Next Article in Journal
Correction: Pless, B. Risk Compensation: Revisited and Rebutted. Safety 2016, 2, 16
Next Article in Special Issue
Stress, Depression, and Occupational Injury among Migrant Farmworkers in Nebraska
Previous Article in Journal
Mapping Bicycle Crash Risk Patterns on the Local Scale
 
 
Font Type:
Arial Georgia Verdana
Font Size:
Aa Aa Aa
Line Spacing:
Column Width:
Background:
Article

Chores at Times of Fatal or Serious Injuries Associated with Tractor Overturns with and without Rollover Protection

1
Emeritus Professor, University of Kentucky College of Public Health, Southeast Center for Agricultural Health and Injury Prevention, 102 Muirfield Drive, Nicholasville, KY 40356, USA
2
Emory University Rollins School of Public Health, Department of Environmental Health, 4916 Holland View Drive, Flowery Branch, GA 30542, USA
3
University of Kentucky College of Public Health, Southeast Center for Agricultural Health and Injury Prevention, 111 Washington Avenue, Lexington, KY 40536, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Safety 2016, 2(3), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/safety2030018
Submission received: 10 May 2016 / Revised: 27 August 2016 / Accepted: 1 September 2016 / Published: 19 September 2016
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Agricultural Safety and Health)

Abstract

:
This study describes chores when farmers were either fatally or seriously injured and required emergency medical treatment as a result of overturns of tractors with or without rollover protective structures (ROPS). Data from the 2002 Kentucky Farm Tractor Overturn Survey were used for this study. The data were collected by a telephone survey of a population-based random sample of 6063 (7.98%) of Kentucky’s 76,017 farm operators as listed in the Kentucky Agricultural Statistics Service database. Of farm operators interviewed, 551 (9.1%) reported 603 overturns and 5512 (90.9%) reported no overturns in the history of their farm, covering a period from 1925 to February 2002. Only the latest overturn was considered to improve recall accuracy. In addition, since the 1925 to 1959 time period had only 49 (8.1%) of the overturns reported, (14 farmers did not provide the year of most recent overturn); only data from the 1960 to 2002 period (approximately 41 years) were used. After making these adjustments, incidents evaluated included 25 cases (one fatal and four serious nonfatal injuries) that involved ROPS-equipped tractor overturns and 88 cases (24 fatal and 64 serious nonfatal injuries) that involved non-ROPS tractor overturns. Chores at highest risk for tractor overturns were identified for which educational and ROPS retrofit interventions could be emphasized. The highest frequency of overturn-related fatalities and nonfatal injuries were associated with hay harvesting, rotary mowing, and on-farm travel chores. These three chores represented 68.2% of fatal events and 50.0% of permanent and 56.6% of temporary disability overturn incidents. Tragically, in countries such as India and China with emerging mechanization, a large majority of tractors are produced without ROPS that can be expected to result in the same overturn-related epidemic of deaths experienced in highly mechanized countries, despite evidence of the protection provided by ROPS.

1. Introduction

In 1966, Knapp warned that implements added to the tractor can “radically” change its stability in different and unexpected ways [1]. Unstable conditions may lead to tractor overturns that are responsible for thousands of deaths and serious injuries [2]. While studies have addressed the overturn hazard related to tractor design, training, environmental conditions, including slope and terrain, and public policies, scant attention has been given to tractor use at the time of an overturn incident with one exception, roadway travel [3,4,5,6]. To this day, tractor overturns remain the leading cause of death on farms in the United States and continue to merit attention regarding the dimensions of the hazard, including chores associated with the overturns [7]. The history of success of rollover protective structures (ROPS) for reducing overturn-related deaths and serious injuries is well-documented [8]. ROPS are known to reduce overturn-related fatalities by up to 98% [9].

1.1. The Non-ROPS Tractor Legacy

In 2004, Day et al. reported the success of a program in the state of Victoria in Australia to retrofit tractors with ROPS. Their program offered rebates for ROPS retrofits on tractors prior to a mandate that required that all tractors be equipped with ROPS [10]. The program reduced the number of non-ROPS tractors from 17,420 in 1996 by 70% in 1998. With the rebates, the eventual prevalence of ROPS-equipped tractors reached 93% before the mandate became effective [11]. In their study, Day et al. found that the most common decade for the manufacture of non-ROPS tractors was 1960 to 1969 [10].
In the United States, tractors dating back to the 1940s lacked a ROPS until 1985, when tractors were manufactured with a ROPS as standard equipment [12]. Rules for ROPS on new tractors in eight European countries preceded this year ranging from 1959 in Sweden to 1978 in Spain; New Zealand required ROPS on new tractors in 1970 and six Australian states required them on new tractors in 1982 [8]. While many of these countries required older tractors to be retrofitted with ROPS, other countries, such as the United States and Canada, have struggled with reducing tractor-related deaths from overturns regarding pre-1985 tractors that lack ROPS.
In 2010, Murphy et al. reported that the average age of farm tractors in use in the United States was more than 25 years, dating back before 1985 [13]. Indeed, tractor longevity is the most critical issue regarding farm-related injuries in the United States and, more particularly, overturn-related deaths [14]. From 1992–2007, as older tractors were retired in the United States (and Canada), ROPS-equipped tractors increased from a prevalence of 41% and 34% relative to the total tractor population, for crop and livestock farms, respectively, to 53% and 49%, respectively. The US has not yet reached the ROPS prevalence rate of 75% to 80% proven in Nordic countries to result in zero overturn deaths for farm tractors. However, there is more to a potential prevention strategy than the overall rate: Myers and Hendricks found that crop farmers and farmworkers experienced 1352 overturn-related deaths for the period, 1992 to 2007, at a rate of 7.8 deaths per 100,000 workers, whereas livestock farmers and farmworkers experienced 183 overturn-related deaths over the same period at a rate of 1.27 deaths per 100,000 workers. Thus, crop farming was 7.4-fold and 6.1-fold higher than livestock farming for fatality frequency and rate in 1992 and 2007, respectively. The authors claimed that more research was needed to identify the factors that continue to place crop farmers at a higher risk of overturn-related deaths [2]. Moreover, older unprotected tractors are still in use for avocational chores on small acreages [15]. Countries, such as India and China, have multiple small, widely-dispersed rural communities of farmers with less mechanized agricultural equipment. As a result many farm tractors lack ROPS and other safety features. This issue is examined in the Discussion section.

1.2. Tractors and Chores

Tractors are considered utility vehicles on farms and are used for a variety of tasks. As an example, a 2016 issue of the magazine, Hobby Farms, listed chores for a tractor that demonstrate the range of farm-related tasks for which tractors are currently known to be useful [16]. The Hobby Farms article suggests either vintage or new tractors for doing the chores listed in Table 1 along with the categories of chores used in the current paper.
Few studies have addressed the task being performed with the exception of travel-related incidents on public roads, as noted earlier. Other studies that examined activities at the time of the overturn depended upon death certificate narratives and were limited by the small number of documented tasks during the overturn. These studies did not address non-fatal injuries associated with tractor overturns and did not use a population-based sample.
In a 1984 study of 1163 overturn-related deaths based upon death certificate narratives, McKnight found that 24 (2.0%) fatalities occurred while operating mowers and 39 (3.4%) deaths occurred when attempting to pull a tree, log, or other vehicle [17]. In 12 cases, tractor front loader buckets that were loaded and/or raised contributed to the overturn.
Lehtola collected use data on 173 tractor incidents, 87 of which were fatal, from newspaper reports in Iowa for the years, 1988–1990 [18]. She found that the highest number of incidents and fatalities occurred during the summer months of May, June, July, and August when tractors were used for mowing, hay harvesting, planting, cultivating, spraying, and routine chores. Of 90 tractor overturns recorded, 42% occurred on roadways, and 58% occurred in the field or the farmyard. Overturns were responsible for 58.6% of the fatalities, all of which involved tractors not equipped with a ROPS [19].
Lehtola et al. conducted another analysis of 136 tractor-related fatalities in Iowa for the years 1988–1992 based on newspaper reports [20]. Of 77 overturn-related deaths in the cohort, 44 (59%) occurred in a field or farmyard, and 28 (37%) occurred on public roads in which no other vehicle was involved. Overturns in the field included carrying loads high with a loader (large round bales or soil), spraying weeds along fence lines, driving along a dead furrow, hay harvesting, and mowing of untilled ground and terraces. In this study, 41% of deaths regarding tractor overturns occurred on roadways, many when mowing ditches, while the remaining chores involved carrying loads high with a loader, spraying weeds along fence rows, herding cattle, driving along the edge of a dead-furrow, performing haying operations, or mowing untilled ground and terraces.
Lehtola and Rautiainen published a tractor safety facilitators’ manual that identified chore-specific risk factors that contribute to tractor overturns [21]. The risk factors included: roadway travel, rotary mower use, front-end-loader use, round bales hauled in front, and chores usually taking less than an hour each time.
In 1999, Bernhardt and Langley reported a North Carolina study that examined both death certificates and medical examiners’ reports [22]. They identified 344 deaths related to tractors for the period 1979–1988. Of these deaths, 56% were classified as an overturn event. The activities most closely aligned with an overturn event along with the number of events included the following: plowing, harrowing or discing (28), pulling something (28), driving on or beside a road (25), brush cutting (22), mowing (22), and dragging logs (16).
In 2011, DeGroot et al. used Canadian Agricultural Injury Surveillance Program data for the years 1990–2005 to examine fatal machine-related fatalities in agriculture. They found that an average of 21 deaths per year were associated with tractor overturns and reported the activity related to each death: transportation (40%), field work (19%), forestry (16%), towing (9%), farm yard work (6%), mowing (4%), and other (6%). They also reported contributing factors to the overturn that included dragging logs or implements (7%) and pulling stumps or trees (4%). Transportation included both public road and off-road transport [23].

1.3. Aims

We are responding to a need to identify factors that continue to place farmers and farmworkers at risk of tractor overturn-related deaths and serious injuries. We found no population-based study that specifically reported the type of tractor work or chore conducted when farmers were either fatally or seriously injured during overturns of tractors with or without a ROPS. This paper describes the chores involved in overturn-related fatal and nonfatal injuries to operators of tractors fitted with or without a ROPS.

2. Methods and Materials

This study used data from the 2002 Kentucky Farm Tractor Overturn Survey [24]. This unique survey collected data from a large population-based random sample of farmers regarding the chore being performed when a tractor overturn occurred and included documentation of whether or not the tractor had a ROPS. The survey is unique in another way since it includes nonfatal injuries, as well as fatal injuries. Indeed, this survey has been used as a resource in other ways as recently as 2012 in which the relationship of terrain with tractor overturns was determined [25]. We also describe below what is meant by a chore and chore classification terms.

2.1. The 2002 Kentucky Farm Tractor Overturn Survey

Tractor overturn cases, which resulted in farmers’ fatal and nonfatal injuries that required emergency medical treatment (EMT)—defined as treatment by emergency response technicians or in a hospital emergency room—were extracted from data collected by the Kentucky Farm Tractor Overturn Survey conducted by the Kentucky field office for the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS). The survey data were collected from a 7.98% (n = 6063) population-based random sample of Kentucky farm operators who were interviewed by telephone. A 40-item survey collected information at the county level about each farm’s history of overturns that included details about their single most recent tractor overturn event. The response rate was 79% [24]. The sample was selected randomly from 76,017 farms statewide documented by USDA in 1997, which was stratified by six agricultural districts in Kentucky and farm size [24].
A total of 551 (9.1%) respondents reported 603 overturns for the period, 1925 to February 2002; whereas 5512 (90.9%) respondents reported no known overturn events in the history of their farm. To reduce respondent recall error, the analysis considered only the most recent overturns on the 551 farms, and since only 49 (8.1%) of the reported overturns occurred during the period, 1925–1959, we considered only those overturns that occurred over the period, 1960 to February 2002 [24,25].
As shown in Table 2, when we reduced the incidents to the most recent overturns reported, the total was 537 overturns in which 92 and 445 overturns occurred on ROPS-equipped and non-ROPS tractors, respectively (not included were 14 overturns for which the ROPS status was unknown). Five respondents did not report the type of injury regarding these incidents, reducing the number to 532 overturns, and to 89 overturns on ROPS-equipped and 443 on non-ROPS tractors. When we truncated the analytic period to the years 1960 to 2002, 49 previous non-ROPS tractor overturns were dropped from the analysis resulting in a study population of 483 overturns for which injury outcomes were known and, thus, reducing the number of non-ROPS incidents to 483 overturns [24,25].
Additionally, as shown in Table 2, we considered only fatal and serious nonfatal injuries. Accordingly, overturns of ROPS-equipped tractors were associated with one fatality and four nonfatal EMT injuries, and overturns of non-ROPS tractors were reported as the cause of 24 fatalities and 64 nonfatal EMT injuries [24].
The survey was conducted in two tiers in which the first tier asked general questions regarding the tractors on the farm and farmstead demographics, which included whether the farm entity or a member of the farm household had experienced an overturn. If so, they were asked a second tier of questions related to only the most recent tractor overturn [24].

2.2. Tractor Chore Descriptions

A chore is typically a routine job or task but includes atypical tasks by farmers who use the tractor as a source of power for traction (pulling or pushing loads) and hydraulic or mechanical power for implements. Informed by the chores identified in the introduction and terms used by farmer responses in our study, chores were categorized, first, for the fatal overturns of non-ROPS tractors. This set of chore names then was used to classify the type of chores for nonfatal injuries with a few additions and for fatal and nonfatal injuries associated with overturns of ROPS-equipped tractors.
Tractor chore descriptions were available for 23 of the 24 reported fatal events and from 443 non-ROPS tractor overturns. Chore description and eight other variables were collected for each event and placed into one of 10 non-overlapping chore categories in an ExcelTM (Microsoft Corporation, Redmond, WA, USA) spreadsheet. Events that involved more than one possible chore category were classified based on the primary chore being performed. For example, an overturn that occurred while a farmer was “bush hogging” a ditch or on a sloped-bank at the side of a public roadway that bordered farm property was classified as rotary mowing as opposed to roadway travel or hay harvesting.
We also identified 64 nonfatal injury cases from non-ROPS tractor overturns that required EMT. The chore at the time of the overturn and the other data collected for each nonfatal event were entered into a spreadsheet in non-overlapping categories consistent with the procedure used for chore classification of fatal events described above.
From 92 overturns of ROPS-equipped tractors, we identified one fatality. In addition, we identified four serious nonfatal injuries related to overturns of ROPS-equipped tractors, none of which involved a permanent disabling injury.

3. Results

This study examined both fatal and nonfatal injuries associated with overturns by non-ROPS and ROPS-equipped tractors. For non-ROPS tractors, there were 24 fatal and 64 serious nonfatal injuries associated with overturns. The 64 nonfatal injuries were serious enough to require hospital admission and were further divided into temporary and permanent disabling injuries. The results are summarized in Figure 1, and the five leading chores associated with fatal and nonfatal injuries are shown in Table 3.
More specifically, we found the following percentages of types of chores with fatal overturn incidents (n = 24): farm travel (25.0%), rotary mowing (25.0%), road travel (16.7%), hay harvesting (12.5%), scraping (8.3%), and other or unknown (8.3%). The nonfatal injuries (n = 64) were separated into permanent and temporary disabilities, as shown in Figure 1. The association of permanent disabilities with tractor overturns (n = 10) were farm travel (40.0%), hay harvesting (20.0%), road travel (10.0%), pulling logs or stumps and logging (10.0%), scraping (10.0%), and fence work (10.0%); The association of temporary disabilities with tractor overturns (n = 54) were hay harvesting (28.8%), farm travel (14.8%), rotary mowing (13.0%), pulling logs or stumps and logging (11.1%), road travel (5.6%), applying chemicals (5.6%), fence work (3.7%), and other or unknown (11.1%).

3.1. Chores at Time of Fatal Non-ROPS Tractor Overturn

Descriptions of chores for 23 of the 24 fatal non-ROPS tractor overturns were distributed within the non-overlapping categories shown in Table 4. Of these 24 fatally injured operators, 11 received EMT, nine did not, and EMT was unknown for four individuals. Of the 24 operators, 14 died in ≤1 h. Of the five who were admitted to a hospital, one lived for 24 h (one day), one for 48 h (two days), two for 72 h (three days), and one for 336 h (14 days). Four operators, none of whom were admitted to a hospital, lived for an unknown period of time before their death. All 24 decedents were males. Twenty were family members (i.e., kin) of the survey respondents, and three were not. Family status was unknown for one individual. Operator age at the time of death was known for 21 individuals and distributed as shown in Figure 2.
As shown in Figure 3, chores that were known for 23 of 24 fatal non-ROPS tractor overturns include rotary mowing = 6, farm travel = 6, road travel = 4, and hay harvesting = 3. Farm travel involves driving from one location to another on farm property as opposed to road travel.

3.2. Chores at Time of Serious Nonfatal Non-ROPS Tractor Overturns

A total of 64 nonfatal operator injuries from overturns of non-ROPS tractors received EMT. For 62 individuals, 59 (95.2%) were male and three (4.8%) were female. Chore categories, as reported at the time of overturn, and other selected variables were distributed as shown in Table 5. Fifty-seven of the injured operators were family members, and three were non-family members. Space does not permit a table that tallies values for all 19 variables for which data were collected. Chore category was known for 58 cases. As shown in Figure 4, chores involved were: hay harvesting = 17; farm travel = 12; rotary mowing = 7; pulling logs, stumps; logging = 6; tillage = 4; road travel = 4; fence work = 3; applying chemicals = 3; scraping = 1; lawn mowing = 1; and unknown = 6.
Days in the hospital were strongly skewed to the right of the distribution as shown in Figure 5. About one-third of the farmers spent less than five days in a hospital, and about one-half of them spent less than 10 days in a hospital. Days hospitalized for 56 farmers totaled 1118 (M = 19.96, SD = 30.28). Days of farm work lost for 48 farmers totaled 6742 (M = 140.46, SD = 133.24). Ten were permanently disabled.
Operator age at the time of nonfatal, non-ROPS tractor overturns was known for 60 farmers as shown in Figure 6.
Eleven farmers were reported to have sustained permanently disabling injuries that resulted from overturns of non-ROPS tractors. See Table 6. Six of the 11 recovered sufficiently to resume farm work. The reported disabilities for these six farmers included broken ankle, knee, rib, and shoulder bones, as well as torn muscles in shoulders and legs.
Five of the 11 farmers with permanent disabilities were never again able to perform farm work, and three were never able to do any other type of work. Of three fully-disabled farmers, one had a crushed chest; and one had injuries that required walking with a cane. The injury description for the third farmer was unknown. None of these fully-disabled farmers required special care typical of that provided by nursing homes.
Excluding eight farmers whose permanent disabilities prevented them from performing farm work or other work, the days of farm work lost were known for 48 farmers. These 48 farmers lost a total of at least 6742 farm work days with a mean of at least 140.46 days each (SD = 133.24) with a median of 90 days. Days of farm work lost are strongly skewed to the right, which suggests that non-ROPS tractor overturns result in high injury severity rates as shown in Figure 7.

3.3. Injury Prevention Effectiveness of ROPS and Seatbelts

Of 24 overturns of ROPS-equipped tractors only one tractor operator died. He was not wearing a seatbelt when driving a ROPS-equipped tractor on a public road. He was ejected and crushed by the overturning tractor when he ran off the road while attempting to avoid a collision with an approaching motor vehicle. Myers et al. presented a separate analysis of seatbelt use regarding this cohort [26].
We identified only four of the 89 ROPS-equipped tractor overturns for which data were complete that produced operator injuries severe enough to require hospital admission [15]. Details of these four ROPS-equipped tractor overturn events are summarized in Table 7. Three of the nonfatal injuries were related to chores of road travel, farm travel (hauling hay as feed), and rotary mowing (bush hogging) while one chore was unknown. All four overturns were to the side and involved violent overturns—one upside down and three with complete 360° rolls—which resulted in neither death nor disabling injuries of the operators. None of these operators were known to be wearing seatbelts.
It is worth noting that hospital stays regarding serious injuries associated with ROPS-equipped tractor overturns ranged from one to six days with a mean of 3.5 days, which is in sharp contrast with non-ROPS tractor overturn-related injuries that are strongly skewed toward much longer hospital stays as shown in Figure 5 with a mean of 20 days. Indeed, the length of hospital stays regarding ROPS-equipped tractor overturn injuries would reside at the low end of the non-ROPS tractor scale for hospital stays, rising up across two-thirds of the scale beyond six days to 180 days for a hospital stay, showing improved safety provided by ROPS. Improved safety of ROPS-equipped tractors was also shown by no permanent injury and many fewer days lost from work.

4. Discussion

No studies with survey data were conducted from a population-based random sample of this magnitude before or since the 2002 study documenting both fatal and nonfatal injuries associated with tractor overturns. Study limitations are noted below. Finally, the application of the study findings are discussed, and the prevalence of non-ROPS tractors is considered in some countries experiencing increasing agricultural machinery mechanization.

4.1. Limitations

Six limitations are described below: three regard the underreported number of fatal and nonfatal injuries, a fourth addresses the issue of exposure measurement, another discusses the current relevance of the 14-year-old study, and a sixth describes the generalizability of the results to a broader population.
First, the healthy worker effect may cause underreporting [27]. Farmers’ whose operations went out of business because of a severe or fatal tractor overturn injury were removed from the NASS state and national list of farm operations. During the approximate 41-year period spanned by the survey, the overturn events were those reported by healthy farmers, or by the family members of injured or deceased farmers’ whose operations remained in business and were, therefore, included in the Kentucky NASS 2001 comprehensive farm list. Thus, data for nonfatal and fatal tractor overturn events from farm operations no longer in business were not counted.
Second, the number of overturn injuries and fatalities reported includes only each farm’s most recent tractor overturn event of Kentucky’s 75,780 farms at the time of the survey. One item at the beginning of the survey asked farmers to report the total number of all tractor overturns that had occurred in the history of their operation. A total of 551 farms reported 603 overturns during the history of their operation. However, to minimize the response burden for the farmers, and to help ensure accuracy of reporting, each farm operator was asked to report only the details for their most recent tractor overturn event. Thus, details for these additional 52 overturn events were not collected.
Third, the survey included only a 7.98% random sample of Kentucky farmers for an approximate 41-year period, As a consequence the total number of fatal and nonfatal tractor overturns within the Kentucky farm operator population over the period are 12.5 times greater than those identified by the survey. Even so, the survey results are robust and useful because they are based on a large statewide, population-based random sample stratified by farm size and USDA agricultural district.
Fourth, while this study addresses qualitative exposures (i.e., exposures to chores), quantitative exposure data would be useful for similar studies. These exposure data could better indicate priorities for educational or ROPS retrofit programs. However, the challenge for measuring exposure is problematic: (1) recall is a problem, especially considering the use of multiple tractors on a farm over a long period of time; and (2) tractor meters are a source of engine running time, but the meters do not differentiate between stationary and mobile operations, and the meters may become defective over time or by damage.
Fifth, this analysis is based on a study conducted 14 years ago in 2002, and the relevance of its results might be questioned. In a 2008 study, investigators found that non-ROPS prevalence on farm tractors in the United States decreased from 62% in 1993 to 54% in 2001, and to 49% in 2004. In 2004, there were 4 million tractors in the United States [28]. A 2010 study found that, by 2006, the non-ROPS prevalence had dropped to 41%. Over the period, from 1992 to 2007, tractor overturns accounted for 1412 deaths, and for each 1% decrease in non-ROPS tractor prevalence, there was a decrease of 0.07 overturn-related deaths per 100,000 workers [2]. The non-ROPS tractors reported in the current study are the same older tractors reported in the 2008 and 2010 studies. Nearly two million non-ROPS tractors manufactured prior to 1985 remain in service and a threat to life today [12,13].
Sixth, the current study was conducted in the state of Kentucky, so generalizability might be questioned. This data have been found to be generalizable to the non-ROPS problem in the high risk areas of the United States [24]. Another study, using the same dataset, found that Kentucky and five other nearby states had the highest fatality rate regarding overturn-related deaths among all 50 states in the country. These six states have rugged terrain and small farms in common [29]. Indeed, another study using the same data set affirmed that rough terrain was typical of small farms in the Appalachian Mountains’ foothills that had a higher tractor overturn rate than large farms on relatively level ground [25].

4.2. Application

This study provided detailed information about the frequency, type, and extent of injuries associated with non-ROPS and ROPS-equipped tractor overturns across an array of chores. Data about these chores and other variables provide information about EMT received, hospital admission rates, days in the hospital, days of work lost, and disability outcomes and their duration. These data are useful in at least three ways.
First, the data can be used to provide more accurate estimates of the costs of tractor overturn injury outcomes as related to the chore performed, as well as for calculating cost effectiveness estimates for preventing injuries. For example, differentiating the potential cost savings of injuries prevented for crop-type chores (e.g., mowing) relative to livestock-type chores (e.g., fence work) would help to counter the averaging effect in cost analyses for ROPS retrofit interventions. As described earlier, ROPS-equipped tractors are less prevalent on crop farms than livestock farms [2]. Thus, a cost savings case could potentially be made for targeted education and ROPS retrofit programs and retrofitting tractors used for crop farming where the overturn-related injury risk is higher and the potential benefit is higher.
Second, the results can be used to design educational materials and interventions. These can be used to inform farmers and others who have a stake in preventing tractor-related injuries about the circumstances and details of chores that result in tractor overturn injuries and methods for their prevention.
Third, this study reinforces the need to encourage retrofitting older tractors with ROPS. Four overturns involving ROPS-equipped tractors resulted in nonfatal hospital admissions—however, none resulted in permanent disabilities.

4.3. Non-ROPS Tractors in Countries with Emerging Mechanization

Economically-challenged small farms and rough terrain, including unpaved roadways, are present in Kentucky [30] as well as in other countries such as China and India. While farm mechanization has come late to many countries, there is emerging interest regarding tractor overturning incidents and safety [31]. Tractors are coming into increased use in these countries, and they typically lack ROPS protection. India and China have numerous tractor manufacturers. Major tractor manufacturers in India include Escorts, Crossword Agro Industries, Mahindra Gujurat Tractor Limited, Punjab Tractors Ltd. (Swaraj), and MARS Farm Equipment Ltd. In India, tractors are a common mode of road transport in rural areas and often involve multiple riders per tractor [32]. Based upon product lines viewed at the webpages of these companies, none of the models shown were equipped with ROPS. China has more than 60 companies that manufacture tractors, which vary from 1960s technology to modern designs. Some of these companies have partnered with international companies, such as John Deere and AGCO [33]. One company that manufactures tractors in China, Wuzheng Agricultural Equipment Co., shows 94 tractor models on its website, 38% with cabs (whether ROPS outfitted or not), 2% fitted with a roll bar, and 60% with no ROPS [34].
The lack of ROPS on these tractors can be expected to result in the same tragedies that continues to be experienced in some highly mechanized countries despite the knowledge of the protection provided by ROPS. Regarding chores, studies need to be conducted in these countries to better understand risks associated with tractor overturns. While a tractor is likely the only motorized vehicle operating on a farm, its broader use as a utility vehicle (e.g., people transport) needs to be better understood so as to guide priorities for education and, more importantly, fitting the tractors with rollover protection.

5. Conclusions

This is the first population-based random sample study of tractor chores during operator fatal and nonfatal overturns of non-ROPS and ROPS-equipped tractors. Furthermore, the data used in this study reflect the problem of non-ROPS tractors and the chores for which they are used. These older tractors persist in being used for farm chores, and our study provides a lens into the type of chores that represent overturn hazards. Taking the perspective of tractor use in farm chores reinforces the need for ROPS retrofits on non-ROPS tractors. In addition, high hazard chores have been identified for which educational and ROPS retrofit interventions can be targeted, especially for travel on the farm, rotary mowing, and hay harvesting. These three chores represent 68.2% of fatal events and 50.0% of permanent and 56.6% of temporary disability overturn incidents. In addition, we found that the hospital residence time of people with nonfatal injuries related to overturns of non-ROPS tractors greatly exceeded the residence time of those patients with nonfatal injuries that resulted from ROPS-equipped tractor overturns. Despite the knowledge of the protection provided by ROPS, an implication of this study concerns countries with emerging mechanization where most tractors are produced without ROPS. The lack of ROPS on tractors in these countries can be expected to result in the same overturn tragedies experienced by the highly-mechanized countries.

Acknowledgments

The work reported in this paper was supported by funds from CDC/NIOSH grants U50/OH07547, U06/CCU412900, 5U50/OH07547, and 5U50OH007547-09. The study’s human subjects’ research protocol was approved by the University of Kentucky IRB, number 01-0710-P2B. We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Leland Brown, Director of the Kentucky NASS field office, his statistical services staff members, and enumerators. We are indebted to the hundreds of Kentucky farmers interviewed. We are thankful for the reviews provided in the acceptance of this manuscript, which greatly improved its content.

Author Contributions

Henry P. Cole designed the study, wrote the original draft, and made an oral presentation with a submitted paper that included the other two authors; Melvin L. Myers made a substantial addition to the analysis and writing of the manuscript; Susan C. Westneat conducted the data analysis for the manuscript.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Knapp, L.W. Man-machine relationship in tractor accidents. Trans. ASAE 1966, 9, 178–179. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  2. Myers, J.R.; Hendricks, K.J. Agricultural tractor overturn deaths: Assessment of trends and risk factors. Am. J. Ind. Med. 2010, 53, 662–672. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  3. Costello, T.M.; Schulman, M.D.; Luginbuhl, R.C. Understanding the public health impacts of farm vehicle public road crashes in North Carolina. J. Agric. Saf. Health 2003, 9, 19–32. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  4. Gerberich, S.G.; Robertson, L.S.; Gibson, R.W.; Renier, C. An Epidemiological Study of Roadway Fatalities Related to Farm Vehicles: United States, 1988 to 1993. J. Occup. Environ. Med. 1996, 38, 1135–1140. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  5. Glascock, L.A.; Bean, T.L.; Wood, R.K.; Carpenter, T.G.; Holmes, R.G. A summary of roadway accidents involving agricultural machinery. J. Agric. Saf. Health 1995, 1, 93–104. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  6. Gkritza, K.; Kinzenbaw, C.R.; Hallmark, S.; Hawkins, N. An empirical analysis of farm vehicle crash injury severities on Iowa’s public road system. Accid. Anal. Prev. 2010, 42, 1392–1397. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  7. Tinc, P.J.; Ayers, P.D.; May, J.J.; Purschwitz, M.A.; Sorensen, J.A. Creating a national coalition to address tractor overturn fatalities. J. Agric. Saf. Health 2015, 21, 105–112. [Google Scholar] [PubMed]
  8. Springfeldt, B. Rollover of tractors—International experiences. Saf. Sci. 1996, 24, 95–110. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  9. Myers, M.L.; Pana-Cryan, R. Prevention effectiveness of roll-over protective structures part II: Decision analysis. J. Agric. Saf. Health 2000, 6, 41–55. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  10. Day, L.; Rechnitzer, G.; Lough, J. An Australian experience with tractor rollover protective structure rebate program: Process, impact and outcome evaluation. Accid. Anal. Prev. 2004, 36, 861–867. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  11. Jones, C.B.; Day, L.; Staines, C. Trends in tractor related fatalities among adults working on farms in Victoria, Australia, 1985–2010. Accid. Anal. Prev. 2013, 50, 110–114. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  12. Myers, M.L. Prevention effectiveness of roll-over protective structures, part I: Strategy evolution. J. Agric. Saf. Health 2000, 6, 29–40. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  13. Murphy, D.J.; Myers, J.; McKenzie, E.A.; Cavalette, R.; Sorensen, J. Tractors and rollover protection in the United States. J. Agromed. 2010, 15, 249–263. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  14. Marsh, M.M.; Fosbroke, D.E. Trends of occupational fatalities involving machines, United States, 1992–2010. Am. J. Ind. Med. 2015, 58, 1160–1173. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  15. Myers, M.L. Avocational Farmers and the Tractor Overturn Hazard; National Symposium on Agriculture, Forestry & Fishing Health and Safety: Boise, ID, USA, 30 June 2011.
  16. Boyt, D. 15 reasons you need a tractor. Hobby Farms 2016, 16, 22–24, 26, 28 and 30. [Google Scholar]
  17. McKnight, R.H. U.S. Agricultural Equipment Fatalities, 1975–1981: Implications for Injury Control and Health Education. Ph.D. Thesis, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA, 1984. [Google Scholar]
  18. Lehtola, C.J. An Investigation of Tractor-Related Farm Accidents in Iowa during 1988–1990. Retrospective Theses and Dissertations. 1992. Paper 10326. Available online: http://lib.dr.iastate.edu/rtd/10326 (accessed on 2 May 2016).
  19. Reynolds, S.J.; Groves, W. Effectiveness of roll-over protective structures in reducing farm tractor fatalities. Am. J. Prev. Med. 2000, 18, 63–69. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  20. Lehtola, C.J.; Marley, S.J.; Melvin, S.W. A study of five years of tractor-related fatalities in Iowa. Appl. Eng. Agric. 1994, 10, 627–632. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  21. Lehtola, C.; Rautiainen, R. TRAC-SAFE: A Community Based Program for Reducing Injuries and Deaths Due to Tractor Overturns, Facilitators Manual; DHHS (NIOSH) Publication No. 96–108; National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health: Cincinnati, OH, USA, 1996. [Google Scholar]
  22. Bernhardt, J.H.; Langley, R.I. Analysis of tractor-related deaths in North Carolina from 1979 to 1988. J. Rural Health 1999, 15, 285–295. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  23. DeGroot, J.M.; Isaacs, C.; Pickett, W.; Brison, R.J. Patterns of fatal machine rollovers in Canadian agriculture. Chronic Dis. Inj. Can. 2011, 3, 97–102. [Google Scholar]
  24. Cole, H.P.; Myers, M.L.; Westneat, S.C. Frequency and severity of injuries to operators during overturns of farm tractors. J. Agric. Saf. Health 2006, 12, 127–138. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  25. Saman, D.M.; Cole, H.P.; Odoi, A.; Myers, M.L.; Carey, D.I.; Westneat, S.C. A spatial cluster analysis of tractor overturns in Kentucky from 1960 to 2002. PLoS ONE 2012, 7, e30532. Available online: http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0030532 (accessed on 11 June 2016). [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  26. Myers, M.L.; Cole, H.P.; Westneat, S.C. Seatbelt use during tractor overturns. J. Agric. Saf. Health 2006, 12, 43–49. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  27. Myers, M.L.; Cole, H.P.; Westneat, S.C. Healthy worker effect related to tractor overturn injuries. Technical paper No. 07-07. In Proceedings of the 2007 Summer Conference of the National Institute for Farm Safety, Inc., Penticton, BC, Canada, 25 June 2007.
  28. Loringer, K.A.; Myers, J.R. Tracking the prevalence of rollover protective structures on U.S. farm tractors: 2001 and 2004. J. Saf. Res. 2008, 39, 509–517. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  29. Cole, H.P.; McKnight, R.H.; Donovan, T.A. Epidemiology, surveillance, and prevention of farm tractor overturn fatalities. J. Agromed. 2009, 14, 164–171. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
  30. Cole, H.P.; Westneat, S.C. Preventing Farm Related Injuries—The Example of Tractor Overturns. In Rural Populations and Health, Determinants, Disparities, and Solutions; Crosby, R.A., Wendel, M.L., Vanderpool, R.C., Baretta, R.C., Eds.; Jossey-Bass: San Francisco, CA, USA, 2012; pp. 303–322. [Google Scholar]
  31. Abubakar, M.S.; Ahmad, D.; Akande, F.B. A review of farm tractor overturning accidents and safety. Pertanika J. Sci. Technol. 2010, 18, 377–385. [Google Scholar]
  32. Brockman, S.R.; Gelt, E.; Jebsen, R.M.; Mathai, S. Tractor rollovers: Historical trends and recent developments (ASABE Paper no. AETC1001). In Proceedings of the Agricultural Equipment Technology Conference in Conjunction with Ag Connect, Orlando, FL, USA, 10–13 January 2010. [CrossRef]
  33. Wikia. Tractor and Construction Plant: Chinese Tractors. 2016. Available online: http://tractors.wikia.com/wiki/Chinese_tractors (accessed on 3 June 2016).
  34. Wuzheng Agricultural Equipment Co. 2016. Available online: http://wuzhengagri.manufacturer.globalsources.com/si/6008838548207/pdtl/Tractor/1084498167.htm (accessed on 5 June 2016).
Figure 1. Number of fatal, permanent, or temporarily disabling injuries associated with overturns of tractors that lacked rollover protective structures in Kentucky,1960–2002, n = 88.
Figure 1. Number of fatal, permanent, or temporarily disabling injuries associated with overturns of tractors that lacked rollover protective structures in Kentucky,1960–2002, n = 88.
Safety 02 00018 g001
Figure 2. Age of operators killed in an overturn of non-ROPS tractors in Kentucky, 1960–2002, n = 21.
Figure 2. Age of operators killed in an overturn of non-ROPS tractors in Kentucky, 1960–2002, n = 21.
Safety 02 00018 g002
Figure 3. Chores associated with fatalities related to non-ROPS tractor overturns, n = 24.
Figure 3. Chores associated with fatalities related to non-ROPS tractor overturns, n = 24.
Safety 02 00018 g003
Figure 4. Chores associated with nonfatal injuries related to non-ROPS tractor overturns, n = 64.
Figure 4. Chores associated with nonfatal injuries related to non-ROPS tractor overturns, n = 64.
Safety 02 00018 g004
Figure 5. Days in hospital for operators injured as a result of non-ROPS tractor overturns, n = 56.
Figure 5. Days in hospital for operators injured as a result of non-ROPS tractor overturns, n = 56.
Safety 02 00018 g005
Figure 6. Age of seriously injured operator in an overturns of non-ROPS tractors in Kentucky, 1960–2002, n = 60.
Figure 6. Age of seriously injured operator in an overturns of non-ROPS tractors in Kentucky, 1960–2002, n = 60.
Safety 02 00018 g006
Figure 7. Operator farm workdays lost following nonfatal injuries related to non-ROPS tractor overturns, n = 48.
Figure 7. Operator farm workdays lost following nonfatal injuries related to non-ROPS tractor overturns, n = 48.
Safety 02 00018 g007
Table 1. Tractor chores listed in 2016 and associated chore categories used later in this article.
Table 1. Tractor chores listed in 2016 and associated chore categories used later in this article.
Tractor ChoresAssociated Chore Categories
Brush hoggingrotary mowing
Land clearing,pulling logs, stumps; logging
Cultivatingtillage
Livestock care and feedingfarm transport
Landscapingscraping
Fence buildingfence work
Construction projectsfarm transport
Firewood friendfarm transport
Recreation: hayridefarm transport
Trail maintenancepulling logs, stumps; farm transport, rotary mowing
Harvestinghay harvesting
Snow removalfarm transport
Backup powerfarm transport
Source: Boyt 2016 [16].
Table 2. Background data collected about overturns from the 2002 Kentucky Farm Tractor Overturn Survey (6063 farms).
Table 2. Background data collected about overturns from the 2002 Kentucky Farm Tractor Overturn Survey (6063 farms).
ItemNumber of Tractors
ROPS-EquippedNo ROPSTotal
Overturns reported (most recent per farm) *92445537
Reports for which injury outcomes were known89443532
Reports for the period, 1960-February 200289394483
Fatal overturns in which chore was reported12425
Non-fatal overturns in which chore was reported16131147
Serious non-fatal overturns reported 46468
* The ROPS status on another 14 overturns was unknown; 9.1% of farms that reported one or more tractor overturns; Required hospital admission; Source: Cole, et al. [24].
Table 3. Top five chores associated with fatal and nonfatal injury overturns of tractors without rollover protective structures.
Table 3. Top five chores associated with fatal and nonfatal injury overturns of tractors without rollover protective structures.
RankFatal Overturns, n = 24Nonfatal Overturns, n = 64
1Farm travel6 (25%)Hay Harvesting17 (26%)
2Rotary mowing6 (25%)Farm travel12 (20%)
3Road travel4 (17%)Rotary mowing7 (11%)
4Hay Harvesting3 (13%)Pulling logs, stumps; logging7 (11%)
5Scraping2 (8%)Tillage4 (7%)
Table 4. Details of fatal non-ROPS tractor overturns by chore category, n = 24.
Table 4. Details of fatal non-ROPS tractor overturns by chore category, n = 24.
Chore Category Overturn Chore and LocationOverturn Type and DegreesEMT *Hours Death KinAge Died
Farm travel **1farm travel, hit trench silorear 180°no-Yes-
2farm travel, stream bankUnknownno0Yes64
3hauling tobacco sticks, across farm, hit ditchlateral 90°no0Yes54
4moving equipment, hit low place fieldlateral 90°no0No18
5spreading tobacco stalks in pastureunknownyes24-30
6traveling farm roadlateral 90°yes72Yes62
Hay Harvesting7mowing hay, hit farm roadlateral 90°yes0No57
8pulling hay baler, hit gullylateral 90°yes-Yes50
9pulling heavy hay baler, hilllateral 90°-0Yes78
Horse play10youths ramming tractors, steep hillsiderear 180°no0Yes13
Road travel11hit chuck hole, ran into treeunknownno-Yes35
12looking for cow, ran off roadlateral 90°no0Yes22
13ran into roadside ditchlateral 180°yes72Yes62
14returning home with plowslateral 180°yes0Yes42
Rotary mowing15Bush Hog by silo, hit farm roadlateral 90°no0Yes82
16Bush Hog farm access road, hilllateral 90°-1Yes52
17Bush Hog public road sidelateral 90°yes0Yes72
18Bush Hog public road sidelateral 180°yes0Yes-
19Bush Hog public road sidelateral 360°Yes336Yes70
20Bush Hog public road sidelateral 90°No0No25
Scraping21cleaning silo, hit gullylateral > 360°Yes0Yes50
22leveling ground, hillsidelateral 180°No48Yes69
Tilling23cultivating tobacco, fieldrear 180°Yes0Yes55
Unknown24unknown chore, hillsidelateral 90°No-Yes-
* EMT: emergency medical treatment; all deaths >1 h required hospital admittance; ** Farm travel refers to driving the tractor from one location to another between tasks; This is a term used by farmers.
Table 5. Chore category and selected variables for overturns of non-ROPS nonfatal injuries, n = 64.
Table 5. Chore category and selected variables for overturns of non-ROPS nonfatal injuries, n = 64.
Chore CategoryOverturn Direction & DegreesDisability OutcomesTotal
LateralRearUnknownTemporaryPermanent
90°180°≥360°180°
Applying chemicals30000303
Farm travel291008412
Fence work11001213
Hay harvesting8522115217
Pulling logs (6), stump (1); logging (1)11221617
Road travel11101314
Rotary mowing22102707
Scraping10000011
Tilling, cultivate (3), plow (1)12100404
Unknown or other22101506
Totals2223947541064
Table 6. Details of nonfatal non-ROPS tractor overturns by chore category, n = 64.
Table 6. Details of nonfatal non-ROPS tractor overturns by chore category, n = 64.
Chore CategoryNo.Overturn Chore and LocationOverturn Direction and DegreesDays Unable to Farm Age
Applying chemicals1spreading fertilizer, sloping areaLateral, 90°738
2spraying, hillsideLateral, 90°9051
3spraying the corn, fieldLateral, 90°9052
Farm travel4driving around edge of fence-repairing fence, fieldLateral, 180°3050
5going from 1 work site to other on dirt trail, woods, dirt trail, woodsLateral, 180°24070
6moving wagons to load tobacco, side of highwayLateral, 180°2852
7coming from a jobLateral, 180°6014
8going from 1 tobacco patch to another, hillsideLateral, 180°4268
9hit ditch while pulling load, ditchLateral, 180°345
10driving out in field turning corner, wheel went in rut, fieldLateral, 180°2118
11fencing, farm roadLateral > 360°5022
12pulling a load of corn, field *Lateral, 90°18038
13farm road *Lateral, 180°-16
14coming in for lunch, field - hit hole *Lateral, 90°Never -
15hauling a load of tobacco, creek bank on black top *Lateral, 180°-35
Fence work16Fencing, fence line *Rear, 180°-40
17moving fence post, slight hillLateral, 90°-30
18trimming around fence-got off it and it ran into fence-grabbed his leg, fence lineUnknown36561
Hay Harvesting19Picking up hay, field *Rear, 180°36523
20making hay, hillsideunknown6025
21raking hay on hillside on farm, hillsideLateral, 90°-15
22hauling hay, in front of hay barnLateral, 90°36577
23round baling hay-park brake broke-rolled to hollow, fieldLateral > 360°36556
24raking hay, hillsideLateral, 90°9056
25mowing, fieldLateral, 180°18031
26mowing, fieldLateral, 90°9050
27mowing, fieldRear, 180°1459
28mowing, fieldLateral, 90°1457
29hauling hay, hillLateral, 90°-65
30rolling hay, farmLateral, 180°-56
31pulling a load of hay down a hill, bottom of hillLateral, 90°18038
32hauling hay, hillLateral, 180°36538
33mowing, hillLateral, 90°36545
34raking hay, hillLateral > 360°15065
35raking hay, field *Rear, 180°9014
Lawn mowing36mowing the lawn, on a bank that broke awayLateral > 360°240
Pulling logs, stumps; Logging37Logging, fieldRear, 180°36519
38pulling logs—rearedUnknown90-
39pulling logs, hillside in woodsLateral, 180°18058
40pulling a log and ran over a stump, woodsRear, 180°6057
41trying to get a stump out of ground, fieldLateral, 90°5650
42dragging out wood-back wheel caught a stump, woodsLateral > 360°36531
43pulling logs, hill *Lateral 360°18060
Road travel44pulling combine, public roadLateral 360°12025
45going from 1 farm to other-father had stroke, fell off, tractor hit tree and overturned, county roadLateral, 90°1465
46moving tractor from 1 farm to another, public roadLateral, 180°36516
47going from one farm to another on tractor, public road *UnknownNever 65
Rotary mowing48bushhogging, fieldLateral, 180°-50
49bushhogging, hillsideLateral > 360°2135
50bushhogging, pasture, slightly steepLateral, 180°6032
51bushhogging, hillLateral, 90°-62
52bushhogging, hillunknown 31
53bushhogging, roadLateral, 90°146
54Bushhogging a pasture, sinkholeUnknown270-
Scraping55blading, bulldozing work, ditch *Lateral, 90°Never40
Tillage56setting tobacco on cultivating tractor-hit hill of rocks, fieldLateral, 90°36540
57cultivating tobacco, small hillLateral, 180°-60
58plowing, turn around at end of roadLateral > 360°-50
59cultivating -run on rock and turned over, gardenLateral, 180°1424
Unknown60Don’t know, fieldLateral, 90°30-
61Don’t know 1420
62Sitting on tractorLateral, 90°-10
63Unknown *Lateral, 180°-58
64-Lateral, 180°-32
* Permanent disability (red colour); 365 days unable to farm is ≥365 days.
Table 7. Chore category, overturn type, injury outcome, and operator age and gender for overturns of four ROPS-equipped tractors.
Table 7. Chore category, overturn type, injury outcome, and operator age and gender for overturns of four ROPS-equipped tractors.
ParameterCase
1234
Chore CategoryRoad travel, steering failedCarrying hay to cattle in pastureBush hogging on hillsideUnknown
Overturn type and degreeLateral, 180°Lateral, 360°Lateral, 360°Lateral, 360°
Seatbelt useNoUnknownNoNo
Emergency medical treatmentYesYesYesYes
Days in hospital3641
Farm work days lost30609042
Age (years)30476058
GenderFemaleMaleMaleMale
Permanent disabilityNoneNoneNoneNone

Share and Cite

MDPI and ACS Style

Cole, H.P.; Myers, M.L.; Westneat, S.C. Chores at Times of Fatal or Serious Injuries Associated with Tractor Overturns with and without Rollover Protection. Safety 2016, 2, 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety2030018

AMA Style

Cole HP, Myers ML, Westneat SC. Chores at Times of Fatal or Serious Injuries Associated with Tractor Overturns with and without Rollover Protection. Safety. 2016; 2(3):18. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety2030018

Chicago/Turabian Style

Cole, Henry P., Melvin L. Myers, and Susan C. Westneat. 2016. "Chores at Times of Fatal or Serious Injuries Associated with Tractor Overturns with and without Rollover Protection" Safety 2, no. 3: 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety2030018

APA Style

Cole, H. P., Myers, M. L., & Westneat, S. C. (2016). Chores at Times of Fatal or Serious Injuries Associated with Tractor Overturns with and without Rollover Protection. Safety, 2(3), 18. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety2030018

Note that from the first issue of 2016, this journal uses article numbers instead of page numbers. See further details here.

Article Metrics

Back to TopTop