The table break down the Alberta injury claims to major industry sectors. For each major industry sector, it shows number of 3 type injury claims, person-year worked, and injury rates in the most current 2 years. In addition, the percentage change comparing to the previous year.
The table break down the lost-time claims and disabling injury claims by source of injury or disease. Identify as the source of injury or disease, the object, substance, element, or bodily motion which directly produced the injury or disease identified in Nature of Injury or Disease.
The table break down the lost-time claims and disabling injury claims by nature of injury or disease. Nature of injury or disease is the name the injury of illness or disease indicated on the source document (eg, for strained back, group to "Sprains, strains, tears").
The table break down the lost-time claims and disabling injury claims by part of body injured. Where the identified injury or disease involves a single part, choose the body part.
The data is based information reported to Workers’ Compensation Board by March 31 for employers who are required to have WCB accounts. The dataset contain employer-specific information on occupational fatality, lost-time and disabling injury claims and presented as counts and rates. This information allows for the tracking of workplace health and safety performance indicators over time.
Canadian Hospitals Injury Reporting and Prevention Program (CHIRPP) is a computerized information system that collects and analyzes data on injuries to people (mainly children) who are seen at the emergency rooms of the 10 pediatric hospitals and of 4 general hospitals in Canada. CHIRPP is a unique, richly detailed database of "pre-event" injury information obtained by asking:What was the injured person doing when the injury happened?, What went wrong? and Where did the injury occur?