The National Farm Injury Data Project · practitioners with information to prevent injuries. As...

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The National Farm Injury Data Project The engine room for Farmsafe Australia farm safety programs by Lyn Fragar and Kirrily Pollock April 2008 RIRDC Publication No 08/045 RIRDC Project No US-121A

Transcript of The National Farm Injury Data Project · practitioners with information to prevent injuries. As...

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The National Farm Injury Data Project

The engine room for Farmsafe Australia farm safety programs

by Lyn Fragar and Kirrily Pollock

April 2008

RIRDC Publication No 08/045 RIRDC Project No US-121A

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© 2008 Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation. All rights reserved. ISBN 1 74151 634 X ISSN 1440-6845 The National Farm Injury Data Project – The engine room for Farmsafe Australia farm safety programs Publication No. 08/045 Project No. US-121A The information contained in this publication is intended for general use to assist public knowledge and discussion and to help improve the development of sustainable regions. You must not rely on any information contained in this publication without taking specialist advice relevant to your particular circumstances.

While reasonable care has been taken in preparing this publication to ensure that information is true and correct, the Commonwealth of Australia gives no assurance as to the accuracy of any information in this publication.

The Commonwealth of Australia, the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (RIRDC), the authors or contributors expressly disclaim, to the maximum extent permitted by law, all responsibility and liability to any person, arising directly or indirectly from any act or omission, or for any consequences of any such act or omission, made in reliance on the contents of this publication, whether or not caused by any negligence on the part of the Commonwealth of Australia, RIRDC, the authors or contributors..

The Commonwealth of Australia does not necessarily endorse the views in this publication.

This publication is copyright. Apart from any use as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, all other rights are reserved. However, wide dissemination is encouraged. Requests and inquiries concerning reproduction and rights should be addressed to the RIRDC Publications Manager on phone 02 6271 4165.

Researcher Contact Details Kirrily Pollock Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety University of Sydney PO Box 256 Moree NSW 2400 Phone: 02 6752 8210 Fax: 02 6752 6639 Email:[email protected] In submitting this report, the researcher has agreed to RIRDC publishing this material in its edited form. RIRDC Contact Details Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation Level 2, 15 National Circuit BARTON ACT 2600 PO Box 4776 KINGSTON ACT 2604 Phone: 02 6271 4100 Fax: 02 6271 4199 Email: [email protected]. Web: http://www.rirdc.gov.au Published Electronically in April 2008

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Foreword

Accurate and timely data relating to farm, injury and illness is needed to provide industry and injury practitioners with information to prevent injuries. As there is no one data source that contains information on all farm-related injuries, the work by the National Farm Injury Data Centre collating all possible sources of information is a significant step forward in providing detailed information about farm-related injuries. This project has played a key role in providing the underpinning information for the Farm Health and Safety program of the Joint Research Venture in Farm Health and Safety with contributions from the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Grains Research and Development Corporation, Cotton Research and Development Corporation, Australian Wool Innovation Corporation, Sugar Research and Development Corporation, Meat and Livestock Australia and Horticulture Australia. The work carried out by the National Farm Injury Data Centre located at the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety collating the data sources that contain information about farm-related injuries is enabling agricultural industries to be informed about their safety issues and to develop appropriate strategies to combat farm-related injury. The reports produced by this project are an important addition to the available knowledge abut farm safety and will be used in the future. This project was funded by the Joint Research Venture in Farm Health and Safety, administered by the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (RIRDC). This report, an addition to RIRDC’s diverse range of over 1800 research publications, forms part of our Rural People and Learning Systems R&D program, which aims to improve productivity, environmental sustainability and wellbeing in rural and regional Australia. Most of our publications are available for viewing, downloading or purchasing online through our website: • downloads at www.rirdc.gov.au/fullreports/index.html • purchases at www.rirdc.gov.au/eshop Peter O’Brien Managing Director Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

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Acknowledgments The whole team of personnel at the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety in Moree have contributed in many different and practical ways to the further development of the work of the National Farm Injury Data Centre, including the production of reports of this project. Their input ensures that reports and publications are relevant to the achievement of the aims of improving health and safety of the people in agriculture in Australia. Others who have played key technical and professional roles include Richard Franklin, the previous Director of the Data Centre, who maintains an active interest in the farm injury prevention field, James Harrison of The Centre for Injury Studies of Flinders University, and the personnel who make available many datasets through NSW Health. The Hunter New England Area Health Service provides core funding of the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, and NSW Health provides infrastructure support that ensures maintenance of the National Farm Injury Data Centre.

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Contents Foreword............................................................................................................................................... iii Acknowledgments................................................................................................................................. iv Executive Summary ............................................................................................................................. vi 1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................................... 1 2. The National Farm Injury Data Centre .......................................................................................... 2 3. The National Farm Injury Data Collection .................................................................................... 3

3.1 Introduction ....................................................................................................................................3 3.2 The Collection ................................................................................................................................4 3.3 Technical guidelines.....................................................................................................................11 3.4 New developments .......................................................................................................................11

4. Project outputs................................................................................................................................. 15 4.1 Reports produced directly in fulfilment of project objectives......................................................15 4.2 Reports produced with significant input from the National Farm Injury Data Collection...........16 4.3 Theses...........................................................................................................................................16 4.4 Publications ..................................................................................................................................17 4.5 Conference presentations .............................................................................................................17 4.6 Book chapters...............................................................................................................................18 4.7 Newsletters circulated ..................................................................................................................18 4.8 Resource packages .......................................................................................................................19

5. The impact of the project – the essential engine room................................................................. 20 5.1 National farm injury prevention programs...................................................................................20 5.2 Benchmarking farm safety performance ......................................................................................26 5.3 Teaching and training...................................................................................................................28 5.4 Summary ......................................................................................................................................28

References ............................................................................................................................................ 30

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Executive Summary

What the report is about Accurate and timely data relating to farm, injury and illness is needed to provide industry and injury practitioners with information to prevent injuries. Recently, there has been recognition of the need for safety benchmarking systems to be available in the context of farm business management. This project has set in place systems that will contribute to that endeavour. Who is the report targeted at? This project represents a key partnership between the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (RIRDC), other partners in the Joint Research Venture in Farm Health and Safety and the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety that has maintained and enhanced the National Farm Injury Data Collection to produce a range of reports that have supported key national and industry programs aimed at improving the health and safety of those whose life and work is in agriculture in Australia. Background It is well recognised that the occupational health and safety performance of the agriculture industries in Australia can be improved, and that injury associated with farm work is incurring unnecessary costs to individual farm businesses, to the industry by higher than necessary workers compensation premiums and to the Australian healthcare system and taxpayers through medical and hospital care for treatment of preventable injury. As more safety and injury prevention activity has been set in place, so have the information needs of the agriculture industries become more sophisticated. At the commencement of this project it was recognised that reports and profiles needed to be presented in ways that were more meaningful to the users of the data – farmers, policy makers, educators and others. It was further recognised that improvements were needed in relation to the timeliness of access to farm deaths and serious injury data – a key challenge using the previous data sources. This has been undertaken by accessing the National Coroners Information System, recognising that this system is in its infancy, with many data access problems yet to be resolved, and by accessing a media monitoring service to provide timely information that is already available to the public.

Aims/Objectives The specific aims of the project were to: 1. maintain and enhance the National Farm Injury Data Collection, and to:

- produce regular National Reports (Newsletter) on farm deaths, injury and illness - produce profiles of health and safety in industries and states

2. develop and trial benchmarks for OHS performance in the Agricultural/Horticulture Industries 3. provide support to Farmsafe Australia Strategies.

Methods used There is no single dataset that provides suitable base for monitoring injury and traumatic deaths occurring on farms across Australia. Even the data collection that is all-inclusive, the Australian Bureau of Statistics database of deaths by Cause of Death, does not indicate the location of the injury event; hence the many on-farm fatalities of people whose occupation is not farmer, farm manager or agricultural labourer cannot be identified. Furthermore that system does not adequately define the women who are injured or at risk of farm-related injury. In order to overcome the problems associated with the lack of data several strategies have been adopted;

- Systematic use of a range of data sources - Identification of the limitations of each data source - Support of programs that have data collection components - Promulgation of data standards - Dissemination of research results.

Data is obtained from several sources because no one source can provide the required scope, coverage and items of interest necessary for total farm injury surveillance.

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Results/Key findings Key outputs from the project include a series of chart books – The Facts series

- Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Beef Cattle Industry – The facts No 1. - Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Poultry Industry – The facts No 2 - Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Horticulture Industries – The facts No 3, - Machinery Injury on Australian Farms – The facts No 4 - Injury on Australian Farms – The facts No 5. - Pesticides and Human Health in Australia – The facts No 6. - Injury on New South Wales Farms – The facts No 7.

Three others are in press and will be published within a subsequent project:

- All-terrain vehicle injury on Australian farms – The facts No 8 - Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Dairy Industry – The facts No 9 - The safety of older farmers in Australia – The facts No 10.

Other reports have been critical to further development of farm safety programs in Australia. These relate to falls injury in agriculture, ATV deaths and serious injury and benchmarking of farm health and safety in Australian agriculture.

Implications for relevant stakeholders A significant investment has been made by governments and agricultural industries in the defining the nature and extent of injury and death associated with agricultural activity, setting priorities for programs, developing programs, developing resources and disseminating information. A number of industries and farm business management groups have recognised the need for benchmarks to be established for safety and safety management that will set industry standards that are achievable, and that can signal to individual businesses and to industry groups how well they are performing in comparison with each other and to the industry as a whole. National benchmarks for industry performance are based on workers compensation claims and demonstrate a relatively poor position for agricultural industries in comparison with all industries in Australia. A growing number of education and training courses are using publications produced by the National Farm Injury Data Centre and published by RIRDC. These include those provided by the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety: • University of Sydney Medical students in the Doctor and Community semester. • General Practice Registrar training in workshops hosted by the Australian Centre for

Agricultural Health and Safety • University of New England Grains Course in the Managing Grains Production Safety unit • NSW Public Health Officers rural training unit.

Recommendations The National Farm Injury Data Project has continued the maintenance of the National Farm Injury Data Collection and its use in providing relevant and timely information to the agriculture industries and the network of agencies that share an interest in improving the health and safety of the people in Australian agriculture with essential information and data. In addition to the formal reports that have been published in print and electronic form, the National Farm Injury Data Centre personnel respond on a routine and daily basis to information requests from the media, from industry and government policy makers, educators and trainers, students and service providers. In addition consideration of the number and nature of those downloading information from the Farmsafe Australia website indicates that the information is being used by a range of other individuals and organisations. The number of users, who are utilising the material for education and training and for consultancy, would indicate that resources are being used quite widely.

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1. Introduction Injury surveillance is a process of collecting data items of interest that relate to injury events, collating them in such a way so as to be meaningful and disseminating the information to those individuals or organisations who are best placed to actively reduce the injury burden. Surveillance is therefore distinct from injury research which requires active data gathering at the site of injury and which is necessary to examine causes of injury in detail. Injury surveillance provides the broad-brush strokes of the injury picture, it allows for priority setting and program development, injury surveillance does not generally provide counter measure information. The process of injury surveillance goes beyond the process of acquiring data, onto the manipulation of the data and its ultimate dissemination. The purpose of the National Farm Injury Data Collection Project therefore goes beyond collection to collation and dissemination of information (Stallones, cited in Fragar et al, 2003). The early work of the National Farm Injury Data Centre was instrumental in drawing attention to farmers’ organisations, research organisations and government the specific safety problems of the industry, and the Data Centre has been undertaking farm injury surveillance for the past nine years in response to their information needs. Farm injury surveillance has been seen as critical in the instigation of prevention programs by the network of organisations under the Farmsafe Australia umbrella. Data has been used to define the nature and scale of the farm injury problem in Australia, in states and in specific industries, to identify priority hazards of high risk that need specific intervention and more recently to define and report on farm safety benchmarks. Farmsafe Australia Inc. is the national association of organisations that share the objective of improving the health and safety of the people in agriculture. Details of the member organisations and the range of programs being implemented by the network is to be found on its website, www.farmsafe.org.au. As more safety and injury prevention activity has been set in place, so have the information needs of the agriculture industries become more sophisticated. At the commencement of this project it was recognised that reports and profiles needed to be presented in ways that were more meaningful to the users of the data – farmers, policy makers, educators and others. It was further recognised that improvements were needed in relation to the timeliness of access to farm deaths and serious injury data – a key challenge using the previous data sources. This has been undertaken by accessing the National Coroners Information System, recognising that this system is in its infancy, with many data access problems yet to be resolved, and by accessing a press monitoring service to provide timely information that is already available to the public. A more recent move has been the recognition of the need for safety benchmarking systems to be available in the context of farm business management, and this project has set in place systems that will contribute to that endeavour. The specific aims of the project were:

1. To maintain and enhance the National Farm Injury Data Collection, and: - produce regular National Reports (Newsletter) on farm deaths, injury and illness - produce profiles of health and safety in industries and states

2. To develop and trial benchmark for OHS performance in the Agricultural/Horticulture Industries 3. To provide support to Farmsafe Australia Strategies

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2. The National Farm Injury Data Centre The National Farm Injury Data Centre was established by the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety in the mid 1990s in response to a growing demand for improved information and data about the nature and extent of the injury problem on Australian farms. Concerns were expressed in a number of different contexts – concern for human health and wellbeing, concern for the cost associated with injury and injury compensation claims, concern about the relatively poor performance of the agriculture industries in the occupational health and safety (OHS) regulatory framework, interest in safety as an integral part of good farm business management. The Data Centre is funded through part of the core funding of the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety by Hunter New England Area Health Service and by Research Infrastructure funding through NSW Health. In addition, many of its reports have been produced with specific project funding from a range of agencies, amongst which the Farm Health and Safety Joint Research Venture has been a major funding contributor, through the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (RIRDC). Many of the reports of the Data Centre are to be found on the RIRDC website www.rirdc.gov.au. The Data Centre has worked to establish and maintain the National Farm Injury Data Collection, and to ensure that people are recruited and skills developed so as to ensure that requests for information and reports can be filled in a timely and careful manner. In addition to producing specific reports, the Data Centre, through maintenance of the Data Collection, has supplied data, comments and advice to a range of organisations and individuals. These have included each states’ OHS authority, Worksafe Australia, the media, Federal, state and territory politicians, research organisations including, Monash University Accident Research Centre, The University of New England Rural Development Centre, ABARE, university & school students, farmers and community groups including the Country Women’s Association, state and national farmer groups, rural rehabilitation service providers, rural educators and medical educators.

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3. The National Farm Injury Data Collection 3.1 Introduction There is no single dataset that provides suitable base for monitoring injury and traumatic deaths occurring on farms across Australia. Even the data collection that is all-inclusive, the Australian Bureau of Statistics database of deaths by Cause of Death, does not indicate the location of the injury event; hence the many on-farm fatalities of people whose occupation is not farmer, farm manager or agricultural labourer cannot be identified. Furthermore that system does not adequately define the women who are injured or at risk of farm-related injury. In order to overcome the problems associated with the lack of data several strategies have been adopted;

- Systematic use of a range of data sources, - Identification of the limitations of each data source, - Support of programs that have data collection components, - Promulgation of data standards, - Dissemination of research results.

Data is obtained from several sources because no-one source can provide the required scope, coverage and items of interest necessary for total farm injury surveillance. Figure 1 below displays the scope associated with severity of injury ascertainment by various methods of surveillance.

Figure 3.1. The relationship of the spread of severity of injuries to the method of cases ascertainment

Adapted from: Stallones 1963 (As reprinted 1996)

The National Farm Injury Data Collection system demonstrates a number of important characteristics of a useful surveillance system: 1. Data collection is systematic, broad and linked directly to the development, dissemination and

utility of an intervention. The end users of the datasets are actively involved in defining the type of data being collected, the manner of collation of data to provide information, which may be amalgamated and used to produce useful reports.

2. Data are used to evaluate and refine hazard profiles. For example, while we know from the OHS

literature that vibrating machinery can cause “white finger”, we know from our data that this is not a major issue in Australian agriculture. Therefore, our intervention programs do not focus on this issue as a priority.

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3. Data are used in a variety of contexts:

- Prevention – setting priorities, justifying resource allocation, development of interventions - Training - Defining research priorities and assisting in defining risk factors.

Surveillance of agricultural injuries is a precursor to an effective program to reduce death and disability. Data gathering does not in itself serve to reduce fatalities or morbidity. Data gathering does allow us to use our prevention dollar more wisely, to evaluate our effectiveness and it alerts us to changing patterns of disease and injury. The following sections describe data that constitutes the National Farm Injury Data Collection. It is important to note that utility of one data source is dependent upon a range of factors including, scope, coverage, collection methodology including sampling frames, exclusion and inclusion criteria. Importantly utility is primarily defined by the needs of the user. The needs of individual institutions for data will of course vary. For example workers compensation data are going to have significant use for information about claims settling rates, while this is not data needed to drive prevention programs. Fragar and Coleman (1996) published a paper defining data needs for Farmsafe Australia and much of the utility discussion in this paper revolves around these needs. 3.2 The Collection The following information is accurate at the time of publication. The collection is an on-going body of work that as time goes by will have information both added and removed from the collection. This by no means the sum total of all collection in Australia, it is the collection known by the National Farm Injury Data Centre as providing information about farm-related injuries in Australia. In this project period two additional data sources were made available to the National Farm injury Data Centre – the National Coroners Information System, and a press monitoring service. The use of these sources will be discussed.

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a. Standards and definitions Data Source Description Location

International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, Tenth Revision. Australian Modification (IDC-10-AM)

Internationally recognised classification of diseases and injury. Used for ABS deaths data and Australian hospitals in-patient data.

ACAHS

Farm Injury Optimal Dataset. Version 2.0 Fragar L, &Pollock 2005 DRAFT

Report - Data Items and classification system for farm injury surveillance.

ACAHS

2001 Census Dictionary, ABS Catalogue No 2901.0 (2001)

Definitions of census and coding classifications ACAHS

Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2004. Rural, regional and remote health: a guide to remoteness classifications. AIHW cat. no. PHE 53. Canberra: AIHW.

Report - Statistical Local Area (SLA) classification system for assign rurality to zones

ACAHS

Type of Occurrence Classification Scheme - Worksafe Australia Version 2.0 (1999)

Report - National standard for coding and classifying occupational injury

ACAHS

National Health Data Dictionary - Institutional Health Care - Version 12 2004. AIHW

Report - Data items and definitions to describe institutional health care in Australia

ACAHS

National directory of data collections in health, welfare and housing. AIHW 1996

Report - A directory of data collections and organisations

ACAHS

Statistical Concepts Reference Library ABS Cat no 1361.0.30.001 - (2000).

ABS concepts, classifications and statistical standards - which includes ASCO (Occupation classification), ANZSIC Industry classification.

http://www.abs.gov.au/websitedbs/D3310114.nsf/home/Methods,%20Classification

National Injury Surveillance and Prevention Project. NISPP Coding Manual

Coding guidelines for Emergency Department injury data

ACAHS

Farm Injury in Australia- options for Improvement in collection and dissemination. R. Coleman 1995

Report - Data items and classification system for farm injury surveillance, plus draft roles for state and federal authorities.

ACAHS

Statistical Geography Volume 1 Australian Standard Geographical Classification (ASGC) ABS 1216.0 (1996)

Report - Definitions of SLA, LGA, SD boundaries ACAHS

National Minimum Dataset for Injury Surveillance- National Injury Surveillance Unit. Version 2.0 (1998)

Report - Data Items and classification system for injury surveillance.

ACAHS

Victorian Health System Injury Data Bases - Utility for the Dairying Industry in the Identification of Dairy Farm Injury - L. Day (1995) Monash University Accident Research Centre

Report - Analysis of injury source utility for the dairy industry.

ACAHS

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b. Australian agriculture

Data Source Description Location Year Book Australia – 2006 Agriculture (2006). ABS Cat 3101,

Estimates of latest statistics on industry status, employment, characteristics of Australian farms, irrigation

ACAHS

Agricultural Commodities, Australia, 2003-03. Cat no 7121.0 ABS, 2005 Canberra.

Estimates for the main commodities collected in the 2003-04 Agricultural Survey. Detailed statistics on crops, livestock and livestock products, land use and industry and size characteristics of farms.

ACAHS

Directory of Agricultural and Rural Statistics 2001 (2001) ABS , Cat No 1142.0

Information on sources of agricultural and rural statistics in the public and private sectors.

Ag Stats - Small Area Agricultural Commodity Data 2001 ABS 7117.0.30.001 (2003)

Electronic Database - Electronic copy of Australian Agricultural Statistics providing regional profile statistics for all States and Territories for the years 1996-97 to 2000-01.

ACAHS

Farm Surveys report 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996,1997 Reports - Financial Performance of Australian Farms - ABARE

ACAHS

Agriculture 1997-98 ABS 7113.0 (1998) Report - Hard Copy of Australian Agriculture production figures

ACAHS

Characteristics of Australian Farms - 31 March 1993 ABS Cat No. 7102.0

Report - Hard Copy ABS report of selected agricultural statistics broken down by state

ACAHS

Agstats 2001 - ABS.

Electronic Database - Computer database of small area agricultural data for Australia.

ACAHS

c. Agricultural population

Data Source Description Location 2001Censusof Population and Housing ABS, People employed in Agriculture Data cubes

Breakdowns of farm residents by industry, occupation, gender and age

ACHAS/ ABS

ABS Labour Force Australia (2005). ABS Cat No. 6202.0.55.001 (1994)

Report - ABS labour force summary survey published quarterly

ACAHS

ABS Agricultural Census data - 2001 Report -.Breakdown of agricultural industry data by state

ACAHS

The Micro-Dynamics of Change in Australian Agriculture 1976-2001, (2004). ABS Cat No 2055.0

Report – Change in agricultural industries and population. Comparison of Agricultural Census data over time

ACAHS

People in Farming. ABARE 98.6 (1998) Report - A survey of broadacre and dairy industries defining the agricultural population working and living on Australian farms

ACAHS

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d. Deaths data

Data Source Description Location National Coroners Information System Electronic data base of deaths investigated by

state coroners in all states since 2001 MUNCII

Media Monitors Database of cases reported by Media Monitor by comprehensive monitoring of print media for farm related deaths and serious injury

ACAHS

ABS Mortality Data (1989- 2002). Electronic Database - All rural fatalities for the 10 years, ABS information including occupation and ICD code.

ACAHS HOIST

NOSI 1 and NOSI2 Databases Database of fatal and nonfatal workers, compensation claims from 1994 by sex, age, agent, mechanism.

www.nohsc.gov.au

Erlich et al. (1993) Scandinavian Journal of Work Environment and Health

Report - NOHSC study of coroners' records examining work-related farm injury.

ACAHS

NSW WorkCover Authority

Fatalities surveillance system (1996)

Electronic Database - Database of age, sex, date of injury, agent, activity and mechanism of death. Continuous data 1987-1995

ACAHS

Suicide in rural NSW (1995)

Report - re: Suicide in Rural NSW from the Standing Committee on social issues. Legislative Council. Limited Occupational data

ACAHS

Causes of Death, 2004 (2006). ABS Cat no 3303.0 Report - All deaths in Australia by ICD code, age, cause, years 2002-2004

ACAHS

Injury Deaths, Australia, 2002 (2004), Aust Institute of Health & Welfare

Report - All injury deaths in Australia by ICD code, indicators, state, age, cause, year 2002

ACAHS

Farm Health and Safety Bulletin (Occasional Reports) Reports - Occasional Report by Victorian HSO regarding both fatal and non-fatal injury.

ACAHS

Occupational Health and Safety Authority - (Now HSO) Victoria. Fatalities Summaries

Reports - Hardcopy of fatalities summary data Jan 1985 - December 1993.

ACAHS

Mortality in the Barwon Health Service - First Draft - Northern districts Public Health Unit. (Undated)

Report - Examination of death rates by occupation for a range of health issues. Needs work before it will become useful.

ACAHS

Mortality in the North West Health Service - Northern districts Public Health Unit. (1994)

Report - Extremely useful planning document for delivery of farmer health programs. Small numbers in samples have led to wide confidence intervals. Analysis needs to be done for State and Australia.

ACAHS

Queensland fatal Work-Related Farm Incidents. Source Division of Workplace Health and Safety. (1996)

Report - Hard Copy Output of Fatal Farm Injuries 1.01.85-1.01.95.

ACAHS

Male Farm Road Fatalities 1988, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1996 Electronic Database - Database of road fatalities to Males, includes information about accident, injury, demographics and circumstances surrounding fatality.

ACAHS

Work-related traumatic fatalities, 1989-1992 (1998) Report - Comprehensive examination of work-related fatalities in Australia

ACAHS

Franklin R, Mitchell R, Driscoll T, Fragar L. 2000. Farm-related fatalities in Australia, 1989-1992. ACAHS, NOHSC & RIRDC. Moree

Report - Comprehensive examination of farm-related fatalities in Australia.

ACAHS

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e. Hospital based data

Data Source Description Location NSW Inpatients Statistics Collection (HOIST) NSW Health, (1988-2005)

Electronic Databases -A collection of datasets kept by NSW health

ACAHS HOIST

Australian Hospitals Inpatients Statistics, AIHW and National Centre for Injury Studies, Flinders University

Data on Australian hospital admissions available by request.

Flinders University (contact James Harrison)

Hospital separations due to injury and poisoning, Australia 2001-02 (2006) NISU

Report - Injuries by age and sex, remoteness of usual residence, length of stay in hospital, external causes of injury, and other characteristics. Patterns of injury morbidity and the burden it imposes on the Australian community

ACHAS

Rural Injury Prevention Program Accident and Emergency presentations - Farm Injury

Electronic Database - 700+ cases of A/E presentations from NW of NSW. Detailed description of demographics, agent, activity, industry, body part and injury type

ACAHS

Victorian Injury Surveillance System - Latrobe Valley Accident and Emergency presentations - Farm Injury

Electronic Database - 400 + cases of A/E presentations from Latrobe Valley VIC. Detailed description of demographics, agent, activity, industry, body part and injury type

ACAHS.

Victorian Hospital Separations (On-going) Electronic Database - Inpatient data coded to ICD-9. Enhanced by special purpose survey in 11 rural hospitals

VIC Health and MUARC.

On farm Injury Requiring Hospitalisation - Central West Health Region - G. Robson (Undated)

Unpublished Report - Summary Data re: 168 cases of farm injury hospitalisation

ACAHS

QLD Hospital Separations Data. Electronic Database - Confidential material, released in 1996.

ACAHS

National Injury Surveillance Unit - Emergency Department Presentations. Farm Injury Subset of 16,000 emergency department presentations

Electronic Database - Confidential material, 1996.

ACAHS

Health Wiz - National Social Health Statistical Database CD-ROM Version 5.1

Electronic Database - Hospital Based Statistics

ACAHS

Needs and Opportunities for improved surveillance of brain injury. A progress report AIHW 1999

Report - This report outlines a range of issues that affect the availability, quality and utilisation of data on traumatic brain injury.

ACAHS

Accidental Poisoning of preschool children from nonmedical substances, Australia. AIHW 2000

Report - Information about child poisoning in Australia

ACAHS

Need and Opportunities for improved surveillance of burns. AIHW 1998

Report - Investigation of the needs and opportunities for improved surveillance of burns was motivated by a number of factors.

ACAHS

NSW Health hospital separations 1988-1998, Emergency Department Visits and special surveys

Electronic Databases -A collection of datasets kept by NSW health

HOIST

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f. Workers compensation based data, and information reported to OHS authorities

Data Source Description Location NOSI 1 and 2 Databases, Department of Employment & Workplace Relations

Database – allows analysis of data for national workers compensation claims from 1994 by sex, age, agent, mechanism. Limit to employed workers in agriculture.

Comparative Performance Monitoring – Seventh Report (2005), Part D & E. Dept Employment & Workplace Relations

Report - Benchmarking analysis of workers compensation data from all states and New Zealand.

ACAHS

Department of Employment and Workplace Relations. 2006. Compendium of Workers’ Compensation Statistics Australia 2002–03 January 2006

Report – comparative national workers compensation statistics

ACAHS

A Statistical Profile of Occupational Health and Safety in Victoria, HSO, October 1995

Report - Industry figures for all industries in Victoria. Useful as a comparison document. Limited agricultural fatalities data

ACAHS

Employment Injuries in agriculture and forestry. Workers Compensation Statistics. New South Wales 1991/92

Report - Hard copy WorkCover Authority agriculture statistics. Useful document, broken down by commodity / industry. Other breakdowns available on request.

ACAHS

Occupational Health and Safety Statistics in Agriculture - New South Wales - Data Analysis and Research Unit - WorkCover Authority July 1994. (Confidential WorkCover Data not for release)

Unpublished Report - Hardcopy analysis of priority industries for intervention. Breakdowns occupation and industry group. Unfortunately breakdowns too broad to be of great value.

ACAHS

Manual handling Injuries and occupational overuse syndrome. Workers Compensation Statistics New South Wales 1990/91

Report - Hard copy WorkCover Authority agriculture statistics. Useful document, broken down by broad industry.

ACAHS

Occupational Health and safety Performance Overviews, selected Industries- Issue No.9 Agriculture and Services to Agriculture. Worksafe Australia.

Report - Produced with input from the National Farm Injury Data Collection Project. Hard Copy agricultural injury / illness statistics for occurrences requiring 5 days or more off work.

ACAHS

Health and Safety of Workers in the rural industry. Division of Workplace Health and Safety. Government Statisticians Office. Report of the Queensland Employee Injury Database (Not Dates)

Unpublished Report - Hardcopy summary report of vastly under-reported injury database. Data has been superseded by Keith Ferguson’s special surveys.

ACAHS

Workers Compensation Board of Queensland - Industry Statistics - Farming and Pastoral 1992/93

Report - Hardcopy injury cost breakdowns by body part, injury type and compensation region. Industry is not coded to ASIC or ANZIC.

ACAHS.

Best Estimates of the Magnitude of health effects of occupational exposure to hazardous substances 1996

Report - Hard copy report about health effects

ACAHS

National Catalogue of State and Industry Based OHS Data NOHSC 1997

Report - Catalogue of Data sources ACAHS

National OHS Improvement Framework (2000) Report - This report describes the National Improvement Framework by OHS stakeholders

ACAHS

Data on OHS in Australia. NOHSC 2000 Report - This report provides an overview of What is known regarding OHS in Australia as described by existing and accessible national data collections

ACAHS

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g. Research and special data collections

Data Source Description Location National Health Survey National survey of self-reported health status HOIST,

NSW Health

NSW Health Survey NSW Survey of self-reported health status HOIST, NSW Health

Farm Survey of workplace Injury / Illness.

Keith Ferguson, Division of workplace Health and Safety. QLD 1995

Report - Prospective / retrospective survey of injury illness factors to support activity planning of Queensland FarmSafe. Coded using early version of National Farm Injury Data Collection - Optimal Dataset.

ACAHS

The Economics of Farm Safety in Australian Agriculture- Griffith GR and Low J. NSW Agriculture. (1994)

Report - Injury type and Cost impacts of farm injury in three rural shires of NSW.

ACAHS

Report Farm Safety Survey. Sa Rural Industry Training Committee Inc. Dr. MC Brown. Dec 1990

Report - Survey of members of the United Farmers and Stockowners. Retrospective query of injury occurrence of 12 months, notable that annual medically treated injury rate per 100 farms = 17.00.

ACAHS

A 12-month study of farm work related injury based on collections from Hospital and Medical Practices in the Callide-Dawson Region of Central Queensland. Chater AB & Ferguson KH. (1994)

Report - Prospective study of Hospital and medical practitioner records relating to farm injury. - Excellent commodity specific reporting based upon earlier draft of optimal dataset as per Ferguson.

ACAHS

Cdata96 (1998) Electronic Database - This is an electronic copy of information collected in the 1996 Australia population census

ACAHS

h. Reportable disease data

Data Source Description Location Australia’s notifiable disease status, (2003) Communicable Diseases Intelligence - Commonwealth Department of Human Services and Health. Vol 18. No.22

Annual Reports- Rates of Notifiable Diseases by statistical division. Reporting mechanism of zoonoses.

ACAHS

National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System Communicable Disease Intelligence

Website - with up-to date information about communicable disease.

http://www.health.gov.au/pubs/cdi/cdihtml.htm

National Leptospirosis Surveillance Reports Nos 13(2004), 12(2003),11(2002),10 (2001), 9(2000)

Reports on National Leptospirosis cases htp://www.health.qld.gov.au/qhpss/pdf/Leptospirosis/reports/Surveillance_Report

i. Overseas data

Data Source Description Location Surveillance of Occupational Injuries and Diseases in Agriculture in Finland. Saarimaki P. International Workshop on Agricultural Health and Safety. Iowa 1996

Report - Hard Copy summary data regarding cause, outcome and cost of occupational injuries in agriculture. Useful activity classifications.

ACAHS

Fatal Farm Injuries in Canada 1991-1995 (1997) Report - Farm-related fatalities in Canada ACAHS

Fatal Injuries in farming, forestry and horticulture 1999-2000 (2000)

Report - Describes farm-related fatalities in the UK

ACAHS

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j. Other

Data Source Description Location NW Pesticide Blood Screening Program

Electronic Database- Database of Cholinesterase Screenings for Organophosphate and carbamate exposure..

ACAHS

NSW Rural Hearing Conservation Program. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety.

Electronic Database - Collection of hearing screenings collected at agricultural field days since 1992 n=4000.

ACAHS

Poisons Information Centres in states Calls to Poisons Information Centres regarding agricultural chemicals

Poisons Information Centres

Australian Injury Prevention Bulletin - NISU . Various Editions 1993-1196

Reports - Hard copy data reports re: injury issues. Important data re suicide

ACAHS

The Health and Safety of South Australian Farmers, Farm Families and Farm Workers. ACAHS 1999

Report - A report describing the health and safety of South Australian farmers, families and workers.

ACAHS

Rural Injury In Central Queensland ACAHS 2000 Report - A report profile injury presenting to Emergency Departments and GP surgeries in central Queensland

ACAHS

The Health and Safety of Australian Farming Community. ACAHS 2000

Report - A report bringing together all sources of information to paint a picture of the health and safety of Australian farmers

ACAHS

3.3 Technical guidelines Technical guidelines guide the internal use of key data sources and interpretation of data reports. These TechNotes summarise specifications, associated datasets, methods of data extraction and use, limitations and utility for farm injury prevention. The following TechNotes are in use or are in preparation:

TechNote 1: Using the National Coroners Information System TechNote 2: Using Media Monitors TechNote 3: Using ICD10 and hospital data TechNote 4: Using ABS Cause of Death Data TechNote 5: Using NOSI (OHS) Data TechNote 6: The Farm Injury Optimal Dataset TechNote 7: The Q Fever Optimum Dataset TechNote 8: AgZones of Australia of importance to health

3.4 New developments 1. National Coroners Information System For this project the National Farm injury Data Centre piloted the use of the National Coroners Information System (NCIS) as a key source of information regarding traumatic deaths occurring on Australian farms. Prior to 2000, information held by coroners in relation to all deaths referred to state coroners was only held in hard paper copies. Any attempt to use the data about injury deaths necessitated researchers examining each file and coding the information into databases. The last comprehensive analysis of farm-related injury deaths used such a method, in association with the research team of the National Occupational Health and Safety Commission and funded by the RIRDC (Franklin et al, 2000). The National Coroners Information System is a national internet based data storage and retrieval system for Australian coronial cases. Information about every death reported to an Australian coroner since July 2000 (January 2001 for Queensland) is stored within the system, providing a valuable

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hazard identification and death prevention tool for coroners and research agencies. The NCIS has a primary role to assist coroners in their role as death investigators, by providing them with the ability to review previous coronial cases that may be similar in nature to current investigations, enhancing their ability to identify and address systematic hazards within the community. Further information about the NCIS is found the on website: http://www.vifp.monash.edu.au/ncis/. Accessing the NCIS to extract all farm injury deaths is not a straightforward activity, for a number of reasons:

- Delays in data being put into the data system and delays in accessing relevant information - Difficulties in identifying farm-relating injury cases as no single coding filed can identify all

farm injured cases - Additional data being entered in relation to cases without a system to advise when new

information is entered. - No Queensland data for July-December 2000

The information held in the database is often inadequate to describe the key causal factors required for use of the Farm Injury optimal Dataset. The key difficulties relate to information about the type of farming enterprise (agricultural industry) and the work phase if work related – i.e. what job was being undertaken at the time of injury event leading to death. Notwithstanding these challenges, an extraction of cases of on-farm deaths has been undertaken for the years 2001 to 2004, and a full report is in preparation (Pollock and Fragar, 2006) In the years 1982 to 1984 there were a total of 223 work-related on-farm fatalities identified by accessing coronial files (Erlich et al, 1993), representing a rate of 19.4 per 100 000 persons per year employed in agriculture. Table 3.1 indicates the number of farm-related traumatic deaths that were extracted in the previous fatality study of the National Farm injury Data Centre for the years 1989-1992 (Franklin et al, 2000) and the numbers extracted using the National Coroners Information System for 2001-2004. Table 3.1: Number of on-farm injury deaths on Australian farms in two surveys Year Number

work-related deaths

Number bystander and

other farm injury deaths

Total deaths including

unknown work status

Number agricultural

establishments*

Rate farm deaths per 10000

agricultural establishments

1989 89 53 147 155 000 E 9.5 1999 94 49 149 155 000 E 9.6 1991 97 64 163 154 380 10.6 1992 93 48 148 151 966 9.7 2001 53 57 110 146 000 E 7.5 2002 45 52 97 135 000 7.2 2003 41 56 97 133 000 7.3 2004# 37 43 80 130 500 6.1 * Agricultural establishments producing an EVAO > $5000 pa E = estimates as changed definitions for value of production # Most likely under-enumerated, with further cases to be added. It should be noted that differences in the rates between the two survey periods are most likely related to the different case ascertainment method, and a conclusion cannot be made that OHS performance has improved in the period between surveys. The important outcome is that the NCIS can be used to produce more timely data, and so long as similar methods of data extraction are used, this can form the basis of an ongoing surveillance program for farm deaths reporting.

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The 2001–2004 data allows further analysis of injury by the following that are being presented in the full report:

- Age - Gender - State - Agent of injury - Season - Time of day

The series of chart books produced earlier in the project period will be updated where relevant using the more recent deaths data. 2. Press Monitoring Service The National Farm injury Data Centre began using a media monitoring service, Media Monitors Australia Pty Ltd, in October 2004 with the aim of providing rapid advice of on-farm deaths and serious injury that is reported in local, state and national print media. Search terms that were piloted and are now in use are:

1. accident* AND (farm*, agricultur*, grower, producer, horticultur*) 2. injur* AND (farm*, agricultur*, grower, producer, horticultur*) 3. death* AND (farm*, agricultur*, grower, producer, horticultur*) 4. fatal* AND (farm*, agricultur*, grower, producer, horticultur*) 5. safety AND (farm*, agricultur*, grower, producer, horticultur*) 6. killed AND (farm*, agricultur*, grower, producer, horticultur*) 7. dies AND (farm*, agricultur*, grower, producer, horticultur*) 8. ACAHS OR (Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety) 9. NFIDC OR (National Farm Injury Data Centre) 10. Farmsafe OR FarmSafe OR (Farm Safe) OR (Farm-Safe)

Table 3.2 provides a summary of articles that were captured and provided to the Data Centre for the calendar year 2005. These media articles have been used by the Data Centre and the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety for the following:

- Alerts to cases of death to be accessed on the National Coroners Information System for inclusion in the farm deaths register

- Provision of information on the circumstances of deaths not yet available on the NCIS. This information is not formally included until validated.

- Advice to farm injury prevention programs on factors of interest surrounding deaths and serious injury associated with specific programs – eg ATV injury, child injury.

Of interest is the number of media pickups following the publication of the RIRDC-funded farm injury fact booklet series.

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Table 3.2: Number of print articles by field of interest and issue captured by the press monitoring program

Field of interest Issue Number articles Number deaths reported

Number serious injuries reported

Agricultural industries Beef Q fever 5 Beef cattle handling 14 10 Sheep and wool 6 1 Dairy 20 7 Grain - harvest 21 1 Pesticides 17 2 Machinery and equipment ROPS 4 PTO 16 1 Tractors 51 19 10 Auger 3 3 Hay baler 5 1 1 Slasher 6 1 ATV 81 9 23 Motorbike 2 2 Welder/Workshop 13 6 Forklift 1 1 Post-rammer 3 1 Wool press 2 1 1 Truck/transport 5 3 4 Ute/Farm Vehicle 6 4 2 Bulldozer/Earth Moving 3 2 1 Cherry picker 2 2 Fertiliser Spreader 5 5 Banana machinery 3 3 General Farm Machinery 32 4 Other hazards Electricity 22 1 Lightning 1 1 Tree 8 3 5 Struck by Object 5 5 Drowning 2 2 Falls 18 1 3 Helmets 20 Skin cancer 2 Asthma 1 Hearing 2 Mental health 3 Flowing grain 2 1 Airplane & helicopter 14 4 3 Dog 3 1 Horse 3 3 Fire 6 2 2 Gudair OJD vaccine 2 2 Programs Farmsafe 2 ACAHS 5 AgrAbility 1 Child safety 46 General Farm Safety 51 Farm Safety Week 24 Publications RIRDC Safety Fact Series 26 TOTAL 593 63 108

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4. Project outputs The following outputs have been produced by the project over the three years 2003-2005. 4.1 Reports produced directly in fulfilment of project objectives These reports have been produced by project funded personnel to meet the objectives defined by the project:

- Franklin RC, Thomas, PR, Fragar LJ. 2004. The Health and Safety of New South Wales Farmers,

Farm Families and Farm Workers. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, Moree and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra.

- Franklin RC, Thomas, PR, Fragar LJ. 2004. Falls in Agriculture. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, Moree and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra.

- Fragar L, Pollock, K. 2004. All-terrain Vehicle Injury on Australian Farms – Update 2004. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety. Farmsafe Australia website. www.farmsafe.org.au

- Fragar L, Pollock, K. 2005. All-terrain Vehicle Injury on Australian Farms – Update 2005. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety. Farmsafe Australia website. www.farmsafe.org.au

- Fragar, L. J., Stiller, L. and Thomas, P. 2005. Child Injury on Australian Farms – The facts No 5. 05/047, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation.

- Fragar, L. J., Thomas, P. and Morton, C. 2005. Injury on New South Wales Farms- The facts No 7. 05/048, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

- Fragar, L. J. and Thomas, P. 2005. Machinery Injury on Australian Farms – The facts No 4. 05/050, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

- Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K. and Morton, C. 2005. Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Beef Cattle Industry - The facts No 1. 05/046, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation.

- Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K. and Morton, C. 2005. Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Poultry Industry- The facts No 2, 05/052, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation.

- Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K. and Morton, C. 2005. Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Horticulture Industries- The facts No 3, 05/049, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

- Fragar, L. J., Sankaran, B. and Thomas, P. 2005. Pesticides and Human Health in Australia – The facts No 6, 05/051, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation.

- Temperley J, Pollock K, Fragar L. 2006. Benchmarking farm health and safety for Australian agriculture – preliminary paper. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety

- Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K, Morton, C, Day L. 2006. Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Dairy Industry - The facts No 9. 05/046, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (In press).

- Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K. and Morton, C. 2006. All-terrain vehicle injury on Australian farms – The facts No 8. 05/046, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (In press).

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- Morton, C, Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K. 2006. The safety of older farmers in Australia - The facts No 10. 05/046, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation (In press).

4.2 Reports produced with significant input from the National Farm Injury Data Collection These reports have been produced by personnel in the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety with significant use of data held by the National Farm Injury Data Collection:

- Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety. 2004, Safe Play Areas on Farms Resource Guide. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, Moree.

- Fragar L, Sankaran B, Thomas P. 2004. Pesticides and human health — a report of health data related to pesticides in Australia. A report to the Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety. Moree

- Athanasiov A, Fragar L, Gupta M. 2004. Farm Machinery Safety – Injuries associated with Grain augers in Australia. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, Moree and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation. Canberra

- Miller J, Fragar L, Franklin R. 2004. Farm Machinery Safety – Injuries associated with posthole diggers. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, Moree and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra.

- Miller J, Fragar L, Franklin R. 2004. Farm Machinery Safety – Injury involving tractor run-over. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, Moree and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra.

- Athanasiov A, Gupta M, Hewitt RJ, Franklin RC, Fragar LJ. 2004 Farm machinery safety – Power take off shaft guards. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, Moree and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra.

- Fragar L, Pollock K. 2006. Head injury On Australian Farms - Data for consideration of helmet requirements. A report produced for Standards Australia Helmet Standard Committee. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety. Moree.

4.3 Theses Teaching and training objectives of the Project were partially achieved by the supervision of students undertaking postgraduate research in the area of farm injury in Australia.

Two PhD students are undertaking research in the field of farm injury and the use of Australian data.

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4.4 Publications Communication of Project outputs has been a key commitment of the Project personnel. The following papers have been published in the peer-reviewed literature: - Franklin RC, Davies JN. Farm related injury presenting to an Australian base hospital. Australian

Journal. Rural Health 2003; 11, (In press)

- Bugeja, L. and Franklin, R. C. 2005. ‘Drowning deaths of zero- to five-year-old children in Victorian dams, 1989–2001’, Australian Journal of Rural Health. 13(5): 300.

- Depczynski, J., Franklin, R. C., Challinor, K., Williams, W. and Fragar, L. J. 2005. ‘Farm Noise Emissions during Common Agricultural Activities’, Journal of Agricultural Safety and Health. 11(3): 325-33.

- Athanasiov, A., Gupta, M. L. and Fragar, L. J. 2006. ‘An Insight into the Grain Auger Injury Problem in Queensland, Australia’, Journal of Agricultural Safety and Health.

- Davies, J. and Franklin, R. 2006. Injuries resulting from horse riding and motorcycle incidents on farms, Journal of Occupational Health and Safety Australa .and New Zealand: 22(1).

- Depczynski, J., Franklin, R. C., Challinor, K., Williams, W. and Fragar, L. J. 2006. ‘Factors Affecting Farm Noise during Common Agricultural Activities’, Journal of Agricultural Safety and Health. (In press)

- Franklin, R. C., Stark, K. and Fragar, L. 2006. ‘Farmers Perception of Rollover Protective Structures (ROPS)’, Journal of Safety Science. (In press)

4.5 Conference presentations Findings relating to farm injury data collected and reported by the Project were presented to professional conferences: - Fragar L. Rural Economy and the Health of Rural Communities in Australia. Future of Rural

Peoples: Rural Economy, Healthy People, Environment, Rural Communities. Fifth International Symposium, Saskatoon, Canada. October 2003.

- Thomas P, Fragar L. Circumstances and Strategies of prevention of road transport injuries in agricultural workers. Road Safety Research, Policing and Education Conference, Sydney, September 24th –26th 2003.

- Thomas P, Fragar L, Franklin R. Agricultural Falls: Circumstances and Categories. New England Research and Health Institute Colloquium. Tamworth 31st March-1st April 2003.

- Depczynski J, Franklin RC, Challinor K, Williams W, Fragar LJ. Programs in Partnership - Addressing Noise Injury In The Farming Community. Australian Health Promotion Association: NSW State Conference, Coffs Harbour, 18-20th May 2003.

- Stiller L. Developing a Strategy for Child Safety on Farms. Australian Injury Prevention Network Conference, Perth WA, March 2003.

- Depczynski J. Building Bridges in the Bush. Australian Health Promotion Association: NSW State Conference. Coffs Harbour, 18-20th May 2003.

- Crosby J, Fuller B. Farmsafe Bridges. Australian Health Promotion Association: NSW State Conference. Coffs Harbour, 18-20th May 2003.

- Stiller L. Progress in the Implementation of a National Strategy for Child Safety on Farms. Future of Rural Peoples: Rural Economy, Healthy People, Environment, Rural Communities. Fifth International Symposium, Saskatoon, Canada. October 2003.

- Boughton K. Innovations in Rural Rehabilitation Programs. Australian Society of Rehabilitation Counsellors Conference, Sydney 16-17th October 2003.

- Crosby J. (2003) NSW Farmers Industrial Association Industrial Seminar, Armidale NSW.

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- Crosby J. (2003) NSW Farmers Industrial Association Industrial Seminar, Inverell NSW.

- Crosby J. (2003) NSW Farmers Association Region 2 Occupational Health and Safety Seminar, Armidale NSW.

- Boughton K (2003) Northern Inland Injury Prevention Forum, Gunnedah, NSW.

- Boughton K (2003) Workcover NSW Rural Industries Reference Group meeting.

- Temperley J. National ChemCert Australian Conference, Commonwealth Science and Industry Research Organisation Research Centre, Canberra 2003.

- Fragar L. 2004. Health Research – the Rural Agenda. ARHEN Conference, Adelaide.

- Stiller L, Depczynski J, Fragar L, Henderson A, Nadall N. “Child Safety on Farms – Baseline survey of Farmers’. 7th Australian Injury Prevention and Control Conference and 2nd Pacific Rim Safe Communities Conference 15th - 17th September, Mackay, Queensland.

- Fragar L. The health of Australia’s population in Agriculture. Women in Agriculture State Conference, Narrabri, May 2004.

- Franklin R, Fragar L, Crosby J. Falls in Agriculture, University of Sydney Seminar, March 2004.

- Stiller L. Farm Fencing for Children. Child Ag Safety Network, Minneapolis, March 2004.

- Fragar l. Injury in the Agriculture sector in Australia. EPICOH – International Commission on Occupational Health. Adelaide. 2004

- Temperley J. Cotton Industry Small Business Premium Discount Program. 5th National Farm Health and Safety Conference, Bondi, Sydney.

- Stiller L. Child safety on farms. Adelaide for College of Emergency Nurses. Australian. Annual Conference.

- Depczynski J, Farm noise emissions and factors that affect them. Farm Safety in Action Conference, Bondi 2004.

4.6 Book chapters The following book chapter drew on farm injury data generated under the project. This is a textbook for Australian medical students undertaking their rural placements/ semesters. - Fragar L and Pedler D. Rural Injury, in Wilkinson D, Hays R, Strasser R, Worley P. Handbook of

Rural Medicine. 2003. Oxford University Press.

4.7 Newsletters circulated Ground Cover – Farm Safety Supplement. The Grains Research and Development Corporation The National Farm injury Data Centre provided the major contribution of content to articles in this special supplement. Circulation > 35000 Australia-wide National Farm Injury Data Centre (NFIDC) The NFIDC newsletter was circulated three times a year to those working in the area of farm injury data collection. The newsletter reports on developments in the area of farm injury data collection and findings from research undertaken by the ACAHS and other related research. Pesticides and Human Health The Pesticides and Human Health quarterly newsletter reports on developments in research in the area of pesticides and human health and is circulated to over 300 individuals - researchers and academics, regulation /legislation authorities, educators, farmers/farm workers and other interested people.

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National Farm Injury Project The Department of Health and Ageing funded National Farm Injury Prevention Project circulates a regular newsletter to 360 key stakeholder partners in this major promotion of child safety, machinery safety, ATV safety and the safety of older farmers.

4.8 Resource packages The following packages have been produced under different funding projects and have been based on farm injury risk data produced by the National Farm Injury Data Collection: - Fragar L. J. and Temperley, J. 2005. Health and Safety in the Packing Shed – A practical guide,

05/097, ACAHS and RIRDC.

- Fragar L. J. and Temperley, J. 2005. Safe cattle handling - A practical guide, 05/095, ACAHS and RIRDC.

- Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety. 2004. “Get Going” publication targeting farmers concerning risks to children being transported on farms. – covers ATV’s, motor vehicles, mobile farm machinery and motorcycles

- Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety.2004. Guidance Note 7: Child safety on Farms Guidance Note. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety, Moree

- ACAHS. 2005. Safety of All-terrain Vehicles and Small Multi-terrain Utility Vehicles on Australian Farms – A practical management guide, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety.

- Baker, W., Temperley, J., Hawkins, A. and Fragar, L. 2005. Farm Machinery Guarding – A practical guide, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety.

- Eather J. J. and Fragar L. J. 2005. Health and Safety in the Farm Workshop – A practical guide, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety.

- Stiller, L. and Baker, W. 2005. Safer fences for children on farms – Effective safe play area fencing options for rural properties, Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation, Canberra.

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5. The impact of the project – the essential engine room Reports and recommendations of the National Farm Injury Data Collection Project have been widely sought and used in policy making, planning, and programs, resource development, education and training and promotion/extension – by governments, industry, service providers and individuals aiming at and achieving improved health and safety on Australian farms.

5.1 National farm injury prevention programs a. Agricultural industry programs Three industry specific programs were initiated and auspiced by Farmsafe Australia with funding by the Farm Health and Safety Joint Research Venture during this project period. Each established a National Reference Group that worked to develop its National OHS Strategy, by a process of consideration of the nature and scale of injury hazards and risks associated with the industry, establishing priorities for action, producing on-farm OHS risk management resources and developing a communication plan. The data and information provided by the National Farm Injury Data Centre and the Data Collection were fundamental to ensuring a sound evidence base for decisions made and publications and resources produced. In addition, the Data Collection continues to provide new data that is used for updating the previously developed resource packages in the other industries. The following tables provide an overview of the available information regarding distribution of resources for the three specific industries and for those industries that had previously produced safety checklists and guidelines. There was no communication activity relating to these resources during 2005, apart from the launch by RIRDC of the Fact book series. Registered Users who download publications from the Farmsafe Australia website provide details of their planned use of material and receive a communication when any resource they have downloaded has been updated. Beef Cattle Industry

Document Reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website Farmsafe Australia. 2005. Health and Safety in the Australian Beef Cattle Industry – An Industry Strategy 2004 – 2009 Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

∗ Farmsafe Australia Members ∗ Beef Cattle Safety Reference Group ∗ Australian Work Health & Safety Authorities ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety

Authorities ∗ National & State Farmer Organisations ∗ Meat & Livestock Australia

18 15 8 6 8 2

Data not available

Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K. and Morton, C. 2005. Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Beef Cattle Industry - The facts No 1. 05/046, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

∗ RIRDC holds publications ∗ Beef Cattle Safety Reference Group ∗ WorkCover NSW ∗ Qld Workplace Health and Safety ∗ Burdekin Centre for Rural Health ∗ NSW Community Farm Safety Groups ∗ General Enquiries ∗ HOWSA ∗ NSW Field Days

12 12 1 1 7 3 6 10

450 per month Oct05-Jan06

Managing Beef Cattle Production Safety Resource Folder. Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation *Folder includes Safe Cattle Handling Guide and Beef Cattle Production Checklist

∗ RIRDC holds publications ∗ Beef Cattle Safety Reference Group ∗ NSW WorkCover ∗ HOWSA ∗ National Farmers Federation, Victorian Farmers

Federation ∗ Managing Farm Safety – Inverell

12 2 2 2 2

NA

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Document Reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website Safe Cattle Handling – A Practical Guide

∗ Farmsafe Australia Members ∗ Farmsafe NSW Members ∗ Beef Cattle Safety Reference Group ∗ Aust Workplace Heath and Safety Authorities ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety ∗ Meat & Livestock Australia ∗ NSW Field Days ∗ General Enquiries

16 18 2 8 2 2 7 5

200 per month Oct05-Jan06 plus 117 Registered Users downloads

Beef Cattle Production Checklists ∗ Registered Users Downloaded via ‘On Farm Resources Section of Farmsafe Australia website

328 Registered Users downloads

Horticulture Industries

Document Reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website Farmsafe Australia 2005. Health and Safety in the Horticulture Industries – An Industry Strategy 2004 – 2009. Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

∗ Farmsafe Australia members ∗ Horticulture Safety Reference Group ∗ Aust Workplace Health and Safety Authorities ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety ∗ National & State Farmer Organisations ∗ Horticulture Australia ∗ Victorian DPI Horticulture Safety Group

16 15 8 4 6 2 18

Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K. and Morton, C. 2005. Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Horticulture Industries- The facts No 3, 05/049, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

∗ RIRDC holds publications ∗ Farmsafe Australia members ∗ Horticulture Safety Reference Group∗ Aust Workplace Health and Safety Authorities ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety (HOWSA) ∗ State Farmer Organisations ∗ Horticulture Australia ∗ Victorian DPI Horticulture Safety Group (from

RIRDC) ∗ NSW WorkCover

16 12 8 8 6 2 18 12

100 downloads per month Nov05-Jan06

Managing Horticulture Farm Safety Resource Folder *Folder includes Packing Shed Guide and Horticultural Production Checklists

∗ Farmsafe Australia Members ∗ Horticulture Safety Reference Group ∗ All Aust Work health & safety organisations ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety ∗ Horticulture Australia ∗ Victorian DPI Horticulture Safety Group (from

RIRDC)

2 15 2 2 2 17

Health and Safety in the Packing Shed – A Practical Guide

∗ Farmsafe Australia Members ∗ Horticulture Safety Reference Group ∗ Australian Workplace Health and Safety

Authorities ∗ HOWSA ∗ Horticulture Australia ∗ Victorian DPI Horticulture Safety Group (from

RIRDC). ∗ NSW Field Days

32 18 8 6 4 18 7

41 Registered Users downloads

Horticulture Production Checklists ∗ Via ‘On-farm Resources’ Section of Farmsafe Australia website.

238 Registered Users downloads

Occupational Health and Safety Risk Associated with Horticultural Produce Production

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Sugar Industries

Document reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website OHS Risk Association with Sugarcane Production

∗ Developed and distributed in 2001 to SRDC, Canegrowers, RIRDC and Agrecon Consultants.

Managing Sugar Farm Safety resource folder

∗ In final draft form – out for comment to Farmsafe Queensland, Canegrowers, SRDC, copy to RIRDC

Other industry resources

Document reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website Grain Industry Checklists – Headers and Harvester – Grain Movement and Storage

Farmsafe Australia website

Registered user downloads 78 70

Managing Grain Production Safety Resource Folder

Managing Farm Safety course – Moree UNE Graduate Certificate in Rural Science - Grain Production

4 25

Sheep / Wool Industry Checklist – Shearing Shed

Farmsafe Australia website

Registered user downloads 84

Woolshed Safety Guideline Farmsafe Australia website 46 Registered Users

Occupational Health and Safety Risk Associated with Sheep and Wool Production in Australia.

On request Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety

Cotton Production Checklists – Cotton Harvesting – Cotton Field Operations

Farmsafe Australia website

Registered user downloads 12 10

Health and Safety Risk Associated with Cotton Production on Farm

On request from Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety

Health and Safety in the Cotton Industry – A National Strategy 1999 - 2004

Farmsafe Australia website 93 per month Oct 2005

Managing Cotton Farm Safety Resource Folder

∗ Cotton Australia ∗ General Enquiries

80 10

Guidance Notes – Cotton Picking – Cotton Chipping

∗ Cotton Conference 2005 ∗ OHS Benchmarking Group ∗ Cotton Conference 2005

20 10 20

Registered user downloads 7 5

Dairy Industry Checklist – Milking Sheds and Milking

Farmsafe Australia website

Registered user downloads 88

Poultry Industry Fragar, L. J., Pollock, K. and Morton, C. 2005. Occupational Health and Safety Risk in the Australian Poultry Industry- The facts No 2, 05/052, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation .

∗ RIRDC holds publications 130 per month Oct05-Jan06

Pesticides Use in Australian Agriculture Fragar, L. J., Sankaran, B. and Thomas, P. 2005. Pesticides and Human Health in Australia – The facts No 6, 05/051, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

∗ RIRDC holds publications 160 per month Nov05-Jan06

Pesticides Hazard Checklist 209 Registered Users

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Document reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website – Hazardous Chemicals, Storage and

Use Farmsafe Australia website downloads

NSW Farm Injury Fragar, L. J., Thomas, P. and Morton, C. 2005. Injury on New South Wales Farms- The facts No 7. 05/048, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

– FMP Registrars – Future Farmers Resource Folder – General Enquiries

6 4 5

110 downloads per month Nov05-Jan06

b. Programs addressing key hazards Farmsafe Australia has been the sponsor organisation for a range of prevention programs and projects that focus on specific hazards of high risk across all agriculture industries. All such programs have been identified as priorities as a results of reports and information produced by the National Farm Injury Data Collection, and nationally established Reference Groups that direct the programs have drawn heavily on the data for defining risk factors, developing strategic approaches, defining target groups for communication of change needs and evaluation and monitoring of progress. The two programs reported here have been funded by the Government of Australia Department of Health and Ageing, within the National Farm Injury Prevention Project, and some promotion has begun for the farm machinery safety project component. This is reflected in the uptake of the farm workshop safety resources. ATV Safety on Australian Farms

Document reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website Farmsafe Australia. 2004. Safe Operation of All Terrain Vehicles and All Terrain Utilities on Australian Farms – An Industry Strategy 2004 – 2009. Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

∗ Farmsafe Australia members ∗ Farm ATV Safety Reference Group ∗ Workplace Health and Safety Authorities ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety ∗ ATV Manufacturers ∗ Tractor & Machinery Association of Australia ∗ Faculties of Medicine at Sydney, NSW &

Newcastle ∗ General Practice training organisations ∗ ATV Attachment Manufacturers

32 19 8 4 6 6 3 4 2

1,992 downloads Jul05-Jan06

Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety. 2005. Safety of All-terrain Vehicles (ATVs) and Multi-terrain Utility Vehicles on Australian Farms – A practical guide. ACAHS

First edition on website. Currently being revised ∗ Farmsafe Australia members ∗ Farm ATV Safety Reference Group ∗ Workplace Health and Safety Authorities ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety ∗ ATV Manufacturers ∗ Tractor & Machinery Association of Australia ∗ Faculties of Medicine at Sydney, NSW &

Newcastle ∗ General Practice (FMP) Registrars ∗ ATV Attachment Manufacturers ∗ NSW Field Days ∗ General Enquiries

32 19 8 6 6 2 40 18 2 20 10

1,063 downloads Dec05-Jan06

Fragar L, Pollock K. 2005/2006. ATV Injury Briefing Paper. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety

* Farmsafe Australia members * Farm ATV Safety Reference Group * Aust Workplace Health & Safety Authorities * Heads of Workplace Health & Safety * ATV manufacturers * Tractor & Machinery Association of Australia * General Practice FMP Registrars * ATV attachment manufacturers

32 19 8 4 6 2 40 2

314 downloads Nov05-Jan06

Fragar l, Pollock K. 2006. Head injury On Australian Farms - Data for consideration of helmet requirements. A report produced for Standards Australia

* Standards Australia Helmet Committee 12

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Document reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website Helmet Standard Committee. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety. Moree.

Farm Machinery Safety

Document reference Distribution Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website Fragar, L. J. and Thomas, P. 2005. Machinery Injury on Australian Farms – The facts No 4. 05/050, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

∗ Farmsafe Australia members ∗ Farm Machinery Safety Reference Group ∗ Workplace Health and Safety Authorities ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety

Authorities ∗ Tractor & Machinery Association of Australia ∗ NSW Field Days

32 15 4 6 2 10

653 Nov05-Jan06

Health and Safety in the Farm Workshop – a practical guide

∗ Farmsafe Australia members ∗ Farm Machinery Safety Reference Group ∗ Australian Workplace Health & Safety

Authorities ∗ NSW WorkCover Rural IRG ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety

Authorities ∗ Tractor & Machinery Association of Australia ∗ General Practice FMP Registrars ∗ National Australia Cotton Trade Show ∗ Farmsafe Queensland ∗ Agricultural Field Days ∗ Farmsafe NW NSW ∗ Farmsafe SA ∗ Southern Farmsafe ∗ Farmsafe WA ∗ Glenelg Outreach Primary Health ∗ Farmsafe Victoria ∗ WA Dept of Education ∗ General Enquiries ∗ NSW Field Days

32 19 22 4 16 4 2 53 46 1,000 500 110 100 50 60 30 30 16 69 253

1,313 Jul05-Jan06 plus 123 Registered Users downloads

Farm Machinery Guarding A Practical Guide Principles of Guarding Guarding of PTOs Guarding augers

Published on Farmsafe Australia website, currently being printed ∗ Farmsafe Australia Members ∗ Farm Machinery Safety Reference Group ∗ Aust Workplace Health & Safety Authorities ∗ Heads of Workplace Health & Safety

32 11 8 4

110 Dec 05 Plus 86 Registered User downloads

c. Programs addressing at-risk populations Farmsafe Australia has also been the sponsor organisation for a range of prevention programs and projects that focus on reducing risk of farm-related death and serious injury to at-risk and vulnerable populations. The two programs reported here, are also part of the Government of Australia Department of Health and Ageing funded National Farm Injury Prevention Project. The Child Safety on Farms Project was in its 3rd year in 2005, and uptake of resources and information reflects the communication programs that have been set in place that are resulting in wider dissemination than other programs, where uptake has not been promoted. The Safety of Older Farmers program was not initiated until late 2005.

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Child Safety on Farms

Document reference Distribution (July 2005 – May 2006) Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website National Strategy Farmsafe Australia website Fragar, L. J., Stiller, L. and Thomas, P. 2005. Child Injury on Australian Farms – The facts No 5. 05/047, Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation

Farmsafe Australia website 834 Nov05-Jan06

Child Safety on Farms Checklist Farmsafe Australia website On request mail-out

9800

77 Jan 06

Set of three childcare fact sheets – 1. Report summary 2. Childcare options 3. Establishing a childcare service

On request mail-out 650

Fridge magnets* Promotions and on demand 3500 Get Going booklets Farmsafe Australia website

Farmsafe Australia website Promotions and mail-out by request

3000

266

Guidance note* Farmsafe Australia website Mail-out on request

360

87 Jan 06

Safe Play Area Posters Mail-out request - 1,100 1100 Ripper II primary schools resource Farmsafe Australia website

Mail-out on request

1400 1,961

Safe Play Area Resource Booklets Farmsafe Australia website Promotions and mail-out by request

1020

Safe Play Area Pamphlets Farmsafe Australia website Promotions and mail-out by request

12600

Horse Safety Posters Farmsafe Australia website Promotions and mail-out by request

800

FSIFVC pre-school lesson plans Farmsafe Australia website 390 Childcare Report Farmsafe Australia website 289

* NB: These resources were out of stock during this period and could not be distributed. Additional funding has now enabled reprints

Note: There were 125 individuals and 350 secondary organizations/groups requesting resources directly from the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety for promoting child safety on farms from July 2005 to mid-May 2006. Of these: • 10 were Farmsafe organizations or groups directly involved in CSOF promotion • 52 were health or community health services involved in promotion • 153 schools directly requested resources • 110 were other secondary organizations including:

o County Women’s’ Association – state & regional o Peak farmer bodies (eg. NFF, VFF, NSW Farmers Association, TFGA) o Local Councils o Childcare (eg. Contact Inc. , Mobile services, Family Day care, ABC) o Association of Independent schools o State Agricultural Teachers Associations o Government departments (eg. Ag Depts., State Work Health Authorities, Education, Health, Community Services) o Private sector (eg. Cargill Australia, Australian Primary Superannuation, Dial Before You Dig, Honda MPE, Motor

Traders Ass., Farm Corporates) o Interest groups (eg. ICPA, Women Tasmania) o Police community liaison / community neighbourhood centres o Other safety organizations (eg. Kidsafe , Kidslife Foundation, RLSSA, Kids & Traffic, Water safety in the Bush

Project, Worksafe Kids Foundation

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Safety of Older Farmers

Document reference Distribution (July 2005 – May 2006) Number Downloads from Farmsafe Australia

website Health and Safety of Older Farmers A National Strategy 2006 - 2008

∗ Safety of Older Farmers Reference Group ∗ Draft strategy developed & submitted to DHA.

Program’s strategic approach has been changes – strategy is being re-written.

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Health and Safety of Older Farms The Facts 2006

∗ In final draft

5.2 Benchmarking farm safety performance A significant investment has been made by governments and agricultural industries in the defining the nature and extent of injury and death associated with agricultural activity, setting priorities for programs, developing programs, developing resources and disseminating information. A number of industries and farm business management groups have recognised the need for benchmarks to be established for safety and safety management that will set industry standards that are achievable, and that can signal to individual businesses and to industry groups how well they are performing in comparison with each other and to the industry as a whole. This project has supported the development of a farm health and safety benchmarking program that will be further piloted and developed during 2006-2007, in association with the Farm Health and Safety Joint research venture (Temperley et al, 2006) National benchmarks for industry performance are based on workers compensation claims (Department of Employment and Workplace Relations, 2006), and demonstrate a relatively poor position for agricultural industries in comparison with all industries in Australia.

Figure 5.1: Agriculture, forestry and fishing industry: incidence rate (Claims per 1000 employees) Source: Department of Employment and Workplace Relations, 2006

Farm safety benchmarks have been defined for three levels of the industry. Differing dimensions and measures are proposed for differing levels, although with increased resources it may be possible to use the enterprise level benchmarks more broadly by, eg survey of sectors and state. Table 5.1 illustrates the proposed framework for safety benchmarking, for which benchmarking measures and tools have been defined and are being piloted.

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Table 5.1 Safety benchmarking framework

Level Dimension Measure/s Comment For each business: • Safety climate XXX item questionnaire that

includes: • Personal motivation for safe

behaviour • Positive safety practice • Risk justification • Fatalism • Optimism

Based on papers by: • AM Williamson et al, 1997 • W Williams et al, 2005

• Safety management 14 item questionnaire that includes: • Engagement • Hazard and risk assessment • Plans and actions • Information • Monitoring

Can be self-assessed and also externally validated Based on: • Farmsafe Australia criteria • OHS legal requirements • Rulings of courts under OHS

Acts • Management of major

hazards Based on:

• Injury data Australia-wide • Availability of effective controls

Farm enterprise/ business

• Injury performance • Business injury records • Workers compensation

claims

Grouped enterprise results for collective:

Can be used to establish industry/sector norms

• Culture of safety As for farm enterprise • Safety management As for farm enterprise • Management of major

hazards As for farm enterprise

Local/industry collective

• Injury performance As for farm enterprise For each definable agriculture sector:

Using nationally available workers compensation data

• Workers compensation claims

Rates per 1000 workers

• Compensable fatalities • Fatality rate per 1000 workers

• Case fatality rate

Industry sector

• Duration of absence for compensable injury

• Mean duration of absence from work

For each state: Using: • ABS data by occupation • NCIS data when available

• Fatalities frequency Number of injury deaths by occupation over time

• Fatalities rate Fatality rate per 1000 workforce

State

• Death rate per production volume and value

Measure to be developed

For Australia: • Fatalities frequency As for state Trend over time • Fatalities rate As for state Using international measure of

fatality rate

Country

• Rate of death per production volume and value

As for state

The most significant step forward for health and safety in agriculture that has occurred as a result of this project has been the development and adoption by Farmsafe Australia of Goals and Targets for farm injury prevention. The goals and targets approach requires data to be the basis of intervention programs. The ‘Managing Farm Safety’ program is a prime example of a data driven intervention. ‘Managing Farm Safety’, coupled with commodity group ownership of interventions will create a self-sustaining industry lobby for improved data. The linking and use of relevant and timely data and research findings to the development of ‘Managing Farm Safety’ has been critical. The information flow processes established in Australia have emerged as important mechanisms to ensure that priority

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issues are addressed, and further will serve well to monitor performance of the industry and to identify future issues as they emerge. Farmsafe Australia's Child Safety on Farms Strategy and Machinery Safety Strategy are perfect examples where a specific issue has been identified and a strategy based on the evidence gathered by the National Farm Injury Data Centre has been implemented to reduce injuries. 5.3 Teaching and training A growing number of education and training courses are using publications produced by the National Farm Injury Data Centre and published by RIRDC. These include those provided by the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety:

- University of Sydney Medical students in the Doctor and Community semester. - General Practice Registrar training in workshops hosted by the Australian Centre for

Agricultural Health and Safety - University of New England Grains Course in the Managing Grains Production Safety unit - NSW Public Health Officers rural training unit

Other courses run by the State Farm Safety Training Centres and the Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety routinely use and have drawn heavily on publications

- Managing Farm Safety short course - Rural Economy Short Course for rural health workers. - Holiday Coast Branch of the NSW Avocado Growers Association Inc Annual General Meeting.

An Introduction to Managing Farm Safety. - Cotton Consultants of Australia – Goondiwindi Workshop – Occupational Health and Safety

Risk Management in the Cotton Industry - Agriculture in Australia - Current challenges. This seminar was presented by Bhoopathy

Sankaran in India among students.

5.4 Summary The National Farm Injury Data Project has continued the maintenance of the National Farm Injury Data Collection and its use in providing relevant and timely information to the agriculture industries and the network of agencies that share an interest in improving the health and safety of the people in Australian agriculture with essential information and data. In addition to the formal reports that have been published in print and electronic form, the National Farm Injury Data Centre personnel respond on a routine and daily basis to information requests from the media, from industry and government policy makers, educators and trainers, students and service providers. In addition consideration of the number and nature of those downloading information from the Farmsafe Australia website indicates that the information is being used by a range of other individuals and organisations. Table 5.2 indicates the profile of those who are registered users of resources downloaded from the Farmsafe Australia website. The number of users, who are utilising the material for education and training and for consultancy, would indicate that resources are being used quite widely.

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Table 5.2 Planned use of downloaded resources by registered users of Farmsafe Australia web resources

Planned Use of Material Persons

Registered Total of

Downloads Average No. of Downloads /

Person To use on your farm 161 2434 15.1 Promotion and Extension 28 404 14.4 Policy Development 25 511 20.4 Other, please specify 10 131 13.1 Education and Training 157 2163 13.8 Consultancy 21 459 21.9 Assignment 18 320 17.8 Total 420 6422 15.3

Farmsafe Australia is sponsoring a series of programs and projects that address priority safety hazards and target key at-risk groups in the industry. Strategies are carefully developed and are being implemented using the information generated by this project and the National Farm injury Data Centre.

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References Department of Employment and Workplace Relations. 2006. Compendium of Workers’ Compensation Statistics Australia 2002–03 January 2006 Erlich S, Driscoll T, Harrison J, Frommer M, Leigh J. 1993. Work-related agricultural fatalities in Australia, 1982-1994. Scandinavian Journal of Environmental Health. 19:162-167. Fragar LJ, Franklin RC, Coleman R. 2001. The National Farm Injury Data Collection. Version 1.2. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety with Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation.

Fragar L, Franklin R, Thomas P. 2003. The National Farm Injury Data Collection project – a report for the Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation. Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation Franklin R, Mitchell R, Driscoll T, Fragar L. 2000. Farm-related fatalities in Australia, 1989-1992. ACAHS, NOHSC & RIRDC. Moree Pollock K, Fragar L.2006. Farm-related traumatic fatalities in Australia 2001 to 2004. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety and Rural Industries Research and Development Corporation. Temperley J, Pollock K, Fragar L. 2006. Benchmarking farm health and safety for Australian agriculture – preliminary paper. Australian Centre for Agricultural Health and Safety