PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

New policy brief examines impact of occupational injuries and illnesses among low-wage workers

Workplace injuries and ailments cost nation billions

2012-12-13
(Press-News.org) WASHINGTON, D.C.—Low-wage workers, who make up a large and growing share of the U.S. workforce, are especially vulnerable to financial hits that can result from on-the-job injuries and illnesses, according to a policy brief released today by researchers at the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services (SPHHS). The policy brief, "Mom's off Work 'Cause She Got Hurt: The Economic Impact of Workplace Injuries and Illnesses in the U.S.'s Growing Low-Wage Workforce," was released along with a white paper showing that such workplace injuries and illnesses cost the nation more than $39 billion in 2010.

"Workers earning the lowest wages are the least likely to have paid sick leave, so missing work to recuperate from a work-related injury or illness often means smaller paychecks," says the lead policy brief author Celeste Monforton, a professorial lecturer in environmental and occupational health at SPHHS. "For the millions of Americans living paycheck to paycheck, a few missed shifts can leave families struggling to pay rent and buy groceries."

The policy brief analyzes and contextualizes for policymakers research by health economist J. Paul Leigh of University of California, Davis. At the request of Monforton and her colleague Liz Borkowski, an SPHHS researcher, Leigh returned to data he analyzed for a 2011 study published in the Milbank Quarterly. (See a summary of that study at http://on.natgeo.com/XcfnBi.)

Leigh zeroed in on approximately 31 million people—22% of the U.S. workforce—in 65 occupations for which the median wage is below $11.19 per hour. Janitors, housecleaners, restaurant workers, and others earning that wage full-time will bring home just $22,350 per year—an amount that means a family of four must subsist at the poverty line.

Leigh calculated that in 2010, 596 low-wage workers suffered fatal on-the-job injuries and 12,415 died from occupational ailments such as black lung disease or certain kinds of cancer. Another 1.6 million suffered from non-fatal injuries, and 87,857 developed non-fatal occupational health problems such as asthma. The costs of the 1.73 million injuries and illness amounted to $15 billion for medical care and another $24 billion for lost productivity—the cost when injured or sick workers cannot perform their jobs or daily household duties.

The policy brief explains that workers' compensation insurance either does not apply or fails to cover many of these costs, which can bankrupt families living on the margin. In some cases, employers do not have to offer this kind of insurance to employees. And even workers that do have the coverage often get an unexpected surprise after an on-the-job injury or illness: Insurers generally do not have to provide wage replacement until the worker has lost between three and seven consecutive shifts. And workers at the low end of the wage scale are often discouraged from reporting on-the-job injuries as work-related—which leaves them with no insurance benefits at all, the brief said.

Leigh calculates that insurers cover less than one-fourth of the costs of occupational injuries and illnesses. The rest falls on workers' families, non-workers-compensation health insurers, and taxpayer-funded programs like Medicaid.

"When low-wage workers miss even a few days of pay while recovering from an occupational injury or illness, the effects spread quickly," Borkowski says, noting that fewer than one in five low-wage workers has access to paid sick leave. "They will usually have to cut back on their spending right away, which affects the local economy." And families with children might skip meals or cut back on the heat, money-saving tactics that can put vulnerable family members such as children at risk of developmental delays and poor performance in school.

The brief suggests that policymakers should address this public health problem more forcefully by improving workplace safety and strengthening the safety net to reduce the negative impacts caused by the injuries and illnesses that still occur. "On average, more than 4,000 workers are injured on the job each day," Monforton notes. "If we make workplaces safer, we not only stop losing billions of dollars each year, but we also could reduce the pain and suffering and financial impact on thousands of low-wage, hard-working Americans and their families."

###

Both the policy brief and white paper, which were funded by the Public Welfare Foundation, are available online at http://defendingscience.org/low-wage-workers.

About the George Washington University School of Public Health and Health Services:

Established in July 1997, the School of Public Health and Health Services brought together three longstanding university programs in the schools of medicine, business, and education and is now the only school of public health in the nation's capital. Today, more than 1,100 students from nearly every U.S. state and more than 40 nations pursue undergraduate, graduate, and doctoral-level degrees in public health.
http://sphhs.gwu.edu/ END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Time restrictions on TV advertisements ineffective in reducing youth exposure to alcohol ads

2012-12-13
Efforts to reduce underage exposure to alcohol advertising by implementing time restrictions have not worked, according to new research from the Center on Alcohol Marketing and Youth (CAMY) at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health and the Dutch Institute for Alcohol Policy. The report, published in the Journal of Public Affairs, confirms what Dutch researchers had already learned in that country: time restrictions on alcohol advertising actually increase teen exposure, because companies move the advertising to late night. In 2009, Dutch regulators sought ...

'Curiosity' can be positioned with eclipses

Curiosity can be positioned with eclipses
2012-12-13
Observations from 'Curiosity' when Mar's moon Phobos crosses in front of the sun, like in September, help us to understand exactly where the rover is on the red planet. Researchers at the Complutense University of Madrid (Spain) have developed a method for achieving precisely this. The exact location of Curiosity on the surface of Mars is determined using data transmitted from its antennas as well as the space probes that orbit the red planet. It is very unlikely that these systems would fail but in such an eventuality there would be an alternative for determining the ...

Uncovering a flaw in drug testing for chronic anxiety disorder

2012-12-13
Pre-clinical trials — the stage at which medications or therapies are tested on animals like laboratory mice — is a crucial part of drug development. It's only then that scientists can assess benefits and side effects before a drug is administered to patients. Now, Prof. Ilan Golani of Tel Aviv University's Department of Zoology and Sagol School for Neuroscience and his fellow researchers Prof. Yoav Benjamini of TAU's Department of Statistics and Operations Research and the Sagol School of Neuroscience, and Dr. Ehud Fonio of the Weizmann Institute are questioning the ...

UAlberta medical researchers discover new potential chemotherapy

2012-12-13
Medical researchers at the University of Alberta have discovered that knocking out a particular "partner" gene is the Achilles' heel of some cancers. Cancer causing genes often have a partner in crime, meaning when either of the two genes is active in cancer cells, the tumour grows. The challenge for researchers has been pinpointing the genes’ “lethal partners.” Loss of one of the partners alone isn’t deadly to the cell, but if both are gotten rid of, the cancer cells are destroyed. Faculty of Medicine & Dentistry researcher Michael Weinfeld and his collaborators, ...

New technique for minimally invasive robotic kidney cancer surgery

2012-12-13
DETROIT – Urologists at Henry Ford Hospital have developed a new technique that could make minimally invasive robotic partial nephrectomy procedures the norm, rather than the exception for kidney cancer patients. The technique spares the kidney, eliminates long hospital stays and provides better outcomes by giving the surgeon more time to perform the procedure. Dubbed ICE for Intracorporeal Cooling and Extraction, the technique may allow more kidney cancer patients to avoid conventional open surgery – now used in the vast majority of cases – and its possible complications, ...

Regenstrief study finds that generic drugs often have incorrect safety labeling

Regenstrief study finds that generic drugs often have incorrect safety labeling
2012-12-13
INDIANAPOLIS -- Despite U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulations requiring generic medications to carry identical warnings to those on corresponding brand-name products, a study by Regenstrief Institute researchers has found that more than two-thirds of generic drugs have safety-warning labels that differ from the equivalent brand-name drug. The investigators reviewed 9,105 product labels for over 1,500 drugs available on DailyMed, an online repository of labeling information maintained by the FDA and the National Library of Medicine. Of the 1,040 drugs with more ...

Novel NIST process is a low-cost route to ultrathin platinum films

Novel NIST process is a low-cost route to ultrathin platinum films
2012-12-13
A research group at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has developed a relatively simple, fast and effective method of depositing uniform, ultrathin layers of platinum atoms on a surface.* The new process exploits an unexpected feature of electrodeposition of platinum—if you drive the reaction much more strongly than usual, a new reaction steps in to shuts down the metal deposition process, allowing an unprecedented level of control of the film thickness. Platinum is a widely used industrial catalyst—in automobile catalytic converters and hydrogen ...

Solar power prices to continue falling through 2025, experts say

Solar power prices to continue falling through 2025, experts say
2012-12-13
Prices for solar modules—the part of solar panels that produce electricity—will continue to fall, in line with the long-term trend since 1980, according to a survey of experts by Near Zero, , a nonprofit energy research organization. However, for prices to keep falling for the long term will require continued committment to research, such as on materials used for making solar modules. To get a sense of what future prices for solar power are likely to be, as well as other challenges and bottlenecks that the industry faces, Near Zero conducted a formal, quantitative survey ...

Tool could help uncover bias against female faculty in STEM fields

2012-12-13
A new Northwestern University study of professors in STEM fields at top research universities across the country shows that bias against women is ingrained in the workforce, despite a societal desire to believe workplace equality exists. The quantitative study of the complete publication records of more than 4,200 professors in seven STEM fields (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) confirms that, for some disciplines, female faculty do publish fewer papers than male faculty but not for lack of talent or effort. The researchers found the "productivity ...

Patients with family history of colorectal cancer may be at risk for aggressive form of the disease

Patients with family history of colorectal cancer may be at risk for aggressive form of the disease
2012-12-13
BOSTON--When people with a family history of colorectal cancer develop the disease, their tumors often carry a molecular sign that the cancer could be life-threatening and may require aggressive treatment, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute scientists report in a new study. The finding, reported in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute, draws on data from studies that have tracked the health of tens of thousands of people over several decades. It suggests that colorectal cancer patients could one day have their tumor tissue tested for the molecular sign, and, if necessary, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Uncovering how developmental genes are held in a poised state

Multimillion-pound research project aims to advance production of next-generation sustainable packaging

‘Marine Prosperity Areas’ represent a new hope inconservation

Warning signs may not be effective to deter cannabis use in pregnancy: Study

Efforts to find alien life could be boosted by simple test that gets microbes moving

Study shows some species are susceptible to broad range of viruses

How life's building blocks took shape on early Earth: the limits of membraneless polyester protocell formation

Survey: Many Americans don’t know long-term risks of heart disease with pregnancy

Dusting for stars’ magnetic fingerprints

Relief could be on the way for UTI sufferers dealing with debilitating pain

Testing AI with AI: Ensuring effective AI implementation in clinical practice

Researchers find improved method for treating rare, aggressive, pregnancy-related cancer

Half of the fish you eat comes from the Great Barrier Reef’s marine reserves

McDonald’s thwarts council efforts to stop new branches by claiming it promotes ‘healthier lifestyles’

Is CBD use during pregnancy as safe as people think? New study uncovers potential risks to babies

Drying and rewetting cycles substantially increased soil CO2 release

Hybrid job training improves participation for women in Nepal, study finds

Understanding aging requires more than counting birthdays

AI tool helps find life-saving medicine for rare disease

A new tool could exponentially expand our understanding of bacteria

Apply for the Davie Postdoctoral Fellowship in Artificial Intelligence for Astronomy

New study finds students' attitudes towards computer science impacts final grades

Clot-buster meds & mechanical retrieval equally reduce disability from some strokes

ISHLT relaunches Global IMACS Registry to advance MCS therapy and patient outcomes

Childhood trauma may increase the risk of endometriosis

Black, Hispanic kids less likely to get migraine diagnosis in ER

Global social media engagement trends revealed for election year of 2024

Zoom fatigue is linked to dissatisfaction with one’s facial appearance

Students around the world find ChatGPT useful, but also express concerns

Labor market immigrants moving to Germany are less likely to make their first choice of residence in regions where xenophobic attitudes, measured by right-wing party support and xenophobic violence, a

[Press-News.org] New policy brief examines impact of occupational injuries and illnesses among low-wage workers
Workplace injuries and ailments cost nation billions