Wisconsin Workplace Safety Institute
AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY, TRANSPORTATION, MINING & UTILITIES > INJURY DATA: MINING > NATURE OF INJURY

Nature of injury refers to the type of injury that happened to the injured worker regardless of the cause or body part. The following charts display the top 10 “nature of injury” classifications found in the WC Division’s injury database for 1999, 2000 and 2001. You will note that strain ranks first for type of injury for all three years in mining. Contusions are the second most common injury type.

1999 2000 2001

Complete Data

  • Nature of Injury for compensable claims in the industry shown on the claims management system to be : Mining
  • The column is the year of the date of injury for the compensable claim
1999 2000 2001
ALL OTHER - SPECIFIC INJURIES (NOT OTHERWISE CLASSIFIED) 19 6 10
ALL OTHER CUMULATIVE INJURIES (NOT OTHERWISE CLASSIFIED) 0 0 1
AMPUTATION 1 3 1
ASPHYXIATION 0 1 0
BURN 1 5 1
CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME 4 1 1
CONCUSSION 0 0 0
CONTUSION 14 6 9
CRUSHING 2 4 3
DISLOCATION 0 1 2
FOREIGN BODY 0 1 2
FRACTURE 11 16 10
HEARING LOSS (TRAUMATIC ONLY) 0 0 0
HERNIA 7 3 4
INFECTION 0 0 1
INFLAMMATION 2 2 0
LACERATION 7 5 6
LOSS OF HEARING 2 0 1
MULTIPLE INJURIES INCLUDING BOTH PHYSICAL AND PSYCHOLOGICAL 0 0 1
MULTIPLE INJURIES PHYSICAL ONLY 3 4 6
POISONING-GENERAL (NOT OD OR CUMULATIVE INJURY AND NOC) 1 0 0
PUNCTURE 0 0 2
RUPTURE 1 2 1
SEVERANCE 0 0 1
SPRAIN 8 9 17
STRAIN 72 57 36
VASCULAR LOSS 0 1 0
Total 155 127 116

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