Accidental injuries among naval personnel by occupation, duty status, and pay grade.

The relative incidence of accidental injury for Navy enlisted men during 1974-1977 was analyzed for 68 occupations, three pay grade or job responsibility levels, and duty status (on or off duty) at the time of the injury. Thirteen "blue-collar", predominantly sea-going or construction occupations, were significantly higher than the Navy injury rate norm and 26 "white-collar" occupations, typically in clerical, supply, administrative or technical specialties, were significantly lower than the Navy norm. An inverse linear relationship was found between injury rate and job responsibility for all occupations combined. This relationship varied by occupation, however, suggesting that experience and familiarity with the work environment may not moderate risks to the same degree in all occupational fields. Occupations with high on-duty injury rates tended to have high off-duty rates as well, suggesting at least some common causal factors.