Are Animals
Occupational Hazards?

Working with animals requires attention to the unique hazards each one poses—otherwise, results can be deadly for workers. Using multi-year data, BLS’ comprehensive overview of occupational hazards posed by animals may be the first to focus on so wide a variety of animals, from livestock to wild animals to pets to insects.

DINO DRUDI

Dino Drudi is an economist in the Office of Safety, Health and Working Conditions, Bureau of Labor Statistics. William McCarthy, a supervisory statistician, Janice Windau, an epidemiologist, and Linda Garris, Eric> Sygnatur, Timothy Webster, and Mark Zak, economists in that office, assisted with data development.
Telephone: (202) 691-6175
E-mail: Drudi_D@bls.gov
 

While animals serve human needs, they can turn on humans with deadly consequences. From 1992-97, animals directly inflicted or contributed to 375 fatal occupational injuries—1 percent of all the fatal injuries reported to the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). BLS also estimates that, during this time span, there were 75,000 animal-related nonfatal cases in the private sector of the economy.1 These 75,000 cases account for 0.6 percent of all nonfatal injuries and illnesses involving 1 or more days away from work to recuperate.2 On average, there are 63 fatal injuries and 12,500 nonfatal injuries and illnesses involving animals each year.

Historically, research on occupational hazards associated with animals has tended to focus on one particular occupation, animal, or group of animals such as farm animals, often subsumed under more general research.3 Data for 1992-97 from the BLS Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI) and Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses (SOII) enable BLS to undertake a pioneering, comprehensive overview of occupational hazards posed by a wide variety of animals. (See tables 1 and 2 for the kinds of animals involved in fatal work injuries and in nonfatal work injuries and illnesses, respectively.) This article presents some of the results of that research.

All live animals, as well as some dead animals, are included within the scope of this discussion. However, once animal carcasses go beyond the initial stages of veterinary autopsy or food processing, they lose their status as animals for BLS classification purposes, and are considered animal products, meat, or waste. At that point they are no longer within the scope of this article. 4 Allergic reactions to animal products, such as feathers or dander, also are not addressed here.

Separate sections devoted to fatal occupational injuries and nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses specific to birds, fish, insects and arachnids, dogs and cats, and cattle and equine comprise the body of the article. The numbers of fatal and nonfatal cases reported for sheep, swine, rodents, and snakes and other reptiles are too small to support such a detailed analysis.5 The major causes of animal-related work fatalities are analyzed. Comparisons among different animal categories are then explored, followed by a summary of major findings and a brief conclusion.

Birds

Between 1992-97, there were approximately 1,200 nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving birds. Poultry (almost entirely chickens and turkeys, but also ducks and geese) account for nearly nine-tenths of these cases. Manufacturing, which often includes poultry slaughter and initial processing, accounts for two-fifths of the cases involving birds. Agriculture and retail trade also account for large numbers of cases. Workers in three occupations— farm workers, non-construction laborers, and butchers and meat cutters—experienced nearly half the bird-related nonfatal cases

Although the data suggest that such incidents are rare, birds can pose a particular hazard for aviation, and have the potential for causing incidents involving multiple fatalities. Birds can be sucked into aircraft engines, causing the engines to fail in flight.

Fish (including shellfish)

Although there are virtually no fatalities associated with fish, they account for 2,500 nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses over the 6-year study period. Manufacturing accounts for most of these cases; non-precision machine operator, handler, and laborer occupations typically associated with manufacturing account for two-fifths of the fish-related nonfatal injuries and illnesses.7

About half of fish-related nonfatal cases result from contact with objects, such as being struck by a several-hundred pound fish being unloaded for processing. A fish this size need not even be alive to cause such an injury or illness—it need only slip off a conveyor belt and land on a worker’s foot. Overexertion (as may occur in lifting or wielding a heavy fish to put it on a conveyor belt) and exposure to harmful substances (as when dermatitis results from handling fish) account for the vast majority of the remaining cases. Fish also inflict a wide variety of injuries and illnesses such as sprains, and punctures other than bites—some species’ fins, for example, can be very sharp.

Insects and arachnids8

Insects caused 42 fatalities during 1992- 97. Of these, 39 were the result of venomous bee, wasp, or hornet stings. Because many persons are allergic to bee, wasp, and hornet venom, they can quickly succumb to such conditions as anaphylactic shock, or even heart failure, unless promptly treated. Although arachnids did not account for any fatalities during this period, arachnids and insects inflicted 36,100 nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses.9 Venomous stings and bites were the most common.

Bees, wasps, and hornets are prevalent throughout the country, and pose a threat to workers, particularly when they are active during warmer times of the year. Unless stung dozens or even hundreds of times, non-allergic individuals tend to survive bee, wasp, and hornet stings. Although more rare, workers also encounter poisonous spiders whose venom is more dangerous— even to those workers who are not allergic. In the southwestern parts of the country, scorpions, whose sting is more venomous than most spider bites, can be a hazard, but workers are less likely to encounter these nocturnal arachnids. Fire ants, which are becoming increasingly common in the southeastern parts of the country, also can inflict serious injury.10

Another, less common hazard associated with insects and arachnids is the transmission of diseases to humans. Workers bitten by ticks, for example, can contract diseases such as Lyme Disease and Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever, which can cause long periods of disability unless the condition is promptly diagnosed and properly treated.11 Insects and arachnids can also play a contributory role in severe injuries, such as a worker falling off a ladder because of a wasp attack.

Outdoor workers account for three quarters of fatal insect injuries, with 27 reported in the agriculture and construction industries over the study period. Outdoor workers, such as construction and non-construction laborers, truck drivers, groundskeepers, and farm workers, also are among the workers most frequently victims of nonfatal insect and arachnid injuries and illnesses. But so are some indoor workers, including machine operators, janitors, nurses aides and orderlies, and even cashiers.

It is not surprising that stings and bites are most common on the upper extremities, as these are the most exposed body parts. Outdoor workers, and some indoor workers such as machine operators and janitors, often wear short sleeves or roll up their sleeves, and generally do not wear gloves during warmer weather when these insects are active. An insect or arachnid might, moreover, be able to sting or bite through many summer shirt or blouse fabrics.

The lower extremities are inherently more vulnerable to insect stings and bites than are the upper extremities because the surface area of the lower extremities is greater, and because parts of the lower extremities are more difficult to swat. Nevertheless, stings and bites are inflicted on the lower extremities barely half as often as on the upper extremities. One explanation might be that it is harder for these insects to sting or bite through such common work pant fabrics as denim. Moreover, although some workers wear shorts or skirts outdoors in warmer weather, when exposure to stings and bites is more likely, most do not; some employers even prohibit or discourage such attire

Because the head is one of the most sensitive body parts, a worker stung or bitten on the head would be more aware of the injury and, consequently, be better able to take preventive measures such as swatting the attacking insect or arachnid. The head, one of the most exposed body parts, accounts for one-tenth of cases involving insects and arachnids.

Of greater potential concern, however, is that one-third of the cases involving the head are in the eye region, where swelling from even a mosquito bite might keep a worker away from the job by impairing vision until the swelling subsides. These 1,300 cases, however, tend to be minor, with a short recuperation time. One-fifth of them involve a foreign body—a small insect, such as a mosquito or gnat—getting caught in the eye without biting the worker.

Dogs and cats

Dogs. Dogs were involved in eight occupational fatalities—six of which resulted from highway and non-industrial off road vehicle crashes in which the vehicle went out of control after hitting, or swerving to avoid hitting, the dog.12

Dogs also were involved in 13,800 nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work, three-quarters of which resulted from animal attacks. Overexertion, primarily overexertion in lifting, accounts for nearly all the remainder—hardly surprising because a number of dog breeds are quite heavy and unwieldy.13

Two-fifths of nonfatal cases associated with dogs involve the upper extremities, compared with just over one fifth of injuries and illnesses overall. Almost all of these cases involve the hand (including the fingers), and generally result from dog bites. Bites comprise three-fifths of all dog-related nonfatal cases. In addition, there is a small number of more serious dog bites that transmit diseases. Sprains are the next most frequent type of case, accounting for one-fifth of the dog-related nonfatal cases

Dog-related nonfatal injuries and illnesses affect a wide range of occupations, although non-farm animal caretakers account for one-third of these cases, followed by truck drivers, who account for one-tenth, and veterinary technicians and meter readers, who each account for one-twentieth.14

Cats. During the 1992-97 period, there were no occupational fatalities associated with cats, although cats account for 4,600 nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving days away from work.15 Almost all injuries and illnesses inflicted by cats are animal attacks, such as cat bites or scratches. Bites alone account for more than two-thirds of all cat-related cases. In addition, there is a small number of more serious cat bites that transmit diseases. Because cats are uniquely equipped to scratch, they account for more abrasions severe enough to require days away from work for recuperation than any other mammal.

Four-fifths of injuries and illnesses associated with cats involve the upper extremities, compared with just over one-fifth of injuries and illnesses overall. The arms, wrists, and hands are often the easiest body part for a cat to bite or scratch. Animal-handling occupations— particularly non-farm animal caretakers, veterinary technicians, and veterinarians—have the largest numbers of cat-related nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses. The number of nonfatal cases involving veterinary technicians is about the same for cats as for dogs, but cats inflicted almost twice as many nonfatal injuries to veterinarians as did dogs during the 6-year study period.

Comparisons between dogs and cats. As we have seen, the number of occupational injuries and illnesses associated with dogs is several times that of cats. While there were no fatal work injuries involving cats during the 6-year period, dogs accounted for eight fatalities. There were 3 times as many nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses for dogs as for cats. Divergent estimates of the numbers of dogs and cats in the United States confound quantification efforts, although the number of cats appears to at least equal the number of dogs.16 Consequently, it appears safe to conclude that dogs pose a larger work hazard than cats.

As the following tabulation illustrates, the 1992-97 gender distribution of nonfatal injuries and illnesses involving these two common pets contrasts with the gender distribution of nonfatal cases overall:

  Nonfatal occupational
injuries and illnesses
Number Percent
Animal Men Women Men Women
Dogs .......... 6,584 7,174 48 52
Cats ........... 1,002 3,644 22 78

Although, overall, men sustain twice as many nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses as women, despite being barely a majority of the workforce, women account for a majority of the cases for dogs and for cats. Their share of cases involving cats, four-fifths, is particularly large. Non-farm animal caretakers, such as might work in a veterinarian’s office, pet store, or kennel, account for the largest number of injuries and illnesses inflicted by dogs and cats alike. According to data from the Current Population Survey, women make up two-thirds of employment in this occupation.17 While this might help explain why women predominate among dog- and cat-related nonfatal cases, it does not explain why women account for a greater share of cat-related cases than of dog-related cases. Even after adjusting for truck drivers and meter readers—male-dominated occupations that are among the most common for dog-related cases, but that are negligible for cat-related cases— women’s share of dog-related cases remains much less than their share of cat-related cases.

Sprains and strains, which account for more than two-fifths of nonfatal injuries and illnesses overall,18 are considerably less prevalent for cat-related cases than for dog-related cases, comprising one-fifth of cases for dogs and a negligible share for cats. Cats typically average 5 to 6 pounds,19 while dogs usually weigh much more. While this might explain why sprains and strains are inflicted with greater frequency by dogs than by cats, and why women account for a greater share of nonfatal injuries and illnesses inflicted by dogs than of nonfatal injuries and illnesses overall, it cannot explain why women suffer disproportionately more cat-related cases.

Cattle (bovine) and equine

Cattle. Cattle include bovine in general, such as dairy and beef cows, calves, heifers, steers, and bulls; bison, which are being introduced as a commercial beef animal (more commonly referred to as “buffalo”); beefalo, a cow bison hybrid; and exotic bovine such as water buffalo.

Cattle account for more fatal work injuries than any other animal. These 141 cases comprise two-fifths of the 375 worker fatalities associated with animals, and nearly half of the 303 fatalities associated with mammals, during the 1992-97 period. However, cattle account for only 7 percent of nonfatal injuries and illnesses associated with animals, 5,300 cases, during these 6 years.20

The fatality risk is disproportionately localized in a small segment of the cattle population. Bulls, which are only about 2 percent of the cattle population, account for about half the cattle related fatalities, 68 of the 141. But, at calving time, cows, which are two-fifths of the cattle population,21 pose another, albeit less prevalent, peril: workers experienced five fatalities related to birthing or maternal defensiveness, such as cows attacking farmers trying to midwife them.

Animal attacks account for four fifths of the cattle-related job fatalities, 114 of the 141. The 14 vehicle crashes resulting from collisions with cattle account for about half the remaining cases, with most of the rest being struck-against incidents, such as 6 cases involving cattle knocking a gate or panel into the worker.

Agriculture accounts for three-quarters of the total cattle-related fatalities. It also accounts for most of the cattle related nonfatal cases, followed by manufacturing (including meatpacking, which involves slaughtering live animals), transportation, and wholesale trade. Farm workers suffered nearly half the cattle-inflicted nonfatal cases. Truck drivers, butchers, and non-construction laborers account for most of the remaining cases.

More than nine-tenths of fatal injuries and nonfatal injuries and illnesses inflicted by cattle involve men. Non-Hispanic whites comprise two thirds of cattle-related nonfatal cases for which race and ethnic origin were reported, with Hispanics accounting for virtually all the remainder.

Bruises (either alone or in combination with other injuries and illnesses) comprise about a third of cattle-related nonfatal cases, compared with one ninth of all nonfatal cases. Fractures (either alone or in combination with other injuries and illnesses) comprise about a sixth of cattle-related nonfatal cases, compared with under one-tenth of all nonfatal cases. However, sprains and strains (either alone or in combination with other injuries and illnesses) also comprise about a sixth of cattle related nonfatal cases, compared with more than two-fifths of all nonfatal cases. While sprains and strains are much less prevalent among cattle-related cases than in nonfatal cases overall, fractures, bruises, and contusions are much more prevalent.

Equine. Equine, which include horses, ponies, mules, burros, and donkeys, account for more fatal work injuries than any animal other than cattle.22 The 104 fatal work injuries associated with equine comprise more than one-quarter of the 375 animal fatalities, and one third of the 303 fatalities associated with mammals, that occurred during the 1992-97 period. The 5,100 nonfatal equine cases, however, account for only 7 percent of nonfatal injuries and illnesses involving animals during these 6 years.23

There were 53 animal attacks accounting for half of the equine-related job fatalities. There also were 25 non-attack fatalities which resulted from the rider falling off the horse,24 16 fatal animal-drawn vehicle incidents (such as falling off a horse-drawn hay cart), and 9 vehicle crashes resulting from collisions with equine or swerving to avoid colliding with them.

The 64 cases involving workers in farming occupations constitute the majority of equine-related job fatalities, followed by those involving jockeys, rodeo riders, and animal trainers, which together account for 20 cases during this 6-year period. Agriculture accounts for two-thirds of the equine-related fatalities, with amusement and recreation services, such as racetracks, accounting for another one-fifth. Two industry divisions, agriculture and services, account for almost all equine-related nonfatal cases. Farm workers account for one-third of the equine-inflicted injuries and illnesses; non-farm animal caretakers account for one-quarter.

Bruises (either alone or in combination with other injuries and illnesses) comprise about three-tenths of equine related nonfatal cases, compared with one-ninth of all nonfatal cases. Fractures (either alone or in combination with other injuries and illnesses) also account for about three-tenths of equine-related nonfatal cases, compared with under one-tenth of all nonfatal cases. However, sprains and strains (either alone or in combination with other injuries and illnesses) comprise less than one-fifth of equine-related nonfatal cases, compared with slightly more than two-fifths of all nonfatal cases. Whereas fractures account for only one-sixth of cases involving cattle, they are the leading injury involving equine, accounting for three tenths of cases.

Comparisons between cattle and equine. A unique feature of both cattle and equine-related cases is that an unusually high portion of trunk injuries involve locations other than the back or shoulder. For nonfatal cases overall, the back and shoulder account for four-fifths of trunk cases. In contrast, for cattle- and equine-related cases, the back and shoulder account for only half of the trunk cases.

Almost three-fifths of cattle-related nonfatal injuries involve the worker being attacked by cattle. Being struck by objects, as when a worker is hit by a gate nudged by a cow passing through it, accounts for an additional one-fifth of nonfatal cattle-related cases. Similarly, more than half of the equine-related cases also involve animal attacks. Being struck by objects accounts for three-tenths of nonfatal equine-related cases.

As the following tabulation shows,25 for 1992-97, the peril cattle pose to workers is proportionate to their share of farm mammals overall:

Animal Numbers
of head
(millions)
Fatalities
Total ................... 174 249
Cattle ...................... 101 141
Swine ...................... 59 -
Sheep ..................... 9 -
Equine ..................... 5 104
NOTE: Dash indicates fewer than five
cases or data that do not meet publication
criteria.

Cattle account for three-fifths of the work fatalities involving farm mammals, and for three-fifths of farm mammals. However, the fatality hazard for equine is different: while equine comprise only 3 percent of all farm mammals, they account for two-fifths of the work fatalities involving farm mammals. Swine make up one-third of farm mammals, but account for few fatalities. Sheep, which are only about 5 percent of farm mammals, account for a negligible number of fatalities.26 In addition to the differences in purpose of the various animals, this may reflect the relative physical size of sheep and swine, compared with horses and bulls.

Table 3 shows the percent distribution of fatal non-vehicle related injuries inflicted by cattle and equine. Internal and intracranial injuries account for more than two-thirds of fatal cases for both cattle and equine. Injuries of this character and magnitude reflect these animals’ sheer size and weight. Intracranial injuries play a larger role in fatal injuries for equine than for cattle, most likely because one of the most typical uses of horses is as riding animals. Riders falling off horses, horses falling while being ridden, and riders being bucked off horses are common causes of equine-related work fatalities. 27 On the other hand, internal injuries play a larger role in fatal injuries involving cattle than in those involving equine.

Major causes of fatal work-related fatalities

Three-fifths of the 375 work fatalities involving animals are the result of being attacked by an animal, or being stung or bitten by a venomous animal. These 227 incidents are divided into two main categories: Animal attacks, such as being gored by a bull or thrown from a horse carriage by a spooked horse, which account for 186 job fatalities; and venomous stings and bites, which account for 41 job fatalities.28 Bee, wasp, and hornet stings account for nearly all the venomous stings and bites; cattle and equine account for the vast majority of animal attacks. Table 4 shows the kinds of animals most frequently involved in these incidents.

Fatal highway and non-industrial, off road vehicle crashes involving animals typically result from collision with an animal or swerving to avoid it; these 75 cases account for a fifth of animal related fatalities. The following tabulation shows the number of cases attributable to the kinds of animals most frequently involved in fatal highway and non-industrial, off-road vehicle incidents.

Animal Number of cases
Total .............................. 75
Deer .................................. 24
Equine ............................... 20
Cattle ................................ 15
Dogs ................................. 6
Other ................................ 10

Cattle-related vehicle fatalities invariably involve collisions with cattle in the roadway: two-thirds of these cattle-related fatalities involve trucks, and half involve tractor-trailer trucks. Equine-related vehicle fatalities usually involve animal-drawn vehicles, such as horse carriages and hay wagons. In most vehicle crashes involving other animals, the crashes resulted because drivers attempted to swerve to avoid them. Trucks also were involved in half of these crashes, but tractor-trailer trucks were involved in only one-sixth.

Combined, the 75 fatalities resulting from highway and non-industrial, off road vehicle crashes involving animals, and the 227 fatal animal attacks and venomous stings and bites, total 302 cases, four-fifths of the animal-related fatalities during the 1992-97 period.

Major findings

A number of key findings emerged from this analysis of the 1992-97 data:

  • The risk that cattle pose to workers is proportional to their share of farm mammals overall. In contrast, equine comprise 3 percent of all farm mammals, but account for two-fifths of the work related fatalities involving farm mammals. Swine and sheep pose a smaller risk than their share of farm mammals overall.

  • Internal and intracranial injuries make up more than two-thirds of work related fatalities involving cattle and equine. Intracranial injuries play a larger role in fatal injuries involving equine than in those involving cattle, while internal injuries play a larger role in fatal injuries involving cattle than in those involving equine.

  • For both cattle and equine-related cases, a high proportion of trunk injuries involve locations other than the back or shoulder.

  • The number of fatal and nonfatal cases associated with dogs is much greater than that for cats, demonstrating that dogs pose a larger work hazard than cats.

  • Although men suffer a majority of nonfatal occupational injuries overall, women account for four-fifths of nonfatal occupational injuries and illnesses involving cats.

  • Outdoor workers account for three-quarters of fatal insect injuries.

  • Three-fifths of the animal-related work fatalities involved attacks by animals or stings or bites by venomous animals. Another fifth resulted from highway and non-industrial, off road vehicle crashes involving animals.

  • Few, if any, work-related fatalities involved snakes or other reptiles, sheep, swine, or rodents.

Conclusion

Animals pose unique hazards to workers, such as being stung by bees or trampled by cattle. Although animals can pose hazards common to work-related injuries and illnesses overall, such as knocking a gate or panel into a worker in much the same way a gust of wind might do, these incidents are the exception. Animals also pose hazards that have both common and unique features. For example, deer darting into traffic to cross the road can cause crashes as vehicles swerve to avoid them, in much the same way that vehicles weaving in and out of traffic can cause crashes. However, unlike vehicles, deer often dart suddenly out of the roadside brush. Although some animals are large and heavy enough to be potent vehicle collision hazards in and of themselves, even collisions with smaller animals, such as dogs, can cause drivers to lose control of their vehicles.

Animals are among the few animate objects with which workers interact, and this places them in a special class of workplace hazards. To illustrate: the weight within a cabinet could shift were the shelves to fall out as furniture movers maneuver the piece up the stairs, straining a worker’s back; but wielding a dog can cause a similar injury to a veterinary assistant were the dog to decide to shift its own weight. Similarly, inanimate objects do not attack a worker in the same way that a bull might gore a farmer or an elephant trample its trainer. Working with, or in the presence of, a particular animal requires special attention to the unique hazards it poses.


 

    1 Data on fatal work injuries are from the

Bureau of Labor Statistics Census of Fatal

Occupational Injuries (CFOI), 1992-97. This

program, which has collected occupational

fatality data nationwide since 1992, uses diverse

data sources to identify, verify, and profile

fatal work injuries. Information about

each workplace fatality (occupation and other

worker characteristics, equipment being used,

and circumstances of the event) is obtained

by cross-referencing source documents, such

as death certificates, workers’ compensation

records, and reports to Federal and State agencies.

This method ensures that counts are as

complete and accurate as possible. CFOI data

do not include fatal work illnesses.

Data on nonfatal work injuries are from

the Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses

(SOII), 1992-97. This program collects

information on nonfatal work-related

injuries and illnesses from a random sample

of about 250,000 establishments representing

most of private sector wage and salary

employment. The self-employed and farms

with fewer than 11 employees are excluded.

Worker characteristics are collected only for

those workers sustaining injuries and illnesses

that require days away from work to recuperate.

Because the scope and methodology of

CFOI and SOII are different, comparison of

the fatal and nonfatal data is problematic.

More information on CFOI and SOII is

available at http://stats.bls.gov/oshhome.htm.

     2 A fatal injury was included in this study

if an animal was the source or secondary

source of the injury, or if the case’s narrative

description identified an animal as playing

an active role in the fatal incident. Because

secondary source was not published for the

nonfatal SOII data, and narrative descriptions

are not included in the SOII database, nonfatal

occupational injuries or illnesses were included

only if the animal was the source. The

source identifies the object, substance, bodily

motion, or exposure that directly produced

or inflicted the injury or illness, whereas the

secondary source identifies the object, substance,

or person that generated the source

of injury or illness or that contributed to the

event or exposure. Each case must have a

source, but many cases do not have a secondary

source associated with them. Fatal injuries

with source as an animal account for 0.6

percent of all injury fatalities, approximately

the same percentage as for nonfatal occupational

injuries and illnesses with source as an

animal. When fatal injuries with a source

other than an animal, but with a secondary

source as an animal or with a narrative description

identifying an animal as playing an

active role in the fatal incident, are included,

fatal injuries involving animals rise to 1 percent

of fatal injuries.

     3 Examples of such occupation or animal-

specific research include A. Steele-

Bodger, “Hazards of Animal Handling,” Annals

of Occupational Hygiene, vol. 12, no.

2, 1969, pp. 79-85, which deals with farm

animals; T.H. Cogbill and H.M. Busch, Jr.,

“The Spectrum of Agricultural Trauma,”

Journal of Emergency Medicine, vol. 3, no.

3, 1985, pp. 205-10; H.M. Busch, Jr., T.H.

Cogbill, J. Landercasper, and B.O.

Landercasper, “Blunt Bovine and Equine

Trauma,” Journal of Trauma, vol. 26, no. 6,

1986, pp. 559-60; J. Landercasper, T.H.

Cogbill, P.J. Strutt, and B.O. Landercasper,

“Trauma and the Veterinarian,” Journal of

Trauma, vol. 28, no. 8, 1988, pp. 1255-59;

T.H. Cogbill, P.J. Strutt, J. Landercasper, and

B.O. Landercasper, “Injuries from Horses and

Cows,” Complications in Orthopedics, vol.

4, no. 4, 1989, pp. 112-14, 120; and P. Freta,

“Injuries from Farm Animals,” Principles of

Health and Safety in Agriculture (Boca Raton,

FL, CRC Press, Inc., 1989), pp. 365-66.

     4 Occupational Injury and Illness Classification

Manual (Washington, Bureau of

Labor Statistics, December 1992) pp. DS55-

DS56.

    5 Encyclopedia Americana reports, “Fatal

snake bites are extremely rare in the

United States…probably fewer than 10 such

deaths annually....” Unlike Asia, where annual

snake bite deaths are estimated at 30,000

to 40,000 because large populations live in

close proximity to dangerously venomous

snakes, the United States has only a few species

of venomous snakes, and their habitats

are usually isolated from population centers.

Only 15 percent of snake species worldwide

are venomous. Moreover, even when venomous

snakes do bite, half the time they do

not inject venom. (Encyclopedia Americana,

vol. 25 (Danbury, CT, Grolier, Inc., 1999),

p. 104.)

 

 

Attacks by other reptiles, such as gila

monsters and alligators, also are rare, perhaps

because these creatures are becoming

less common as the consequence of property

development, or because workers know how

to avoid places that they frequent.

Bats are now the primary rabies vectors

(organisms that transmit pathogens) to humans.

Since 1980, 25 persons have caught

rabies in the United States, all but three of

them from bats. (“Bat Bites Cause Most

U.S. Rabies Cases,” Washington Times, Nov.

3, 1999, p. C5.)

     6 Agricultural Statistics, 1999 (Washington,

U.S. Department of Agriculture, National

Agricultural Statistics Service, 1999),

pp. VIII-30 and VIII-40-VIII-41.

     7 Due to vagaries of coverage requirements

and reporting practices for some offshore

operations, some nonfatal cases in the fishing

industry may not be included.

     8 Insects are six-legged arthropods whose

bodies consist of three segments—head, thorax,

and abdomen—whereas arachnids are

eight-legged arthropods whose bodies consist

of only two segments—head and abdomen.

Bees, hornets, and wasps are insects, whereas

spiders, scorpions, and ticks are arachnids.

     9 Because small farms with fewer than 11

employees are excluded from SOII coverage,

the actual number of nonfatal cases involving

insects and arachnids is likely to be greater

than the 36,100 reported to the SOII.

     10 For more information on venomous

stings and bites, see Matthew Cahill, ed., Diseases

(Springhouse, PA, Springhouse Corp.,

1993), pp. 266-67.

     11 See Cahill, Diseases, pp. 135-37, 184-

86, and 189-92. See also “Lyme Disease

Facts,” Hazard Information Bulletin (Washington,

U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational

Safety and Health Administration, Apr.

20, 2000).

      12 Dogs, in the BLS Occupational Injury

and Illness Classification System, refer

strictly to domestic dogs. Other members of

the dog family, such as wolves, are subsumed

under other mammals. SOII does not contain

sufficient detail to ascertain the number

of nonfatal cases attributable to other members

of the dog family.

      13 A number of dog breeds are heavy and

unwieldy. Saint Bernards, for example, can

reach as much as 200 pounds. (See Encyclopedia

Americana, vol. 9, p. 234.) BLS data

are not sufficiently detailed to afford any

breed-specific conclusions.

      14 Because the SOII does not include government

employment, nonfatal animal-related injuries and illnesses to

public sector employees, such as animal-control officers,

police officers, and letter carriers, are not

available from BLS. Data for some of these

occupations might be available from other

sources, such as the U.S. Department of Labor,

Occupational Safety and Health Administration

for Federal Government employees,

and the U.S. Postal Service for postal

workers. See also “Risks of the Route,” The

Washington Post, June 12, 2000, p. A19.

      15 Cats, in the BLS Occupational Injury

and Illness Classification System, refer

strictly to domestic cats. Other members of

the cat family, such as tigers, which account

for a small number of fatal occupational injuries,

are subsumed under other mammals.

SOII does not contain sufficient detail to ascertain

the number of nonfatal cases attributable

to other members of the cat family.

16 There is no apparent consensus about

the numbers of cats and dogs in the United

States. Colliers Encyclopedia estimates that

there are 50 million cats, 10 million of which

are feral (Colliers Encyclopedia, vol. 5 (New

York, P.F. Collier, 1994), p. 539), but only

25 million dogs (vol. 8, p. 292). Encyclopedia

Americana reports that there are 25 million

cats (vol. 5, p. 801), while elsewhere

reports cats are believed to outnumber dogs,

which it estimates at 29 to 35 million (vol.

9, p. 234). World Book Encyclopedia estimates

58 million cats (World Book Encyclopedia,

vol. 3 (Chicago, World Book, 1989),

p. 284) and 49 million dogs (vol. 5, p. 264).

The American Veterinary Medicine Association

estimates there were 53 million dogs

and 59 million cats in the United States as of

the end of 1996 (US Pet Ownership and Demographics

Sourcebook (Schaumburg, IL,

American Veterinary Medicine Association,

1997), p. 3; and “Cats, Dogs Live Longer

with Up-to-Date Care,” Washington Times,

Nov. 15, 1999, p. A2). The Pet Food Institute

estimates there were 56 million dogs and

68 million cats in the country in 1996 (“Pet

Incidence Trend Report” (Washington, The

Pet Institute, 1999), p. 6).

 

 

     17 See Employment and Earnings, January

issues for 1993-98, which contain annual

22 Compensation and Working Conditions Fall 2000

average employment data for 1992-97.

     18 Timothy Webster, “Putting a Strain on

Workers’ Health,” Compensation and Working

Conditions, Spring 1999, p. 29.

19 Encyclopedia Americana, vol. 5, p.

801.

     20 Because small farms with fewer than 11

employees are excluded from SOII coverage,

the actual number of nonfatal cases involving

cattle is likely to be greater than the 5,300

reported to the SOII. Other studies that include

small farms find farm animals account

for as much as one-third of traumatic nonfatal

agricultural injuries. See Cogbill and Busch,

“The Spectrum of Agricultural Trauma,” pp.

205-10; T.L. Napier, W.R. Goe, and A.R.

Pugh, “Incidence and Predictive Factors Associated

with Farm Accidents in Ohio,” Research

Circular 287 (Wooster, OH, Ohio State

University, 1985); and T.H. Cogbill, E.S.

Steenlage, J. Landercasper, and P.J. Strutt,

“Death and Disability from Agricultural Injuries

in Wisconsin: A 12-year Experience

with 739 Patients,” Journal of Trauma, vol.

31, no. 12, 1991, pp. 1632-37.

      21 Agricultural Statistics, 1999, p. VII-1.

      22 “U.S. Equine Inventory Up 1.3 Percent,”

Agriculture Department Bulletin Eq 1

(Washington, U.S. Department of Agriculture,

National Agricultural Statistics Service,

Mar. 2, 1999).

      23 Because small farms with fewer than 11

employees are excluded from SOII coverage,

the actual number of nonfatal cases involving

equine is likely to be greater than the

5,100 reported to the SOII. See note 20 for

further discussion of the role of farm animals

in traumatic nonfatal agricultural injuries.

      24 Examples of animal attacks involving

equine include a horse bucking its rider; a horse

seeing a rattlesnake and rearing back in fright,

causing the rider to fall off; a horse being

broken in dragging its trainer; horses trampling

a jockey who falls off his horse during a

race; and a mule kicking a farm worker standing

near it. Examples of falls from equine

that are not animal attacks include a horse

losing its footing and falling, even falling on

top of the rider; a rider falling off, even if

merely as a consequence of the horse galloping

too fast; and a rider losing her balance for

reasons unrelated to the motion or behavior

of the horse.

       25 Cattle, swine, and sheep data are from

Agricultural Statistics, 1999, pp. VII-1,

VII-19, and VII-29. The Agriculture Department

began releasing equine data in

1999; consequently, equine data are from

“U.S. Equine Inventory Up 1.3 Percent.”

Because of a lack of data for earlier years,

the equine estimate represents the number

reported as of January 1, 1998.

       26 The nonfatal SOII data exclude farms

with fewer than 11 workers, rendering comparison

of the prevalence of nonfatal occupational

injuries and illnesses for particular

kinds of farm animals inappropriate. Totals

for fatalities involving various kinds of

farm animals include those from farms with

fewer than 11 workers, while totals for nonfatal

occupational injuries and illnesses do

not.

        27 For discussion of a similar concept for

farm youth, see D.B. Reed, S. Novak, and

R.L. Heath, “Farm Youth and Horse-related

Injuries: A Case for Safety Helmets,” Journal

of Agromedicine, vol. 5, no. 1, 1998, pp.

45-57.

         28 The following explanation might help

clarify the distinction between venomous

stings and bites versus other animal attacks:

A snake bite, for example, would be classified

as a venomous bite for a poisonous

snake such as a copperhead (presuming

venom is injected), whereas it would be an

animal attack for a nonpoisonous snake such

as a king snake.