Business & Tech
Workplace Deaths in Georgia Among Worst Nationally
The rate of deaths in Georgia due to workplace injuries has climbed in year-over-year comparison, as the total number also rises sharply.

WASHINGTON, DC — The rate of fatal workplace injuries across the country has dropped slightly, but Georgia's rate and the total number of deaths rose sharply in year-over-year data just released by the U.S. Department of Labor. Georgia's death rate climbed to 4.3 for every 100,000 workers.
The department’s Bureau of Labor Statistics' new data related to fatal occupational injuries compared new 2015 numbers to the previous year. The total number of deaths nationally climbed to 4,836 — up 15 from the previous year. But the death rate dropped from 3.43 for every 100,000 workers to 3.38 for every 100,000 workers.
Georgia's increase in the death rate was driven by 180 deaths in 2015 — up from 152 the previous year.
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Some of the data on the state's workplace fatalities:
- 38 percent involved transportation-related incidents.
- 20 percent involved falls or slips.
- 172 of 180 deaths were men.
Five large states accounted for more than 1,500 of the workers who died on the job in 2015: Texas, California, Florida, New York and Ohio. The death rates, not surprisingly, were worse in states with smaller workforce populations, including North Dakota, Montana and Wyoming.
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The rise in fatalities was slight nationwide year-over-year, but the bureau said the number recorded in 2015 was the highest since 2008 when 5,214 fatal injuries occurred in workplaces across the country.
The rate of non-fatal workplace injuries in Georgia, released in November, were actually down slightly in a year-over-year comparison.
More: Workplace Injuries in Georgia: 13 Jobs Most Likely to Hurt You
Heavy and tractor-trailer truck drivers experienced more fatalities nationwide in 2015 than workers in any other occupation, the bureau said. The number was 745. The private construction industry as a whole (all occupations considered) also saw 937 fatal work injuries in 2015. The bureau said that number is the highest since 2008 when 975 workers died.
Older workers accounted for fewer deaths in 2015 than they did in 2014. Even so, the 650 deaths involving workers age 65 and older in 2015 was "the second-largest number for the group since the national census began in 1992,” the agency reported. The number in 2014 was 684.
The census also looked at how workers died with transportation-related incidents topping the list over the year. The total number was 2,054, which includes aircraft, roadway, rail and pedestrian-related accidents.
Falls, slips and trips were blamed in 800 deaths across the country, with violence and other injuries accounting for 703 deaths. The number of workplace-related homicides was 417 in 2015, up from 409 in 2014. Suicides in the workplace dropped from 280 nationally in 2014 to 229 in 2015.
To check out the full report, visit the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics online.
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