Construction Site Fatalities
OSHA has identified four categories of hazards that account for more than 50% of all
construction fatalities:
Falls (36.5%)
Struck by object (10.1%)
Electrocutions (8.6%)
Caught-in/between (2.5%)
The assignment is to write a research paper involving one of these four construction hazard
categories. You may narrow your topic down to a more specific type of accident within the major category. For example, under falls, you could focus your research on falls from ladders. When
writing the paper, consider the following questions:
What are the common causative factors?
What does data indicate?
What are the effective proven corrective measures?
The submission must be a minimum of three pages in length, not including the title page or
reference page. A minimum of three scholarly reference sources must be used from the
Online Library. Scholarly sources include:
peer-reviewed journal articles (Click here to access a webinar outlining peer-reviewed articles.)
safety reference books and textbooks, and
other publications by safety professionals and organizations (print or online).
Note that wikipedia.com, answers.com, ask.com, about.com, and similar broad-based Internet
sites are not considered scholarly sources. Use government and professional safety-related
sources, such as osha.gov, niosh.gov, asse.org, nsc.org, and nfpa.org. Contact your professor if
you have any questions about the validity of a reference source.
APA format is required. Be sure to use in-text citations for direct quotes and paraphrased
information.
construction fatalities:
Falls (36.5%)
Struck by object (10.1%)
Electrocutions (8.6%)
Caught-in/between (2.5%)
The assignment is to write a research paper involving one of these four construction hazard
categories. You may narrow your topic down to a more specific type of accident within the major category. For example, under falls, you could focus your research on falls from ladders. When
writing the paper, consider the following questions:
What are the common causative factors?
What does data indicate?
What are the effective proven corrective measures?
The submission must be a minimum of three pages in length, not including the title page or
reference page. A minimum of three scholarly reference sources must be used from the
Online Library. Scholarly sources include:
peer-reviewed journal articles (Click here to access a webinar outlining peer-reviewed articles.)
safety reference books and textbooks, and
other publications by safety professionals and organizations (print or online).
Note that wikipedia.com, answers.com, ask.com, about.com, and similar broad-based Internet
sites are not considered scholarly sources. Use government and professional safety-related
sources, such as osha.gov, niosh.gov, asse.org, nsc.org, and nfpa.org. Contact your professor if
you have any questions about the validity of a reference source.
APA format is required. Be sure to use in-text citations for direct quotes and paraphrased
information.
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