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Found 10 records similar to Injury Claims, Rates and Person 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 provides the number of people employment and number of disabling injury claims by gender. 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 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.
This table presents planned Full-time Equivalents (FTEs) by Program. This table also aligns planned FTEs with the Whole-of-Government by linking each Program line with its corresponding Government of Canada Spending Area and Activity. Notes:
- Planned FTEs is a measure of the extent to which an employee represents a full person-year charge against the departmental budget for future spending years. Full-time equivalents are calculated as a ratio of assigned hours of work to scheduled hours of work.
This data set includes total number of claims paid for personal injury compensation under the Motor Vehicle Accident Claims (MVAC) program by date including total amount paid within the time period, total number of claims and the total number of claims that are recoverable and unrecoverable.
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").
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?