Overview of Injury on New Zealand Farms
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This article provides a descriptive overview of the mortality and morbidity
associated with injuries on farms in New Zealand. The study utilized New Zealand’s
comprehensive national injury databases. All injuries which occurred on a farm and
resulted in death, hospitalization, or a compensated insurance claim were included.
There were 274 injury deaths on farms between 1986 and 1991 (an average of 46 per
year), 1,377 injury hospitalizations in 1989, and 15,287 compensated claims for injury
in the 1989/1990 financial year. The most significant injury events on farms were
incidents involving agricultural machinery (in particular tractors), motorcycle/ATV
crashes, and horses. Tractors were particularly significant in terms of fatal injury while
the most common events resulting in hospitalization were those involving horses and
motorcycles/ATVs. The overall rate of on-farm injury per 1,000 person-years was 0.09
for fatalities (95% CI: 0.08 to 0.10), 2.7 for hospitalizations (95% CI: 2.6 to 2.9), and
28.5 for compensated insurance claims (95% CI: 28.0 to 29.1). The injury rates in
males were markedly higher than those in females and the fatality rate in males
increased during later life (40 years of age and over).