Under-reporting of non-fatal occupational injuries among precarious and non-precarious workers in Sweden

Occup Environ Med. 2022 Jan;79(1):3-9. doi: 10.1136/oemed-2021-107856. Epub 2021 Sep 20.

Abstract

Background: Under-reporting of occupational injuries (OIs) among precariously employed workers in Sweden challenges effective surveillance of OIs and targeted preventive measures.

Objective: To estimate the magnitude of under-reporting of OIs among precarious and non-precarious workers in Sweden in 2013.

Methods: Capture-recapture methods were applied using the national OIs register and records from a labour market insurance company. Employed workers 18-65 resident in Sweden in 2013 were included in the study (n=82 949 OIs). Precarious employment was operationalised using the national labour market register, while injury severity was constructed from the National Patient Register. Under-reporting estimates were computed stratifying by OIs severity and by sociodemographic characteristics, occupations and precarious employment.

Results: Under-reporting of OIs followed a dose-response pattern according to the levels of precariousness (the higher the precarious level, the higher the under-reporting) being for the precarious group (22.6%, 95% CI 21.3% to 23.8%), followed by the borderline precarious (17.6%, 95% CI 17.1% to 18.2%) and lastly the non-precarious (15.0%, 95% CI 14.7% to 15.3%). Under-reporting of OIs, decreased as the injury severity increased and was higher with highest level of precariousness in all groups of severity. We also observed higher under-reporting estimates among all occupations in the precarious and borderline precarious groups as compared with the non-precarious ones.

Conclusions: This is the first register-based study to empirically demonstrate in Sweden that under-reporting of OIs is 50% higher among precariously employed workers. OIs under-reporting may represent unrecognised injuries that especially burden precariously employed workers as financial, health and social consequences shift from the employer to the employee.

Keywords: epidemiology; occupational Health; public health.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Data Collection / methods*
  • Employment / statistics & numerical data*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Insurance Claim Reporting
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Occupational Injuries / statistics & numerical data*
  • Patient Acuity
  • Registries
  • Socioeconomic Factors
  • Sweden / epidemiology