Estimating the Number of Agricultural Fatal Injuries Prevented by Agricultural Engineering Developments in the United States
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Education and Training Programs
2.2. Regulations
2.3. Standards
2.4. Agricultural Transformation
3. Materials and Methods
- (1)
- The USDA National Agricultural Statistical Services (NASS) reports production output for many crops and animal products. In addition, it reports cash receipts for farms in their census survey (usually every five years), with 1997 as the earliest year available in NASS Quick Stats [45].
- (2)
- The USDA NASS (and NASS predecessors such as the Agricultural Statistics Board) has published a quarterly report on Farm labor since the 1930s on the number of hired laborers, including distinctions between full-time and part-time workers [46].
- (3)
- The USDA NASS (and NASS predecessors) has published a yearly report on farm and land in farms since the 1960s on the number of farms, farmland and farm size in acres (1 acre = 0.405 hectare) [47].
- (4)
- The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) publishes the Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries that reports the total fatal injuries, fatal injury rates and the number of workers for agriculture as an industry and occupation [4].
- (5)
- The USDA Economic Research Services (ERS) publishes productivity tables that include values for production, labor and land in dollar figures accounting for inflation. There is no access to the metadata that generated these tables [13].
Data Analysis
4. Results
5. Discussion
Limitations
- (1)
- One of the most important safety recommendations when entering grain storage facilities is having an observer that can assist in making sure harness lines are taunt and call for help if needed [50]. For farmers to follow this recommendation, they can significantly reduce their risk of grain entrapment, but they do so at the risk of reducing their efficiency by having two individuals instead of one empty the grain bins.
- (2)
- A farmer deciding to plant a cover crop could potentially increase yield (by maintaining soil quality), but this would be at the expense of efficiency due to increased labor demands.
- (3)
- Banning the use of a highly effective pesticide due to potential health risk would decrease injury rates but also potentially reduce productivity.
- (4)
- Utilizing and adopting all-terrain vehicles (ATV) has increased farmer efficiency but at the expense of an increased risk of injury.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Issa, S.F.; Patrick, K.; Thomson, S.; Rein, B. Estimating the Number of Agricultural Fatal Injuries Prevented by Agricultural Engineering Developments in the United States. Safety 2019, 5, 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety5040063
Issa SF, Patrick K, Thomson S, Rein B. Estimating the Number of Agricultural Fatal Injuries Prevented by Agricultural Engineering Developments in the United States. Safety. 2019; 5(4):63. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety5040063
Chicago/Turabian StyleIssa, Salah F., Kiana Patrick, Steven Thomson, and Bradley Rein. 2019. "Estimating the Number of Agricultural Fatal Injuries Prevented by Agricultural Engineering Developments in the United States" Safety 5, no. 4: 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety5040063
APA StyleIssa, S. F., Patrick, K., Thomson, S., & Rein, B. (2019). Estimating the Number of Agricultural Fatal Injuries Prevented by Agricultural Engineering Developments in the United States. Safety, 5(4), 63. https://doi.org/10.3390/safety5040063