Worker compensation injuries among the Aboriginal population of British Columbia, Canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010

Abstract Background Aboriginal people in British Columbia (BC) have higher injury incidence than the general population, but information is scarce regarding variability among injury categories, time periods, and geographic, demographic and socio-economic groups. Our project helps fill these gaps. Th...

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Main Authors: Jin, Andrew, George, M, Brussoni, Mariana, Lalonde, Christopher E
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: BioMed Central Ltd. 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/14/710
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spelling ftbiomed:oai:biomedcentral.com:1471-2458-14-710 2023-05-15T16:17:14+02:00 Worker compensation injuries among the Aboriginal population of British Columbia, Canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010 Jin, Andrew George, M Brussoni, Mariana Lalonde, Christopher E 2014-07-10 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/14/710 en eng BioMed Central Ltd. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/14/710 Copyright 2014 Jin et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. Occupational injuries (MeSH) Workers’ compensation (MeSH) Indians North American (MeSH) Indigenous population (MeSH) “First Nations” British Columbia (MeSH) Canada (MeSH) Epidemiology (MeSH) Population surveillance (MeSH) Socioeconomic factors (MeSH) Research article 2014 ftbiomed 2014-07-27T00:34:12Z Abstract Background Aboriginal people in British Columbia (BC) have higher injury incidence than the general population, but information is scarce regarding variability among injury categories, time periods, and geographic, demographic and socio-economic groups. Our project helps fill these gaps. This report focuses on workplace injuries. Methods We used BC’s universal health care insurance plan as a population registry, linked to worker compensation and vital statistics databases. We identified Aboriginal people by insurance premium group and birth and death record notations. We identified residents of specific Aboriginal communities by postal code. We calculated crude incidence rate and Standardized Relative Risk (SRR) of worker compensation injury, adjusted for age, gender and Health Service Delivery Area (HSDA), relative to the total population of BC. We assessed annual trend by regressing SRR as a linear function of year. We tested hypothesized associations of geographic, socio-economic, and employment-related characteristics of Aboriginal communities with community SRR of injury by multivariable linear regression. Results During the period 1987–2010, the crude rate of worker compensation injury in BC was 146.6 per 10,000 person-years (95% confidence interval: 146.4 to 146.9 per 10,000). The Aboriginal rate was 115.6 per 10,000 (95% CI: 114.4 to 116.8 per 10,000) and SRR was 0.88 (95% CI: 0.87 to 0.89). Among those living on reserves SRR was 0.79 (95% CI: 0.78 to 0.80). HSDA SRRs were highly variable, within both total and Aboriginal populations. Aboriginal males under 35 and females under 40 years of age had lower SRRs, but older Aboriginal females had higher SRRs. SRRs are declining, but more slowly for the Aboriginal population. The Aboriginal population was initially at lower risk than the total population, but parity was reached in 2006. These community characteristics independently predicted injury risk: crowded housing, proportion of population who identified as Aboriginal, and interactions between employment rate and income, occupational risk, proportion of university-educated persons, and year. Conclusions As employment rates rise, so has risk of workplace injury among the Aboriginal population. We need culturally sensitive prevention programs, targeting regions and industries where Aboriginal workers are concentrated and demographic groups that are at higher risk. Article in Journal/Newspaper First Nations BioMed Central British Columbia ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000) Canada
institution Open Polar
collection BioMed Central
op_collection_id ftbiomed
language English
topic Occupational injuries (MeSH)
Workers’ compensation (MeSH)
Indians
North American (MeSH)
Indigenous population (MeSH)
“First Nations”
British Columbia (MeSH)
Canada (MeSH)
Epidemiology (MeSH)
Population surveillance (MeSH)
Socioeconomic factors (MeSH)
spellingShingle Occupational injuries (MeSH)
Workers’ compensation (MeSH)
Indians
North American (MeSH)
Indigenous population (MeSH)
“First Nations”
British Columbia (MeSH)
Canada (MeSH)
Epidemiology (MeSH)
Population surveillance (MeSH)
Socioeconomic factors (MeSH)
Jin, Andrew
George, M
Brussoni, Mariana
Lalonde, Christopher E
Worker compensation injuries among the Aboriginal population of British Columbia, Canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010
topic_facet Occupational injuries (MeSH)
Workers’ compensation (MeSH)
Indians
North American (MeSH)
Indigenous population (MeSH)
“First Nations”
British Columbia (MeSH)
Canada (MeSH)
Epidemiology (MeSH)
Population surveillance (MeSH)
Socioeconomic factors (MeSH)
description Abstract Background Aboriginal people in British Columbia (BC) have higher injury incidence than the general population, but information is scarce regarding variability among injury categories, time periods, and geographic, demographic and socio-economic groups. Our project helps fill these gaps. This report focuses on workplace injuries. Methods We used BC’s universal health care insurance plan as a population registry, linked to worker compensation and vital statistics databases. We identified Aboriginal people by insurance premium group and birth and death record notations. We identified residents of specific Aboriginal communities by postal code. We calculated crude incidence rate and Standardized Relative Risk (SRR) of worker compensation injury, adjusted for age, gender and Health Service Delivery Area (HSDA), relative to the total population of BC. We assessed annual trend by regressing SRR as a linear function of year. We tested hypothesized associations of geographic, socio-economic, and employment-related characteristics of Aboriginal communities with community SRR of injury by multivariable linear regression. Results During the period 1987–2010, the crude rate of worker compensation injury in BC was 146.6 per 10,000 person-years (95% confidence interval: 146.4 to 146.9 per 10,000). The Aboriginal rate was 115.6 per 10,000 (95% CI: 114.4 to 116.8 per 10,000) and SRR was 0.88 (95% CI: 0.87 to 0.89). Among those living on reserves SRR was 0.79 (95% CI: 0.78 to 0.80). HSDA SRRs were highly variable, within both total and Aboriginal populations. Aboriginal males under 35 and females under 40 years of age had lower SRRs, but older Aboriginal females had higher SRRs. SRRs are declining, but more slowly for the Aboriginal population. The Aboriginal population was initially at lower risk than the total population, but parity was reached in 2006. These community characteristics independently predicted injury risk: crowded housing, proportion of population who identified as Aboriginal, and interactions between employment rate and income, occupational risk, proportion of university-educated persons, and year. Conclusions As employment rates rise, so has risk of workplace injury among the Aboriginal population. We need culturally sensitive prevention programs, targeting regions and industries where Aboriginal workers are concentrated and demographic groups that are at higher risk.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jin, Andrew
George, M
Brussoni, Mariana
Lalonde, Christopher E
author_facet Jin, Andrew
George, M
Brussoni, Mariana
Lalonde, Christopher E
author_sort Jin, Andrew
title Worker compensation injuries among the Aboriginal population of British Columbia, Canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010
title_short Worker compensation injuries among the Aboriginal population of British Columbia, Canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010
title_full Worker compensation injuries among the Aboriginal population of British Columbia, Canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010
title_fullStr Worker compensation injuries among the Aboriginal population of British Columbia, Canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010
title_full_unstemmed Worker compensation injuries among the Aboriginal population of British Columbia, Canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010
title_sort worker compensation injuries among the aboriginal population of british columbia, canada: incidence, annual trends, and ecological analysis of risk markers, 1987–2010
publisher BioMed Central Ltd.
publishDate 2014
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/14/710
long_lat ENVELOPE(-125.003,-125.003,54.000,54.000)
geographic British Columbia
Canada
geographic_facet British Columbia
Canada
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_relation http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2458/14/710
op_rights Copyright 2014 Jin et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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