The burden of occupational injury attributable to high temperatures in Australia, 2014–19: a retrospective observational study

Author:

Varghese Blesson M1,Hansen Alana1,Mann Nick2,Liu Jingwen1,Zhang Ying3ORCID,Driscoll Tim R3,Morgan Geoffrey G34,Dear Keith1,Capon Anthony5,Gourley Michelle2,Prescott Vanessa2,Dolar Vergil2,Bi Peng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Adelaide Adelaide SA

2. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Canberra ACT

3. The University of Sydney Sydney NSW

4. Centre for Rural Health the University of Sydney Lismore NSW

5. Monash Sustainable Development Institute Monash University Melbourne VIC

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesTo assess the population health impact of high temperatures on workplace health and safety by estimating the burden of heat‐attributable occupational injury in Australia.Study design, settingRetrospective observational study; estimation of burden of occupational injury in Australia attributable to high temperatures during 2014–19, based on Safe Work Australia (work‐related traumatic injury fatalities and workers’ compensation databases) and Australian Institute of Health and Welfare data (Australian Burden of Disease Study and National Hospital Morbidity databases), and a meta‐analysis of climate zone‐specific risk data.Main outcome measureBurden of heat‐attributable occupational injuries as disability‐adjusted life years (DALYs), comprising the numbers of years of life lived with disability (YLDs) and years of life lost (YLLs), nationally, by Köppen–Geiger climate zone, and by state and territory.ResultsDuring 2014–19, an estimated 42 884 years of healthy life were lost to occupational injury, comprising 39 485 YLLs (92.1%) and 3399 YLDs (7.9%), at a rate of 0.80 DALYs per 1000 workers per year. A total of 967 occupational injury‐related DALYs were attributable to heat (2.3% of occupational injury‐related DALYs), comprising 890 YLLs (92%) and 77 YLDs (8%). By climate zone, the heat‐attributable proportion was largest in the tropical Am (12 DALYs; 3.5%) and Aw zones (34 DALYs; 3.5%); by state and territory, the proportion was largest in New South Wales and Queensland (each 2.9%), which also included the largest numbers of heat‐attributable occupational injury‐related DALYs (NSW: 379 DALYs, 39% of national total; Queensland: 308 DALYs; 32%).ConclusionAn estimated 2.3% of the occupational injury burden in Australia is attributable to high ambient temperatures. To prevent this burden increasing with global warming, adaptive measures and industry‐based policies are needed to safeguard workplace health and safety, particularly in heat‐exposed industries, such as agriculture, transport, and construction.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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