US Dept. of Labor Releases Case Data on More than 890K Injuries, Illnesses at over 91K Workplaces

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Labor has released data collected by its Occupational Safety and Health Administration on more than 890,000 workplace injuries and illnesses at more than 91,000 workplaces in 2023, including incident level details on the conditions and circumstances of injury and illness events.

According to a news release, federal electronic recordkeeping and reporting requirements require certain employers to use OSHA’s Injury Tracking Application to submit injury and illnesses reports.

OSHA has produced a video explaining the workplace injury and illness data collected by the Injury Tracking Application.

The agency is making available workplace injury and illness incident details, including name of the employer, the location of incidents, injury or illness descriptions, workers’ activities before incidents occurred, events that caused the harm, types of injuries or illnesses, and the objects or substances involved.

“Publication of this data is a milestone in our efforts to make data on workplace injuries and illnesses more transparent,” said Assistant Secretary for Occupational Safety and Health Doug Parker. “This information is an unprecedented tool for researchers, public health officials, businesses and workers to understand the nature of workplace injuries and illnesses in this country, whether they are looking at national trends, or the factory where they work every day.”

To protect workers’ privacy, OSHA used artificial intelligence and human review to redact personally identifiable information, such as names, Social Security numbers, phone numbers, birthdates and addresses.

“By making the data accessible, employers, workers, customers and the public are empowered to make informed decisions about workplace safety and health at specific establishments. It also enables researchers to identify patterns and trends in injuries, illnesses and hazardous conditions more effectively,” the release stated.

Learn more about OSHA’s Injury Tracking Application and OSHA’s recordkeeping and reporting requirements.

Source: Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)

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