Review and Statistical Analysis of U.S. Structural Firefighting Injuries: Their Causes and Effects

Author:

Garcia Juliana1,Bazzocchi Michael C. F.12ORCID,Fite Kevin1,Ocampo Juan D.3,Martinez Marcias1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Clarkson University, Potsdam, NY 13699, USA

2. Department of Earth and Space Science and Engineering, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Toronto, ON M3J 1P3, Canada

3. Department of Engineering, St. Mary’s University, 1 Camino Santa Maria, San Antonio, TX 78228, USA

Abstract

Safety and prevention of injuries should always be considered in a firefighting environment due to the hazardous conditions experienced on the fireground. These hazardous environmental conditions lead to an increased risk of contracting job-related injuries and illnesses. This review article focuses on evaluating from a statistical perspective the potential solutions found in the literature and how they decrease the likelihood and impact of occupational firefighting injuries. Investigating, identifying, and prioritizing the most common activities leading to injury, the nature of injury, and the body parts affected is a vital step in the implementation of preventive solutions. The scientific community has conducted various studies to evaluate the main injuries and injury profiles commonly suffered by firefighters. Researchers have conducted many independent studies on firefighter communities in the United States, while others have referenced national databases from sources such as the National Fire Protection Association, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System. Unfortunately, the results of these independent studies lacked standardization in survey categories and terminology, impairing the ability to obtain a clear consensus among studies on the primary nature of injuries, the body parts injured, and the activities contributing to these injuries. Consequently, this review article performed a comparative statistical analysis of published data between 1992 and 2020 to define and rank the most common work scenarios where firefighters were likely to be injured, the most common types of injuries, the parts of the body affected, and the activities that most contribute to United States firefighter injuries as documented in both national databases and independent research surveys. The statistical analysis consisted of determining the mean, standard deviation, confidence intervals (95%), and coefficients of variation for the reported data. The present study identified that despite the preventative measures taken by many organizations in the firefighting community, strains and sprains were still the leading type of injury reported from all the databases under this analysis.

Funder

National Science Foundation

MDPI/Fire

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference55 articles.

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2. Campbell, R., and Hall, S. (2021). United States Firefighter Injuries in 2021, National Fire Protection Association.

3. U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2024, January 26). What Firegithers Do, Available online: https://www.bls.gov/ooh/protective-service/firefighters.htm#tab-2.

4. The National Fire Protection Association (2020). Standard for Wildland Firefighting Personnel Professional Qualifications, NFPA. in 1051.

5. The National Fire Protection Association (2019). Standard for Fire Fighter Professional Qualifications, The National Fire Protection Association. in 1001.

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