Injury Statistics Work-related Claims: 2011

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1 Injury Statistics Work-related Claims: 2011 Embargoed until 10:45am 17 October 2012 Key facts Provisional data show that in 2011: 1 in 10 workers made a claim to ACC for a work-related injury. The overall rate of injury claims was 97 claims for every 1,000 full-time equivalents (FTEs). Men made up 71 percent of all claims for work-related injuries, with a rate of 122 claims per 1,000 FTEs. Workers aged years and workers aged 65 years and over had the highest claim rates across all age groups, with just over 1 in 8 making a claim. Pacific peoples had the highest incidence rate of all ethnicities, with 115 claims per 1,000 FTEs. Agriculture and fisheries was the occupation group with the highest incidence rate, with 211 claims per 1,000 FTEs. 187,900 claims in total were made for work-related injuries; these claims were made by 169,400 people. The Canterbury region had the most claims lodged for fatal work-related injuries, due to the 22 February 2011 earthquake. Trends from final data for show that: The total number of claims has continued to fall each year since 2006 (to 212,100 in 2010). The incidence rate has fallen each year since 2002 (to 111 claims per 1,000 FTEs). Geoff Bascand Government Statistician 17 October 2012 ISSN

2 Commentary Work-related injury claims fewer than 200,000 for first time since 2002 Highest injury claim rates for males, older workers, and Pacific peoples Agriculture and fishery workers have highest rate of work-related injuries Manufacturing industry has highest number of claims in 2011 Auckland and Wellington have the lowest claim rates Canterbury earthquake affects fatal claims figures Trends show that claims and rates continue to fall Males consistently dominate claim trends Claims and rates in largest regions continue to fall The figures presented in this information release are for claims accepted by the Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) for work-related injuries. The statistics are based on one claim for each person for each injury event. The information covers all claims for work-related injuries, including claims involving entitlement payments (eg compensation and support for returning to independence) and claims for fatal injuries. The data in this information release are not a definitive count of all work-related injuries, because not all result in a claim to ACC. This commentary describes both the number of claims and the incidence rate (measured as the number of claims per 1,000 full-time equivalent employees (FTEs)). See the Definitions section for more information. The figures released for the first time are provisional statistics for 2011 and final statistics for 2010 (both as reported by 31 March 2012). This commentary focuses on the provisional statistics for 2011, with trends in work-related injuries for at the end. Work-related injury claims fewer than 200,000 for first time since 2002 Provisionally, there were 187,900 claims for work-related injuries that occurred in the 2011 calendar year. This is the first time fewer than 200,000 provisional work-related injuries have been recorded since this information release began in The provisional incidence rate for 2011 was 97 work-related injury claims per 1,000 FTEs. This is the first time the incidence rate has been lower than 100 claims per 1,000 FTEs. Of all claims, 10 percent (19,200) resulted in entitlement payments. This includes payments for weekly compensation and rehabilitation necessary for returning to independence. The 187,900 claims were made by 169,400 people. Most people (91 percent) lodged only one claim. Highest injury claim rates for males, older workers, and Pacific peoples Provisional claims by age, sex, and ethnicity: In 2011, the majority of work-related injury claims were for males, with 134,000 claims (71 percent of all claims). The incidence rate for males (122 claims per 1,000 FTEs) was almost twice as high as for females (64 claims per 1,000 FTEs). The graph below shows that in 2011, workers aged years made more claims for workrelated injuries than any other age group, with 44,200 claims (24 percent of all claims). This age group was followed by workers aged 35 44, who made 39,900 claims (21 percent of all claims). 2

3 The incidence rates across the age groups show a different pattern (see graph below). Although in 2011 workers aged 65 and over (65+) made only 5 percent of all claims (9,500), they had the highest incidence rate with 122 claims per 1,000 FTEs. Workers aged had the secondhighest incidence rate, with 116 claims per 1,000 FTEs. The lowest incidence rate was for those aged 25 34, with 86 claims per 1,000 FTEs. By ethnicity, the number of work-related injury claims in 2011 were: European 133,100 (71 percent of all work-related claims) Māori 21,000 (11 percent) Asian 11,800 (6 percent) Pacific peoples 11,400 (6 percent). 3

4 The incidence rate for work-related injury claims in 2011 shows a different picture (see graph below). Incidence rates by ethnicity were: Pacific peoples 115 claims per 1,000 FTEs Māori 95 claims per 1,000 FTEs European 90 claims per 1,000 FTEs Asian 58 claims per 1,000 FTEs. Provisional entitlement claims by age and sex: As was the case for all work-related claims, in 2011 almost three-quarters (74 percent) of entitlement claims were for males. The incidence rate for males (13 claims per 1,000 FTEs) was more than double that for females (6 claims per 1,000 FTEs). Also similar to the pattern for all work-related claims, in 2011 workers aged lodged more entitlement claims than any other age group, with 4,700 claims. This was 24 percent of all entitlement claims. Workers aged 65+ made the fewest entitlement claims, with 900 (5 percent). The incidence rates for entitlement claims by age group ranged between 9 and 12 per 1,000 FTEs. The highest rate was for the 65+ age group, with 12 entitlement claims per 1,000 FTEs, while the second-highest was for workers aged 15 24, with 11 entitlement claims per 1,000 FTEs. 4

5 Agriculture and fishery workers have highest rate of work-related injuries Provisional claims by occupation: Occupation describes the injured person's job at the time of their injury. Provisionally in 2011, the occupation groups with the most work-related injury claims were: trades workers 32,800 claims agriculture and fishery workers 28,100 claims plant and machine operators and assemblers 26,900 claims. Clerks had the least number of claims, with 7,100. Agriculture and fishery workers had the highest incidence rate, with 211 work-related injury claims per 1,000 FTEs in 2011 (see graph below). Workers in the elementary occupations group (183 claims per 1,000 FTEs), and trades workers (180 claims), had the next highest rates. The lowest rates were for the clerks and professionals occupation groups, which had 35 and 36 claims per 1,000 FTEs, respectively. Claims by males outnumbered those by females in all occupation groups, with the exception of: service and sales workers (59 percent of all claims were made by females) clerks (58 percent of all claims were made by females) professionals (57 percent of all claims were made by females). 5

6 A high proportion of the workers in the three occupation groups with the highest number of workrelated injury claims were males. They made up 98 percent of all claims made by trades workers, 89 percent of claims by plant and machine operators and assemblers, and 79 percent of claims by agriculture and fishery workers. Provisional entitlement claims by occupation: Provisionally in 2011, plant and machine operators and assemblers had the highest proportion of claims resulting in entitlement payments (16 percent). Workers in the elementary occupations group (13 percent) had the next highest proportion of work-related claims resulting in entitlement payments. Plant and machine operators and assemblers also had the highest incidence rate, at 26 entitlement claims per 1,000 FTEs. Workers in elementary occupations, and agriculture and fishery workers both followed closely with incidence rates of 23 and 22 entitlement claims per 1,000 FTEs, respectively. Manufacturing industry has highest number of claims in 2011 Provisional injury claims by industry: Industry describes the main type of activity carried out by the organisation that the injured person worked for. This is the first Injury Statistics information release using the Australian and New Zealand Standard Classification 2006 (ANZSIC06). This replaces ANZSIC96, which was used in previous releases. As a result, any trend analysis for industry is not possible. The highest number of work-related claims in 2011 were lodged by workers in the following industries: manufacturing 28,900 claims construction 21,300 claims agriculture, forestry and fishing 19,900 claims. Mining had the least work-related claims (600), which is due to the comparatively small size of that industry. In 31,200 claims (17 percent of the total) the industry of the workplace where the injury occurred was not specified. For this reason, the figures for claims by industry should be interpreted with caution. In 2011, the highest incidence rates were in the following industries: agriculture, forestry, and fishing 152 claims per 1,000 FTEs construction 133 claims per 1,000 FTEs manufacturing 122 claims per 1,000 FTEs electricity, gas, water and waste services 113 claims per 1,000 FTEs. While mining had the least number of claims, it had an incidence rate of 81 claims per 1,000 FTEs, eighth out of the 19 industries. 6

7 Provisional entitlement claims by industry: As with all work-related claims, the following industries were among those with the highest incidence rates of work-related entitlement claims: agriculture, forestry and fishing (20 entitlement claims per 1,000 FTEs), construction (17 claims), and manufacturing (16 claims). However, the transport, postal, and warehousing industry had the second-highest rate, with 18 entitlements per 1,000 FTEs. This meant 18 percent of all workrelated claims in this industry were for entitlement payments. This was the highest industry percentage; overall, 10 percent of all claims involved entitlement payments. Auckland and Wellington have the lowest claim rates Provisional claims by region: Provisionally in 2011, the Auckland region had the most workrelated injury claims, with 54,600 claims (29 percent of all claims). This reflects the size of the region's population. Canterbury (28,300) and Waikato (20,000) were second and third, again reflecting the higher number of workers in these regions. However, Wellington, the third-largest region, was fifth, with 13,800 claims. While the Auckland region had the most claims, its incidence rate was the second-lowest, with 88 claims per 1,000 FTEs (see graph below). The regions with the highest incidence rates were: Gisborne/Hawkes' Bay 139 claims per 1,000 FTEs Northland 135 claims per 1,000 FTEs Bay of Plenty 122 claims per 1,000 FTEs. 7

8 Wellington had the lowest rate, with 58 claims per 1,000 FTEs. Provisional entitlement claims by region: Auckland also had the highest number of entitlement claims (4,700), accounting for 25 percent of the total. However, this region had the second-lowest incidence rate, at 8 entitlement claims per 1,000 FTEs. The highest rates of entitlement claims occurred in: Gisborne/Hawkes' Bay 15 claims per 1,000 FTEs Otago/Southland 13 claims per 1,000 FTEs Northland 13 entitlement claims per 1,000 FTEs. The Wellington region again had the lowest rate, with 6 entitlement claims per 1,000 FTEs. Canterbury earthquake affects fatal claims figures Provisional fatal claims: Overall, the provisional number of claims for fatal work-related injuries in 2011 was 126. Males made up 71 percent of these claims. Workers aged accounted for 24 percent of all fatal claims. The agriculture, forestry, and fishing industry had the highest number of fatal claims, with 15. Both the construction industry and the financial and insurance services industry followed closely, with 12 fatal claims each. However, information on industry should be interpreted with caution because the industry was unknown for 21 of the fatal claims (17 percent). The earthquake that occurred in the Canterbury region on 22 February 2011 resulted in the deaths of 185 people. This affected the number of claims for fatal work-related injuries in the 8

9 provisional 2011 data. Those people who were at work at the time of the earthquake will have their claims deemed to be work-related. The effects of the Christchurch earthquake on the provisional data for fatal injuries can be seen when looking at fatalities by geographic region. The number of fatal work-related claims in the Canterbury region was 63 (50 percent of the total), while the Auckland region had just 12 fatal claims (10 percent of the total). Canterbury recorded 9 fatal claims in the 2010 final data. Fatalities by occupation occupation group are very different when comparing 2011 data with the finalised 2010 data. Provisionally in 2011 there were: 18 fatal claims in the legislators, administrators, and managers occupation group, compared with 3 claims in the 2010 final data 18 fatal claims in the professionals occupation group, compared with 0 claims in the 2010 final data 9 fatal claims in the technicians and associate professionals occupation group, compared with 0 claims in the 2010 final data. Due to random rounding, individual figures may not always sum to the stated total. See Rounding and suppression for more information. Trends show that claims and rates continue to fall Although the final number of work-related injury claims (see graph below) increased slightly each year from 2002 to 2005, from 2006 the number of claims has continued to fall each year (to 212,100 in 2010). The final incidence rate has decreased each year since 2002, from 143 work-related claims per 1,000 FTEs, to 111 in 2010 (see graph below). The incidence rate has dropped for both employees and self-employed people over this period. Over the final 12 months however, the rate for self-employed has dropped from 196 claims per 1,000 FTEs (in 2009) to 181 (in 2010). Over the same period, the rate for employees remained steady, with 103 claims per 1,000 FTEs in 2009 and 102 claims in

10 Males consistently dominate claim trends Trends in claims by age and sex: Males consistently accounted for just under three-quarters (varies between 71 to 74 percent) of all work-related claims each year between 2002 and Each year, males also had a higher incidence rate than females. The rate for males decreased from 183 claims per 1,000 FTEs (in 2002) to 141 (in 2010), while the rate for females also decreased over this period from 88 claims per 1,000 FTEs (in 2002) to 72 (in 2010). Between 2002 and 2007, workers aged consistently made the most claims each year (see graph below). This trend changed in 2008, when workers aged took over as the leading age group making claims. This trend continued in 2010, with 50,400 claims made in the year age group, compared with 45,000 in the year age group. While workers aged 65+ remain the lowest claimants overall (comprising 3 to 5 percent of all claims), the number of claims lodged by this age group increased, from 6,800 claims in 2002 to 11,800 in 2009, although it dropped slightly in 2010 to 11,400. This increase over time reflects New Zealand's ageing population and larger numbers of people aged 65+ remaining in the workforce. 10

11 The graph below shows a general decline in the incidence rate of claims for almost all age groups since Claims and rates in largest regions continue to fall Trend in claims by region: Claims by workers in the four largest regions (Auckland, Waikato, Wellington, and Canterbury) declined from 2002 to These regions made up four of the five regions with the most claims overall. Wellington had fewer claims than Otago/Southland over this time period, despite having significantly more workers. The graph below shows a decline in incidence rates for workers in the four largest regions from 2002 to In 2002, Waikato (172 claims per 1,000 FTEs) and Canterbury (146) were both above the national total of 143. However, by 2009 Canterbury (103 claims per 1,000 FTEs) had dropped below both Auckland (106 claims) and the national rate (114 claims). 11

12 Waikato was the only one of the four largest regions to remain above the national rate in 2010, with 134 claims per 1,000 FTEs compared with 111 claims for the national rate. Wellington continues to have the lowest rate for work-related injury claims, with 64 claims per 1,000 FTEs in For more detailed data see the Excel tables in the 'Downloads' box. 12

13 Definitions About Injury Statistics Work-related Claims Injury Statistics Work-related Claims measures claims accepted by ACC for work-related injuries. The statistics are based on one claim for each person for each injury event. Claims are only included if some costs are recorded see Data quality for more information. The information covers all claims for work-related injuries, including claims involving entitlement payments (where compensation and support for returning to independence may have been required), and claims for fatal injuries. The data in this information release are not a definitive count of all work-related injuries. This is because not all work-related injuries result in a claim to ACC. This data is used for monitoring the number and incidence of work-related injuries in New Zealand, and informing policy on reducing work-related injuries. Definition of terms Accident: the Accident Compensation Act 2001 (section 25) defines accident as: a specific event, or a series of events, that involves the application of a force (including gravity) or resistance external to the human body, or involves the sudden movement of the body to avoid such a force or resistance external to the human body, or a twisting movement of the body the inhalation or oral ingestion of any solid, liquid, gas, or foreign object on a specific occasion, which kind of occurrence does not include the inhalation or ingestion of a virus, bacterium, protozoa, or fungi unless that inhalation or ingestion is the result of the criminal act of a person other than the injured person a burn, or exposure to radiation or rays of any kind, on a specific occasion, which kind of occurrence does not include a burn or exposure caused by exposure to the elements the absorption of any chemical through the skin any exposure to the elements, or to extremes of temperature or environment. Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC): this agency administers New Zealand s accident compensation scheme, which provides no-fault personal injury cover for all New Zealand citizens and residents, and visitors to New Zealand. The ACC scheme is governed by the Accident Compensation Act An ACC claim is made when treatment for an injury is first sought from any recognised health professional, such as a doctor, a physiotherapist, or a dentist. Claims that are accepted by the ACC are divided into different categories for funding purposes. Only those claims in the workrelated category are included in this release. See Work-related claims for more information. Age: specifies the injured person s age in years, as at the date of injury, and is calculated from their date of birth. This age may differ from the worker s age when the claim is lodged, the age when compensation is received, or the age at death (if the worker dies of the injury). Body site of injury: the part or parts of the body injured in the accident. Claim: a lodgement by a person or care provider requesting that ACC assists through paying for, or helping to pay for, medical, weekly compensation and/or rehabilitation costs associated with an injury. A person can have more than one ACC claim. 13

14 All claims registered by ACC are categorised according to the type of services the claimant goes on to receive. There are two main categories of claim used in this release (see Claims for medical fees only, and Claims involving entitlement payments for details). Claims for fatal work-related injuries: claims made to ACC for deaths that resulted from workplace injuries (for example, a fatal work-related fall) or occupational diseases resulting in death, such as asbestos-related illnesses. Claims for medical fees only: claims for which ACC has paid a health professional for medical treatment or service. Approximately 90 percent of all ACC claims are in this category and often involve only one or two visits to a health professional. A claim is deemed to be a medical fee only claim if the person has received medical or dental treatment, or counselling. Claims involving entitlement payments: claims that have progressed past the medical fees only claim category. Compensation and support for returning to independence may have been required. Under the Accident Compensation Act 2001 (section 69), entitlements are: rehabilitation, comprising treatment, social rehabilitation, and vocational rehabilitation first week compensation weekly compensation lump sum compensation for permanent impairment funeral grants, survivors grants, weekly compensation for the spouse or partner, children and other dependants of a deceased claimant, and child care payments. Diagnosis of injury and illness/disease: the type of injury, illness or disease sustained by the worker, and recorded on the ACC claim by the treatment provider. Diagnosis is classified using: READ version 2 The International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th revision, Australian Modification, Second Edition (ICD-10-AM). For this release, where more than one diagnosis was provided the first diagnosis listed was used. Diagnoses are aggregated into three groups based on National Data Standards for Injury Surveillance (NDS-IS) recommendations (see the Data quality section for more detail). Employment status: indicates whether a worker is self-employed (that is, working for himself/herself), or is an employee (working for another person or entity). The employment status figures cover all those working for wages and salaries, including those working for employers who belong to the ACC partnership programme (as part of the accredited employer scheme). The self-employed figures include those classified as self-employed and not employing others, but exclude those working without pay or profit in a family business. While this differs from the definition in the Household Labour Force Survey (HLFS), it corresponds closely to definitions used for workplace accident insurance. Entitlement payments: see Claims involving entitlement payments Ethnic group: a self-identified variable that measures cultural affiliation and is distinct from terms such as race, ancestry, nationality, or citizenship. An individual may identify their ethnicity according to a number of characteristics including: 14

15 a common name one or more elements of common culture which may include religion, customs, or language unique community of interests, feelings, and actions a shared sense of common origins a common geographic origin. Fatal injury claims: see Claims for fatal work-related injuries. Fatal injury payments: if someone dies as a result of an injury, ACC may help cover financial needs. Payments may include funeral grants, survivor grants, childcare payments, and weekly compensation for wages. These payments are paid to the deceased s next of kin. Final figures: for the purposes of this release claims are included in the tables under the calendar year in which the injury occurred. For final figures, claims are only included if some costs are recorded within 15 months of the end of the calendar year in which the injury occurred. This allows for a consistent comparison between the years. Although details of claims may change after this time (eg the claimant may die), the statistics in this release will not be updated to reflect these changes. Full-time equivalent employees (FTEs): a standard measure used in labour force statistics, for example, to calculate average weekly earnings. FTEs are calculated as the number of full-time employees plus half the number of part-time employees. It is used instead of total number of employees for the calculation of the incidence rate, as parttime employees have a lower exposure to injury because they work fewer hours than full-time employees. This allows the denominator of the incidence rate to be expressed as units that each have approximately the same risk of work-related injury. The FTE numbers used in this release are annual averages derived from the Household Labour Force Survey (HLFS), and are used to calculate injury incidence rates by age, sex, ethnic group, employment status, industry, occupation, and region where the injury occurred. Geographic region: the part of New Zealand or the world where the injury event took place. The physical address or place of the injury event is classified according to the territorial authority (TA) in which it occurred. TAs are grouped into regions of New Zealand. There is also an additional group of codes for injuries that occurred outside New Zealand. The regions reported in this release mostly align with regional council boundaries, but in a few cases TAs straddle these council boundaries. Those TAs have been assigned to the region containing the greatest proportion of their population, on the basis of the usually resident population count, 2001 Census. The TAs involved are Franklin, Waitomo, Taupo, Rotorua, Stratford, Rangitikei, Tararua, and Waitaki districts. 15

16 Household Labour Force Survey (HLFS): Statistics NZ s quarterly Household Labour Force Survey (HLFS) produces a range of statistics on the employed, unemployed, and those not in the labour force. The target population of the HLFS is the civilian, usually resident, non-institutionalised population aged 15 years and over. It therefore excludes: people in non-private dwellings such as hospitals and prisons visitors from overseas who are staying for less than 12 months the armed forces overseas diplomats in New Zealand people living on offshore islands (except Waiheke Island). The HLFS provides the FTE figures that are used in this release to calculate incidence rates (see Full-time equivalent employees for more detail). Impairment: ACC defines impairment as any loss or abnormality of psychological, physiological or anatomical structure or function. Level of impairment is used by ACC to determine eligibility for, and amount of, lump sum and independence allowance entitlements (see Permanent impairment assessment for more details). Incidence rate: the number of work-related claims per 1,000 FTEs. These rates are used to compare levels of injury and fatal injury claims between groups with different numbers of workers. This rate is used by the International Labour Organization to enable comparisons of work-related injuries between countries. Independence allowance: a quarterly payment made to compensate a claimant for any longterm impairment they have as a result of an injury. This payment covers injuries that occurred before 1 April 2002, except for gradual process, sensitive, or medical treatment claims where different time-limits relating to the 2002 cut-off period apply. The injured person must have a permanent impairment assessment resulting in an impairment level of 10 percent or more to be eligible for the independence allowance (see Permanent impairment assessment for more details). Industry: the type of activity carried out by the organisation, enterprise, business, or unit of economic activity that the injured person worked in. Injury: the Accident Compensation Act 2001 (section 26), defines a personal injury as: death a physical injury, or mental injury caused by a physical injury mental injury caused by a criminal act of another person work-related mental injury that is suffered by a person through witnessing a sudden traumatic event at work (added from 1 October 2008) damage to dentures or prostheses that replace a part of the human body. The Act 2001 also covers work-related gradual process, disease, or infection (see Work-related gradual process for more details). Loss of earnings compensation: formerly termed weekly compensation payments, these are payments ACC makes to claimants who cannot work because of injury. The payment is based 16

17 on 80 percent of weekly income before the injury occurred and compensates for loss of earnings (or potential earnings), until a certain point determined by ACC. A spouse, partner, or dependant of a deceased claimant may be entitled to loss of earnings compensation. Lump sum compensation: a one-off non-taxable payment to compensate for permanent impairment resulting from an injury. This payment covers injuries that occurred on or after 1 April The injured person must have a permanent impairment assessment resulting in an impairment rating of 10 percent or more to be eligible for a lump sum payment (see Permanent impairment assessment for more details). Mental injury: the Accident Compensation Act 2001 defines mental injury as a clinically significant behavioural, cognitive, or psychological dysfunction. Occupation: all occupations in this release relate to the injured person s occupation at the time of injury. Permanent impairment assessment: assessments for lump sum and independence allowance payments are fully funded by ACC and completed by an independent medical practitioner. They determine the amount of compensation, based on the level of permanent impairment sustained from the injury. Level of impairment is assessed using the American Medical Association Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, fourth edition. It is an estimate of the proportion of the activities of daily living, such as eating or personal hygiene, that an average person is unable to do as a result of their injury. The level of permanent impairment must be 10 percent or more to be eligible for an entitlement. Examples at different impairment levels include: 0 to 5 percent impairment: common lower back injury (not eligible for an entitlement) 10 percent impairment: severe damage to the ligaments of the knee (would be eligible for an entitlement) 32 percent impairment: amputation of the leg below the knee (would be eligible for an entitlement) 80 percent or more impairment: paraplegia (would be eligible for maximum entitlement). Provisional figures: all claims are included under the calendar year when the injury occurred. For provisional figures, claims are only included if some costs are recorded within three months of the end of the calendar year in which the injury occurred. For 2011, provisional figures are as at 31 March Rehabilitation: ACC defines rehabilitation to be a process of active change and support to help a person with an injury to regain his or her health and independence, and therefore the ability to participate in his or her usual activities, as far as is practicable. Rehabilitation payments: these are payments made to claimants to support their rehabilitation. These payments include compensation for treatment, counselling, travel and accommodation for treatment, childcare, attendant care, equipment, and home modifications. Scene of injury: describes the location where the injury occurred. It includes homes, farms, and roads or streets. Weekly compensation payments: see Loss of earnings compensation. 17

18 Work-related claims: claims made to ACC for work-related injuries. The injury can be either due to an accident or have happened by gradual process related to the person s work (see Workrelated gradual process). The Accident Compensation Act 2001 (section 28(1)) defines a work-related injury as an injury which happens when the worker is: at his or her place of employment, including when the place moves (as it does for a taxi driver), or is a place to or through which the worker moves having a rest or meal break at work travelling to or from work in transport provided by the employer, or travelling to or from work in order to receive treatment for a work-related injury. Work-related gradual process, disease, or infection: includes changes to the body that develop slowly and progressively over time and result in personal injury, such as the effects of exposure to noise or fumes at a workplace or physical deterioration resulting from an activity you can carry out over the course of your work (such as keyboarding). Work-related gradual process is covered under the Accident Compensation Act 2001 (section 30). When determining a gradual process claim ACC considers the following key elements: whether the injury occurred over a period of four weeks or more whether a characteristic of the work environment has caused the personal injury whether the particular characteristic that has caused or contributed to the injury is present in the person s non-work environment whether the risk of personal injury is greater for people who work in the employment environment than those who do not. 18

19 Related links Upcoming releases Injury Statistics Work-related Claims: 2012 will be released in October Subscribe to information releases, including this one, by completing the online subscription form. The release calendar lists all our upcoming information releases by date of release. Past releases Injury Statistics Work-related Claims has links to past releases. Related information The Injury Information Portal provides links to published data reports, information about injury data collected in New Zealand, reports and articles about injury data, and to websites of other agencies that produce injury information. 19

20 Data quality Period-specific information This section has information about data that has changed since the last release. Reference period Changes since the last release General information This section has information on data that has not changed between releases. Data sources Accuracy of the data Consistency with other periods or datasets Interpreting the data Classifications used in the information release Period-specific information Reference period This release contains provisional statistics for work-related claims for injuries in the 2011 calendar year. It also includes final statistics for injuries in the 2010 calendar year. Both of these are as reported by 31 March Changes since the last release Industry The industry classification used in this year's information release has been updated to the Australian and New Zealand Standard Industrial Classification (ANZSIC), New Zealand Version 2006, (Version 1.0). Previous releases have used the ANZSIC96 classification. The tables in previous Injury Statistics releases have not been updated to ANZSIC06. Any comparisons between the industry tables in this release and those in any previous are therefore not possible. Trend series have never been provided for industry, given the high proportion of 'not specified' results (approximately 17 percent in 2011) in the source data. Rounding and suppression All figures in the tables have been randomly rounded using the standard Statistics NZ random rounding to base 3 method. In this routine, all counts are randomly rounded up or down to one of the adjoining multiples of three (eg a count of five would be displayed as either 3 or 6, and a count of one would be displayed as either 0 or 3). For fatal claims, this replaces the previous methodology where numbers of fatal claims less than four were suppressed. Non-fatal claims remain rounded to the nearest hundred. Rounding may result in totals disagreeing slightly with the total of individual items shown in the tables. 20

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