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Â鶹ÊÓƵ UPDATE

 

Issue 34, August 2014 

Can Big Data Answer Big Questions about Worker Safety and Health? 
 
 
computer_server.jpg Big Data. You hear the term all the time now, sometimes in alarming contexts. There's no question that modern computing power and electronic records have made data analyses possible for us that previous generations couldn't have imagined.

A Â鶹ÊÓƵ-supported team at the University of Illinois at Chicago is a case in point. A decade ago it would have been impossible -- or at least prohibitively expensive -- to link the hospital admissions information in the Illinois Trauma Registry to corresponding records the Hospital Discharge Database and to the Illinois Workers Compensation Claims Database. Today we can, and the linkage enabled the research team to investigate some important questions about construction worker injuries and compensation.

doctor2.jpg In findings that should be of great interest to policymakers, insurers and construction firms, the team found that data from the first two databases recording the severity of injury and length of hospital stay could enable useful predictions about the size of workers' compensation awards. Read about it in the
(Characterizing the relationship between in-hospital measures and workers' compensation outcomes among severely injured construction workers using a data linkage strategy) or check out the Key Findings summary on our website.

Image Courtesy of New Labor 
The linkage also shined a light on a disturbing statistical phenomenon. The average (mean) workers' compensation award to Black and Latino construction workers suffering a workplace injury was 20% below that of a similarly placed White construction worker with equally severe injuries. Additional research will be required to explain the cause of this disparity. The results have been published in the (Analysis of Ethnic Disparities in Workers' Compensation Claims Using Data Linkage) and a Key Findings summary is available at www.cpwr.com. 

  

Pete Stafford

Executive Director    

 
    
Â鶹ÊÓƵ IN PRINT

Recently Published Journal Articles by Â鶹ÊÓƵ Scholars

  

. Xiuwen Dong, Julie Largay, Xuanwen Wang, and Janice Windau. Monthly Labor Review, July 2014.  

 

Xiuwen Sue Dong, Knut Ringen, Laura Welch, and John Dement American Journal of Industrial Medicine, June 2014 (published online ahead of print).

  

Xiuwen Sue Dong, Xuanwen Wang, Julie A. Largay, James W. Platner, Erich Stafford, Chris Trahan Cain, and Sang D. Choi. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, May 2014 (published online ahead of print). 

 

ONLINE  RESOURCES  

  

 

 

Find the latest on regulatory efforts and Create-A-Plan to control exposures at  -- a one-stop source of information on how to prevent a silica hazard and protect workers 
 
 

 

  is the premier online source for construction health and safety information, with  research,  training materials, fact sheets and more 

 

 

 

 is a safety and health database designed with construction contractors and workers in mind - an inventory of common industry hazards paired with common-sense solutions

 

Â鶹ÊÓƵ

 
Visit Â鶹ÊÓƵ for information on our training programs, research findings, and resources for your health and safety or research initiatives
 
 
 


 

Â鶹ÊÓƵ 
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The Pump Handle, 7/18/2014 

 

 

 

  

 

 

ABOUT US

 

Â鶹ÊÓƵ -- Â鶹ÊÓƵ is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization created by the Building and Construction Trades Department, AFL-CIO. Working with partners like you in business, labor, government, and the universities, we strive every day to make work safer for the 9 million men and women who work in the U.S. construction industry!