Injury Experience In Coal Mining, 1951 - Analysis Of Mine Safety Factors, Related Employment, And Production Data - Introduction And Summary

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Seth T. Reese
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
79
File Size:
34880 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1955

Abstract

THE INJURY DATA and experience at coal mines in the United States for 1951 are presented in this bulletin under the following general heads: (A) General injury experience: Tables 1 to 18: Contain current data on number of fatalities and nonfatal injuries, frequency and severity rates, average severity, major and detailed injury agencies, and distribution of injuries by part of body and days of disability. (B) Selected injury data: Tables 19 to 43: Contain current data on various selected factors of operating and physical conditions that contributed to the occurrence of injuries at bituminous-coal, lignite, and anthracite mines. These factors include extent of hand and machine loading, size of mine by employment and production groups, thickness of bed or vein, duration and number of work shifts, rating of mine as gassy or nongassy, types of cap lamps, explosives, and combination of factors that influence mine safety. (C) Injury experience by States: Tables 44 to 50: Contain current data on number of fatalities and nonfatal injuries, frequency and severity rates, average severity, major causes and principal agencies, injury records of all coal-producing States, and the relative standing by States according to injury-frequency rates. (D) Major disasters: Table 51: Lists the coal-mine disasters that occurred during 1951, giving location, source, and cause. A major disaster in coal mining is defined as a single accident in which or as a result of which five or more men lost their lives. (E) Historical coal-mine injury experience: Tables 52 to 86: Contain data on injuries, injury-frequency rates, employment, and production at bituminous-coal, lignite, and anthracite mines from the earliest records through 1951.
Citation

APA: Seth T. Reese  (1955)  Injury Experience In Coal Mining, 1951 - Analysis Of Mine Safety Factors, Related Employment, And Production Data - Introduction And Summary

MLA: Seth T. Reese Injury Experience In Coal Mining, 1951 - Analysis Of Mine Safety Factors, Related Employment, And Production Data - Introduction And Summary. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1955.

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