Economic Dimensions of Slip and Fall Injuries
- 1 September 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by ASTM International in Journal of Forensic Sciences
- Vol. 41 (5) , 733-746
- https://doi.org/10.1520/jfs13991j
Abstract
This paper provides an update of annual economic costs imposed by fall injuries. Such costs include medical, rehabilitation, hospital costs, and the costs of morbidity and mortality. These costs are projected to the year 2020, based on changing demographic trends. The market for slip and fall injury prevention is analyzed for the elderly and for those in the workplace—two high risk groups. Questions as to whether this market operates in a socially desirable manner, or whether government intervention is justified on efficiency grounds, are considered. Essential aspects of cost-benefit analysis are reviewed in the context of a prospective evaluation of interventions to prevent slip and fall injuries. The cost-benefit analysis framework is applied to part of the FICSIT experiment (a major intervention to reduce falls among the elderly) and to recent revisions in Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulations directed at reducing workplace falls.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Occupational slips and falls: more than a trivial problemErgonomics, 1995
- Preventing disability and falls in older adults: a population-based randomized trial.American Journal of Public Health, 1994
- A Multifactorial Intervention to Reduce the Risk of Falling among Elderly People Living in the CommunityNew England Journal of Medicine, 1994
- Attempts to Prevent Falls and Injury: A Prospective Community StudyThe Gerontologist, 1992
- The cost and frequency of hospitalization for fall-related injuries in older adults.American Journal of Public Health, 1992
- Claims Reporting and Risk Bearing Moral Hazard in Workers' CompensationJournal of Risk and Insurance, 1991
- Incentive effects of workers' compensation insuranceJournal of Public Economics, 1990
- Risk Factors for Falls among Elderly Persons Living in the CommunityNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- Relative incomes and rates of return for U.S. physiciansJournal of Health Economics, 1985
- Insurance theoretic aspects of workers' compensationPublished by Elsevier ,1977