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Trends in fatal occupational injuries in Latino/a workers relative to other groups, North Carolina 2000-2017
Richey, M. M., Golightly, Y., Marshall, S. W., Novicoff, W., Keil, A. P., Nocera, M., & Richardson, D. B. (2022). Trends in fatal occupational injuries in Latino/a workers relative to other groups, North Carolina 2000-2017. American Journal of Industrial Medicine, 65(4), 242-247. https://doi.org/10.1002/ajim.23331
Background Latino/a workers may experience higher fatal occupational injury rates than non-Latino/a workers. In North Carolina, the Latino/a population more than doubled between 2000 and 2017. We examined fatal occupational injuries among Latino/a and non-Latino/a workers in North Carolina over this period. Methods Information on fatal occupational injuries was abstracted from records of the North Carolina Office of the Chief Medical Examiner and the death certificate records held by the North Carolina Office of Vital Records. Estimates of the working population were derived from the decennial census and American Community Survey. Estimates of annual rates of fatal occupational injury for the period January 1, 2000 to December 31, 2017 were derived for Latino/a workers and compared to Black and White workers not identified as Latino/a. Results Over the study period, 1,783 fatal occupational injuries were identified among non-Latino/a workers and 259 fatal occupational injuries among Latino/a workers in North Carolina. The majority of fatal occupational injuries among Latino/a workers occurred among males employed in construction and agriculture. While the fatal occupational injury rate among Latino/a workers declined over the study period, the rate among Latino/a workers was higher than among non-Latino/a White and Black workers; moreover, fatal occupational injury rates for Latino/a workers trended upwards during the most recent years of the study period. Conclusions Latino/a workers in North Carolina have the highest fatal occupational injury rate of any race/ethnicity group.