Nonwage Losses Associated With Occupational Injury Among Health Care Workers Journal Articles uri icon

  •  
  • Overview
  •  
  • Research
  •  
  • Identity
  •  
  • Additional Document Info
  •  
  • View All
  •  

abstract

  • OBJECTIVE: To examine nonwage losses after occupational injury among health care workers and the factors associated with the magnitude of these losses. METHODS: Inception cohort of workers filing an occupational injury claim in a Canadian province. Worker self-reports were used to calculate (1) the nonwage economic losses in 2010 Canadian dollars, and (2) the number of quality-adjusted days of life lost on the basis of the EuroQOL Index. RESULTS: Most workers (84%; n = 123) had musculoskeletal injuries (MSIs). Each MSI resulted in nonwage economic losses of Can$3131 (95% confidence interval, Can$3035 to Can$3226), lost wages of Can$5286, and 7.9 quality-adjusted days of life lost within 12 weeks after injury. Losses varied with type of injury, region of the province, and occupation. Non-MSIs were associated with smaller losses. CONCLUSIONS: These estimates of nonwage losses should be considered in workers' injury compensation policies and in economic evaluation studies.

authors

  • Guzman, Jaime
  • Ibrahimova, Aybaniz
  • Tompa, Emile
  • Koehoorn, Mieke
  • Alamgir, Hasanat

publication date

  • August 2013