Abstract
Objective
With population ageing, the number of older workers is increasing
and the number of work-related injuries in older people is also
increasing. Occupational patterns and work-related injury patterns vary
with age. This study aimed to compare the incidence and characteristics
of work-related injuries in older and younger workers in Korea.
Methods
We conducted a retrospective review of the characteristics of
workers hospitalised with work-related injuries from January 2010 to
December 2014, using data from the National Hospital Discharge In-Depth
Injury Survey in South Korea. The analysis was stratified by age into
older (aged ≥65 years) and younger (aged 20–64 years) workers.
Results
The hospitalisation rate in older workers was double that of younger
workers (2014 IRR: 2.06, 95% CI 1.53 to 2.76). Compared with workers of
conventional working-age, a higher proportion of injured older workers
were female (33.1% vs 13.6%, p<0.001), injured due to falls (40.8% vs
28.5%) and injured while working on a farm (46.5% vs 6.3%, p<0.001).
In older workers, work-related injuries were seasonal and peaked during
summer, but there was little seasonality in injuries among younger
workers.
Conclusion
Older workers are more vulnerable to work-related injuries and have
a different profile of work-related injuries from younger workers.
Age-related differences in the injury profile need to be considered when
developing workplace injury prevention policies and programmes, and the
specific vulnerabilities of older workers need to be addressed.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health