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Fatal work injuries up nearly 6 percent over 2021
2023-12-27T06:00:00Z
A worker died every 96 minutes from a work-related injury in 2022, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported in its Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI). This is a 5.7 percent increase over 2021, for a total of 5,486 fatal work injuries.
Fatalities rose in the following categories:
- Transportation incidents (up 4.2 percent over 2021) remained the most frequent type of fatal event, accounting for 37.7 percent of all occupational fatalities.
- Slips, trips, and falls, up 1.8 percent.
- Most fatalities (over 80 percent) were due to falls to a lower level.
- Violence and other injuries by persons or animals, up 11.6 percent.
- Exposure to harmful substances or environments, up 5.1 percent.
- The increase was largely due to the number of unintentional overdoses, which accounted for 60 percent of deaths in this category.
- Suicides increased 13.1 percent over 2021, and deaths due to temperature extremes rose 18.6 percent.
- Contact with objects and equipment, up 4.7 percent.
Other key takeaways
- Workers in transportation and material moving occupations had the most fatalities of any group, with 1,620 fatalities, followed by construction and extraction workers with 1,056 fatalities.
- Black or African American workers and Hispanic or Latino workers had fatal injury rate increases of 4.0 to 4.2 and 4.5 to 4.6 per 100,000 full-time equivalent (FTE) workers over 2021. (The all-worker rate is 3.7.) Transportation incidents caused the greatest number of fatalities within both groups.
- Women made up 8.1 percent of all workplace fatalities but accounted for 15.3 percent of homicides.
- Workers ages 55 to 64 continued to have the highest number of fatalities in 2022. Transportation incidents were the highest cause of fatalities, followed by slips, trips, and falls.