accidents
Labour, fatal injuries to a minimum
Inail: 980 victims in 2010 "
In 2010, work-related fatalities were 980, down 6.9% from 1053 to 2009. The data is supplied Inail that emphasizes as this is the lowest figure since the war. The incidents during the course of employment were a total of 775,000, down 1, 9% over 2009. The decline is more pronounced in industry and in the South that has most suffered from the employment crisis.
industry, where he continued the consistent loss of jobs (-2.9% of employees compared to 2009), accidents were reduced by 6.1% in agriculture, however, a slight increase in employment ( +0.7%), 4.9%. Positive trend regarding the Construction sector, which registered a decline of 7.3% of injuries, without being particularly badly affected in terms of job (-0.1%) Over the previous year. A modest increase (+1.3%) is recorded in the services business, compared with a slightly increasing trend in employment (+0.4%).
Fatal accidents fell rather less in services (-4.1% from 438 to 420) but a significant industry (-8.6%, from 487 to 445) and, in particular, in construction (- 10.5%, from 229 to 205). Very significant is the decrease in percentage of deaths at work in agriculture (-10.2%, from 128 to 115). If the first time since the war, it falls below the threshold of 1,000 deaths a year, the data on victims of work, according to the Inail, "is unacceptable."
Reduction of injuries is widespread throughout the peninsula, but the South, which has suffered most by the crisis in employment (-1.6% vs. -0.4% in the North and a slight improvement in the data center), showed a contraction of 3.2% for accidents in complex, compared with a drop of 1, 8% in Central and 1, 5% of the North. At the center of the drop in fatalities (or 11, 8%, from 221 to 195), is very significant, but the benchmark is 2009, which had scored in the same area, a resurgence of the phenomenon.
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