The 2024 Injury Tracking Application (ITA) cycle marked a pivotal year for Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) recordkeeping and analytics. With expanded electronic reporting now ...
Each year, millions of U.S. workers are injured on the job, yet the full scope of workplace injuries remains unclear. A recent article published in the American Journal of Public Health highlights the ...
The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration has released 2024 workplace injury and illness data collected from its Injury Tracking Application. Under federal ...
Injury data sets that OSHA now makes public are an underused resource in preventing workplace injuries. Maintaining and facilitating access to these data would help the United States bring down the ...
Publicly available OSHA data offers unprecedented insight into workplace injury in the United States
Millions of workers in the United States (US) are injured on the job annually. However, accurately determining the true rate of occupational injuries remains a challenge due to gaps in existing ...
The U.S. Department of Labor has released detailed 2023 data on more than 890,000 workplace injuries and illnesses across over 91,000 establishments. The data—collected through the OSHA Injury ...
On Dec. 13, OSHA released comprehensive data collected on more than 890,000 workplace injuries and illnesses at more than 91,000 workplaces in calendar year 2023. The data includes incident level ...
While individual companies’ sharing of injury and illness data in real time, a concept that was promoted by then-CEO Paul O’Neill when he was at Alcoa, isn’t a reality yet, OSHA is nudging business in ...
OSHA’s 2024 Injury Tracking Application (ITA) cycle expanded electronic reporting, providing richer case-level detail for large establishments in high-hazard industries, enhancing OSHA’s ability to ...
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