Total work-related injuries of agriculture and fishery workers employed by New Zealand organisations
By injury type, 2023, number of claims
Injury type | Number of claims |
---|---|
Soft tissue injury | 18,948 |
Laceration,puncture,sting | 5,703 |
Foreign body in orifice/eye | 648 |
Fracture/dislocation | 1,635 |
Burns (burn,scald,corrosive injury) | 246 |
Dental injury | 309 |
Concussion | 210 |
Hernia | 51 |
Amputation | 30 |
Trauma-induced hearing loss | 36 |
Inhalation/ingestion (non-gradual) | 33 |
Gradual onset: Industrial deafness | 606 |
Gradual onset: Pain syndromes | 150 |
Gradual onset: Local inflammation | 216 |
Gradual onset: Compression syndrome | 66 |
Gradual onset: Occupational disease | 42 |
Other and unspecified | 1,650 |
Definitions
Injury type: the primary injury/illness/disease diagnosis, as reported by the treatment provider.
Occupation: the claimant’s occupation at the time of injury.
Territorial authority: where the injury event took place.
Work-related injuries: Injuries covered by ACC as determined by the Accident Compensation Act 2001.
Section 26 of the Accident Compensation Act 2001 defines a 'personal injury', which includes: death, a physical injury or mental injury caused by a physical injury, mental injury caused by criminal act, damage to dentures or prostheses that replace a part of the human body.
Section 25 defines 'accident', which includes:
- a specific event, or a series of events, that involves the application of a force (including gravity) or resistance external to the human body, or involves the sudden movement of the body to avoid such a force or resistance external to the human body
- the inhalation or oral ingestion of any solid, liquid, gas, or foreign object on a specific occasion, which kind of occurrence does not include the inhalation or ingestion of a virus, bacterium, protozoa, or fungi unless that inhalation or ingestion is the result of the criminal act of a person other than the injured person
- a burn, or exposure to radiation or rays of any kind, on a specific occasion, which kind of occurrence does not include a burn or exposure caused by exposure to the elements
- the absorption of any chemical through the skin
- any exposure to the elements, or to extremes of temperature or environment.
The Act 2001 also covers work-related gradual process, disease, or infection.
Gradual process is defined as: 'Changes that result in personal injury and develop slowly and progressively over time, although not necessarily over a definable period', such as:
- effects of exposure to noise or fumes over a few months at a workplace
- physical deterioration resulting from an activity such as keyboarding where there are no specific events involving impact or strain
- progressive degenerative change due to the ageing process.
The second category covers occupational overuse syndromes, a range of conditions caused/contributed to by work factors resulting in localised inflammations, compression syndromes, and pain syndromes.
The Accident Compensation Act 2001, s28(1), defines a 'work-related personal injury' as an injury that happens when the worker is:
- at his or her place of employment
- including when the place moves (eg taxi)
- is a place to or through which the worker moves
- having a rest or meal break at work
- travelling to or from work in transport provided by the employer
- travelling from work in order to receive treatment for a work-related injury.
Data calculation/treatment
Random rounding and suppression: Counts under four have been suppressed for confidentiality. All figures in the tables are randomly rounded using the standard Stats NZ random rounding to base 3 method.
For more information
Limitations of the data
The data in this release is for claims for work-related injuries, and is not a definitive count of all work-related injuries. This is because not all work-related injuries result in a claim to ACC.
Inclusions
This data includes claims made through accredited employers. Under the Accredited Employers Programme, employers agree to act on behalf of ACC for their employees' work-related claims in exchange for downward levy adjustments.
This data includes claims for accidents which occurred while overseas, at sea or on a plane.
Exclusions
- Non-work-related claims are excluded from this data.
- Claims without any costs recorded against them (any claims where the only treatment was provided at a hospital accident and emergency (A&E) department are not included)
- 'Not specified’ claims: A very small number of claims each year are classed as ‘not specified’ for sex, where the values were not recorded.
Data provided by
Dataset name
Work-related Injury Statistics: All claims for work-related injury by territorial authority (provisional) 2023 (age group version)
Webpage:
How to find the data
Data is displayed at URL provided. To create this dataset, click on download and “filtered data in tabular text (CSV)”
Figure.nz filtered for processing purposes: Select totals for Body site of the injury and Ethnic group then 'select all' for Age group, Sex, Occupation, Type of injury, and Territorial authority. Download as a CSV.
Import & extraction details
File as imported: Work-related Injury Statistics: All claims for work-related injury by territorial authority (provisional) 2023 (age group version)
From the dataset Work-related Injury Statistics: All claims for work-related injury by territorial authority (provisional) 2023 (age group version), this data was extracted:
- Rows: 2-50,043
- Column: 19
- Provided: 4,108 data points
This data forms the table Health - ACC claims for work-related injuries by location (excluding New Zealand territorial authorities), occupation, age, sex and injury type 2023.
Dataset originally released on:
September 04, 2024
About this dataset
This dataset is based on information about claims for work-related injury made to the Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC). ACC administers New Zealand’s accident compensation scheme, which provides injury insurance for all New Zealand citizens, residents, and temporary visitors to New Zealand.
A claim is made to ACC when treatment for an injury is first sought from any recognised treatment provider, such as a doctor or a physiotherapist.