Changes for page Resolution II. Resolution concerning the measurement of employment-related income, the 16th ICLS
Last modified by Helena on 2025/07/31 14:13
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... ... @@ -27,12 +27,12 @@ 27 27 * (a) to identify the occupations and economic activities where occupational injuries occur, along with their extent, severity and the way in which they occur, as a basis for planning preventive measures; 28 28 * (b) to set priorities for preventive efforts; 29 29 * (c) to detect changes in the pattern and occurrence of occupational injuries, so as to monitor improvements in safety and reveal any new areas of risk; 30 -* (d) to inform employers, employers’ organizations, workers and workers’ organizations of the risks associated with their (% style="color: rgb(231,76, 60);color: rgb(231, 76, 60)" %)work(%%) and workplaces, so that they can take an active part in their own safety;30 +* (d) to inform employers, employers’ organizations, workers and workers’ organizations of the risks associated with their (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) and workplaces, so that they can take an active part in their own safety; 31 31 * (e) to evaluate the effectiveness of preventive measures; 32 32 * (f) to estimate the consequences of occupational injuries, particularly in terms of days lost or costs; 33 33 * (g) to provide a basis for policy-making aimed at encouraging employers, employers’ organizations, workers and workers’ organizations to introduce accident prevention measures; 34 34 * (h) to assist in developing training material and programmes for accident prevention; 35 -* (i) to provide a basis for identifying possible areas for future research. 35 +* (i) to provide a basis for identifying possible areas for future research. 36 36 37 37 4. The major users of the statistics, including the representative organizations of employers and workers, should be consulted when the concepts, definitions and methodology for the collection, compilation and dissemination of the statistics are designed or revised, with a view to taking into account their needs and obtaining their cooperation. 38 38 ... ... @@ -42,7 +42,7 @@ 42 42 43 43 * (a) //occupational accident//: an unexpected and unplanned occurrence, including acts of violence, arising out of or in connection with (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) which results in one or more workers incurring a personal injury, disease or death; as occupational accidents are to be considered travel, transport or road traffic accidents in which workers are injured and which arise out of or in the course of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%), i.e. while engaged in an economic activity, or at (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%), or carrying on the business of the employer; 44 44 * (b) //commuting accident//: an accident occurring on the habitual route, in either direction, between the place of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) or (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%)-related training and: 45 -** (i) the worker’s principal or secondary residence; 45 +** (i) the worker’s principal or secondary residence; 46 46 ** (ii) the place where the worker usually takes his or her meals; or (iii) the place where he or she usually receives his or her remuneration; which results in death or personal injury; 47 47 ** (iii) //occupational injury//: any personal injury, disease or death resulting from an occupational accident; 48 48 * (c) an occupational injury is therefore distinct from an occupational disease, which is a disease contracted as a result of an exposure over a period of time to risk factors arising from (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) activity; ... ... @@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ 53 53 54 54 6. The various sources of statistics should, where practical, cover all occupational injuries, as defined in paragraph 5, including non-fatal injuries causing an absence from (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of at least one day, excluding the day of the accident, and fatal injuries. Where it is practical and considered relevant to include injuries resulting from commuting accidents, the information relating to them should be compiled and disseminated separately. 55 55 56 -7. Where practical, the statistics should cover all workers regardless of their status in [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] (for example, [[employee>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]], employer and own-account worker). The coverage should include child workers, [[(% class="wikiinternallinkwikiinternallinkwikiinternallinkwikiinternallinkwikiinternallink"%)^^~[1~]^^>>path:#_ftn1]](%%)[[informal sector>>doc:working:Glossary.Informal sector.WebHome]] workers and homeworkers, where they exist.56 +7. Where practical, the statistics should cover all workers regardless of their status in [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] (for example, [[employee>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]], employer and own-account worker). The coverage should include child workers,{{footnote}}This inclusion should not be interpreted as condoning child labour.{{/footnote}} [[informal sector>>doc:working:Glossary.Informal sector.WebHome]] workers and homeworkers, where they exist. 57 57 58 58 8. The statistics should in principle cover the whole country, all branches of economic activity and all sectors of the economy. A case of occupational injury occurring while a worker is outside the country of normal residence should be included in the statistics of the country within whose jurisdiction the accident took place. 59 59 ... ... @@ -62,69 +62,68 @@ 62 62 9. Countries should aim to collect the following types of information regarding cases of occupational injury: 63 63 64 64 * (a) information about the enterprise, establishment or local unit: 65 -** (i) location; 65 +** (i) location; 66 66 ** (ii) economic activity; 67 67 ** (iii) size (number of workers); 68 68 * (b) information about the person injured: 69 -** (i) sex; 69 +** (i) sex; 70 70 ** (ii) age; 71 -** (iii) occupation; (iv) status in employment; 71 +** (iii) occupation; 72 +** (iv) status in employment; 72 72 * (c) information about the injury: 73 -** (i) whether fatal or non-fatal; 74 +** (i) whether fatal or non-fatal; 74 74 ** (ii) type of injury; 75 75 ** (iii) part of body injured; 76 76 * (d) information 78 +** (i) about the accident and its circumstances: type of location of the accident: //such as the usual workplace, another place within the establishment, outside the premises of the establishment//; 79 +** (ii) date and time of the accident; 80 +** (iii) mode of injury: //how the person was injured by a physical contact with an item or object which caused the injury or was psychologically affected by an event; if there are several injuries, the mode of the most serious injury should be recorded//; 81 +** (iv) material agency of injury: //the item, agent, object or product associated with the injury, i.e. the physical tool, object, element, etc. with which the victim came into contact and was injured by; if there are several injuries, the material agency associated with the most serious injury should be recorded.// 77 77 78 -* about the accident and its circumstances: 79 -* type of location of the accident: //such as the usual workplace, another place within the establishment, outside the premises of the establishment//; 80 -* date and time of the accident; 81 -* mode of injury: //how the person was injured by a physical contact with an item or object which caused the injury or was psychologically affected by an event; if there are several injuries, the mode of the most serious injury should be recorded//; 82 -* material agency of injury: //the item, agent, object or product associated with the injury, i.e.// 83 -* //the physical tool, object, element, etc. with which the victim came into contact and was injured by; if there are several injuries, the material agency associated with the most serious injury should be recorded.// 84 - 85 85 10. The programme of statistics can include studies to assess the value of further information as, for example, given below. Countries which thus find this or other information useful could continue to develop their programme of statistics further, especially for more serious cases of occupational injuries and fatalities. 86 86 87 -* (a) information about the injury: 88 -* incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) expressed in calendar days of absence from (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%); (b) information about the accident and its circumstances: 89 -* shift, start time of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of the injured person and hours (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%) in the activity when the accident occurred; 90 -* the total number of workers injured in the accident; 91 -* place of occurrence: //the type of place where the accident occurred, such as a production or construction area, trade or service area, farm, street or highway//; 92 -* (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) process in which the injured person was engaged when the accident occurred: //the main type or kind of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) being carried out by the victim during the period up to the accident (this is a subset of the tasks covered by the occupation of the victim), such as setting up machines, cleaning of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) area, teaching//; 93 -* specific activity of the injured person at the time of the accident: //the activity actually being carried out by the victim when the accident occurred; the duration of the activity may range from very short to long; it may or may not be associated with an item or object, such as feeding the machine, operating transport equipment, carrying loads//; 94 -* material agency associated with the specific activity of the injured person: //the tool, object, element, product, etc., used by the victim in the specific activity when the accident happened (this may not necessarily be implicated in the accident), such as floors, doors, hand tools, mobile cranes;// 95 -* deviation which resulted in the accident: //what occurred in an abnormal way, deviating from the normal way of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) or the normal process, i.e. what went wrong, the event leading to the accident, such as breakage, loss of control of machine, fall of person, aggression; if there are several interlinked or successive events, the last one should be recorded;// 96 -* material agency associated with the deviation: //the tool, object, element, product, etc. linked with what occurred in an abnormal way, such as floors, doors, hand tools, mobile cranes.// 85 +* (a) information about the injury: 86 +** (i) incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) expressed in calendar days of absence from (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%); 87 +* (b) information about the accident and its circumstances: 88 +** (i) shift, start time of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of the injured person and hours (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%) in the activity when the accident occurred; 89 +** (ii) the total number of workers injured in the accident; 90 +** (iii)place of occurrence: //the type of place where the accident occurred, such as a production or construction area, trade or service area, farm, street or highway//; 91 +** (iv) (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) process in which the injured person was engaged when the accident occurred: //the main type or kind of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) being carried out by the victim during the period up to the accident (this is a subset of the tasks covered by the occupation of the victim), such as setting up machines, cleaning of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) area, teaching//; 92 +** (v) specific activity of the injured person at the time of the accident: //the activity actually being carried out by the victim when the accident occurred; the duration of the activity may range from very short to long; it may or may not be associated with an item or object, such as feeding the machine, operating transport equipment, carrying loads//; 93 +** (vi) material agency associated with the specific activity of the injured person: //the tool, object, element, product, etc., used by the victim in the specific activity when the accident happened (this may not necessarily be implicated in the accident), such as floors, doors, hand tools, mobile cranes;// 94 +** (vii) deviation which resulted in the accident: //what occurred in an abnormal way, deviating from the normal way of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) or the normal process, i.e. what went wrong, the event leading to the accident, such as breakage, loss of control of machine, fall of person, aggression; if there are several interlinked or successive events, the last one should be recorded;// 95 +** (viii) material agency associated with the deviation: //the tool, object, element, product, etc. linked with what occurred in an abnormal way, such as floors, doors, hand tools, mobile cranes.// 97 97 98 98 ~11. Where injuries due to commuting accidents are covered, information corresponding to that provided for in paragraph 9 should be collected, as well as the following: 99 99 100 -* place of accident; 101 -* the injured person’s mode of transport; 102 -* the injured person’s transport role; 103 -* the mode of transport of the counterpart (if any). 99 +* (a) place of accident; 100 +* (b) the injured person’s mode of transport; 101 +* (c) the injured person’s transport role; 102 +* (d) the mode of transport of the counterpart (if any). 104 104 105 105 = Measurement = 106 106 107 107 == //Occupational injury// == 108 108 109 -The unit of observation should be the //case of occupational injury//, i.e. the case of one worker incurring an occupational injury as a result of one occupational accident. If a person is injured in more than one occupational accident during the reference period, each case of injury to that person should be counted separately. Recurrent absences due to an injury resulting from a single occupational accident should be treated as the continuation of the same case of occupational injury, not as new cases. Where more than one person is injured in a single accident, each case of occupational injury should be counted separately. 108 +12. The unit of observation should be the //case of occupational injury//, i.e. the case of one worker incurring an occupational injury as a result of one occupational accident. If a person is injured in more than one occupational accident during the reference period, each case of injury to that person should be counted separately. Recurrent absences due to an injury resulting from a single occupational accident should be treated as the continuation of the same case of occupational injury, not as new cases. Where more than one person is injured in a single accident, each case of occupational injury should be counted separately. 110 110 111 111 == //Fatal occupational injury// == 112 112 113 -For measurement purposes, a fatal occupational injury is an occupational injury leading to death within one year of the day of the occupational accident. 112 +13. For measurement purposes, a fatal occupational injury is an occupational injury leading to death within one year of the day of the occupational accident. 114 114 115 115 == //Time lost due to occupational injuries// == 116 116 117 -Time lost should be measured separately for each case of occupational injury leading to temporary incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of a maximum of one year. In order to assess the severity of the injury, time lost should be measured in terms of the number of calendar days during which the injured person is temporarily incapacitated, based on the information available at the time the statistics are compiled. If it is measured in workdays, attempts should be made to assess the total number of calendar days lost. 116 +14. Time lost should be measured separately for each case of occupational injury leading to temporary incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of a maximum of one year. In order to assess the severity of the injury, time lost should be measured in terms of the number of calendar days during which the injured person is temporarily incapacitated, based on the information available at the time the statistics are compiled. If it is measured in workdays, attempts should be made to assess the total number of calendar days lost. 118 118 119 -The time lost should be measured inclusively from the day after the day of the accident, to the day prior to the day of return to (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%). In the case of recurrent absences due to a single case of occupational injury, each period of absence should be measured as above, and the resulting number of days lost for each period summed to arrive at the total for the case of injury. Temporary absences from (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of less than one day for medical treatment should not be included in time lost. 118 +15. The time lost should be measured inclusively from the day after the day of the accident, to the day prior to the day of return to (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%). In the case of recurrent absences due to a single case of occupational injury, each period of absence should be measured as above, and the resulting number of days lost for each period summed to arrive at the total for the case of injury. Temporary absences from (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of less than one day for medical treatment should not be included in time lost. 120 120 121 -The time lost as a result of permanent incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) or fatal occupational injuries may also be estimated. In these cases, the data should be compiled and disseminated separately from data relating to temporary incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%). 120 +16. The time lost as a result of permanent incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) or fatal occupational injuries may also be estimated. In these cases, the data should be compiled and disseminated separately from data relating to temporary incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%). 122 122 123 123 = Reference period and periodicity = 124 124 125 -For a given reference period, the statistics should relate to the number of cases of occupational injury occurring during the period and the total time lost as a result of those cases of injury. Cases of fatal injury should be included in the statistics for the reference period during which the occupational accident occurred. 124 +17. For a given reference period, the statistics should relate to the number of cases of occupational injury occurring during the period and the total time lost as a result of those cases of injury. Cases of fatal injury should be included in the statistics for the reference period during which the occupational accident occurred. 126 126 127 -The statistics should be compiled at least once a year for a reference period of not more than a year. Where seasonal trends may be considered to be important, the statistics may be compiled more frequently, using [[shorter reference periods>>doc:working:Glossary.Short Reference Period.WebHome]], such as a month or a quarter. 126 +18. The statistics should be compiled at least once a year for a reference period of not more than a year. Where seasonal trends may be considered to be important, the statistics may be compiled more frequently, using [[shorter reference periods>>doc:working:Glossary.Short Reference Period.WebHome]], such as a month or a quarter. 128 128 129 129 = Comparative measures = 130 130 ... ... @@ -132,27 +132,39 @@ 132 132 133 133 For each of the measures below, the numerator and the denominator should have the same coverage. For example, if self-[[employed persons>>doc:working:Glossary.Persons in Employment.WebHome]] are covered in the statistics of occupational injuries they should also be covered in the denominator. 134 134 135 -The frequency rate of new cases of occupational injury: Number of new cases of occupational injury during the reference period x 1,000,000134 +* (a) The frequency rate of new cases of occupational injury: 136 136 137 -Total number of hours (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%) by workers in the reference group during the reference period 136 +Number of new cases of occupational injury 137 +during the reference period 138 +~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_ x 1,000,000 139 +Total number of hours worked by workers 140 +in the reference group during the reference period 138 138 139 139 This may be calculated separately for fatal and non-fatal occupational injuries. Ideally, the denominator should be the number of [[hours actually worked>>doc:working:Glossary.Hours Actually Worked.WebHome]] by workers in the reference group. If this is not possible, it may be calculated on the basis of normal hours of (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%), taking into account entitlements to periods of paid absence from (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%), such as paid vacations, paid sick leave and public holidays. 140 140 141 -The incidence rate of new cases of occupational injury: Number of new cases of occupational injury during the reference period x 1,000144 +* (b) The incidence rate of new cases of occupational injury: 142 142 143 -Total number of workers in the reference group during the reference period 146 +Number of new cases of occupational injury 147 +during the reference period 148 +~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~__ x 1,000 144 144 145 -This may be calculated separately for fatal and non-fatal injuries. The number of workers in the reference group should be the average for the reference period. In calculating the average, account should be taken of the hours normally (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%) by those persons. The number of those (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) part time should be converted to full-time equivalents. (c) The severity rate of new cases of occupational injury: 150 +Total number of workers in the reference group 151 +during the reference period 146 146 147 - Number of dayslostas a result of new cases of153 +This may be calculated separately for fatal and non-fatal injuries. The number of workers in the reference group should be the average for the reference period. In calculating the average, account should be taken of the hours normally (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%) by those persons. The number of those (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) part time should be converted to full-time equivalents. 148 148 149 -occupational injury during the reference period x 1,000,000155 +* (c) The severity rate of new cases of occupational injury: 150 150 151 -Total amount of time (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%) by workers in the reference group during the reference period 157 +Number of days lost as a result of new cases of 158 +occupational injury during the reference period 159 +~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~_~__ x 1,000,000 152 152 161 +Total amount of time (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%) by workers in the 162 +reference group during the reference period 163 + 153 153 This should be calculated only for temporary incapacity for (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%). The amount of time (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%) by workers in the reference group should preferably be measured in hours (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)worked(%%). 154 154 155 - (d)Days lost per new case of occupational injury:166 +* (d) Days lost per new case of occupational injury: 156 156 157 157 Median or mean of the number of days lost for each new case of occupational injury during the reference period. 158 158 ... ... @@ -160,50 +160,43 @@ 160 160 161 161 = Dissemination = 162 162 163 -The statistics of occupational injuries that are compiled should be disseminated regularly, at least once a year; preliminary figures should be released no later than one year after the end of each reference period. The disseminated data should include time series, as well as the data for the most recent reference period. Any revisions to figures released in the past should be clearly indicated in newly disseminated data. 174 +20. The statistics of occupational injuries that are compiled should be disseminated regularly, at least once a year; preliminary figures should be released no later than one year after the end of each reference period. The disseminated data should include time series, as well as the data for the most recent reference period. Any revisions to figures released in the past should be clearly indicated in newly disseminated data. 164 164 165 -Detailed descriptions of the sources, concepts, definitions and methodology used in collecting and compiling the statistics on occupational injuries should be: 176 +21. Detailed descriptions of the sources, concepts, definitions and methodology used in collecting and compiling the statistics on occupational injuries should be: 166 166 167 -* produced and updated to reflect significant changes; 168 -* disseminated by the competent body; 169 -* communicated to the ILO. 178 +* (a) produced and updated to reflect significant changes; 179 +* (b) disseminated by the competent body; 180 +* (c) communicated to the ILO. 170 170 171 -In order to promote the comparability of the statistics among countries whose national statistical practices do not conform closely to the international standards, the disseminated data should be accompanied by an explanation of any divergences from those standards. 182 +22. In order to promote the comparability of the statistics among countries whose national statistical practices do not conform closely to the international standards, the disseminated data should be accompanied by an explanation of any divergences from those standards. 172 172 173 -Dissemination may take the form of printed publications, electronic data sets, etc. Where possible, the relevant competent authority should make data available on the Internet, so as to facilitate analysis by users throughout the world. The statistics should be disseminated in such a way that the disclosure of any information relating to an individual statistical unit, such as a person, household, an establishment or an enterprise is not possible, unless prior permission has been obtained from the individual units concerned. 184 +23. Dissemination may take the form of printed publications, electronic data sets, etc. Where possible, the relevant competent authority should make data available on the Internet, so as to facilitate analysis by users throughout the world. The statistics should be disseminated in such a way that the disclosure of any information relating to an individual statistical unit, such as a person, household, an establishment or an enterprise is not possible, unless prior permission has been obtained from the individual units concerned. 174 174 175 -Each year, countries should communicate to the ILO the statistics on occupational injuries (not including individual cases) requested for dissemination by the ILO in its //Yearbook of Labour Statistics// and other forms. 186 +24. Each year, countries should communicate to the ILO the statistics on occupational injuries (not including individual cases) requested for dissemination by the ILO in its //Yearbook of Labour Statistics// and other forms. 176 176 177 177 = Sources of data = 178 178 179 -In compiling statistics of occupational injuries, various sources of information should be used in order to provide as full a picture as possible of the situation at a given point in time and to give an estimate of any under-reporting which may occur. For example, consideration could be given to periodically supplementing the information available from systems for the notification of compensation of occupational injuries by adding brief modules of questions to existing survey questionnaires, such as those used for establishment surveys for [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] and [[wages>>doc:working:Glossary.Earnings.WebHome]], and for [[labour force>>doc:working:Glossary.Labour Force.WebHome]] surveys. In addition, the feasibility of developing new sources should be examined. 190 +25. In compiling statistics of occupational injuries, various sources of information should be used in order to provide as full a picture as possible of the situation at a given point in time and to give an estimate of any under-reporting which may occur. For example, consideration could be given to periodically supplementing the information available from systems for the notification of compensation of occupational injuries by adding brief modules of questions to existing survey questionnaires, such as those used for establishment surveys for [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] and [[wages>>doc:working:Glossary.Earnings.WebHome]], and for [[labour force>>doc:working:Glossary.Labour Force.WebHome]] surveys. In addition, the feasibility of developing new sources should be examined. 180 180 181 -Where data from different sources are used together, attempts should be made to ensure that the concepts, definitions, coverage and classifications used by the different sources are consistent. To this end, it would be useful to establish a coordinating committee at the national level, comprising representatives of government, other producers of statistics on occupational injuries, and employers’ and workers’ organizations. In addition, efforts should be made to harmonize the statistics compiled from different sources and by different bodies. 192 +26. Where data from different sources are used together, attempts should be made to ensure that the concepts, definitions, coverage and classifications used by the different sources are consistent. To this end, it would be useful to establish a coordinating committee at the national level, comprising representatives of government, other producers of statistics on occupational injuries, and employers’ and workers’ organizations. In addition, efforts should be made to harmonize the statistics compiled from different sources and by different bodies. 182 182 183 183 = Classification = 184 184 185 185 27. The data should be classified at least according to major branch of economic activity and as far as possible according to other significant characteristics of persons injured, of enterprises or establishments, of occupational injuries and of occupational accidents for which information is collected in accordance with paragraph 9. Countries should attempt to use classifications that are either comparable with or can be related to the most recent versions of the relevant international classifications, where these exist. Annexes A to F provide the most recent versions of the international classifications below, up to the second level, where available. It may however be desirable, for accident prevention purposes, for countries to classify their data at a greater level of detail. 186 186 187 -//International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities// (ISIC), Revision 3 (1990). 198 +* //International Standard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities// (ISIC), Revision 3 (1990). 199 +* Classification according to [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] size of establishments, as in the// International Recommendations for Industrial Statistics, //Rev. 1 (1983). 200 +* //International Standard Classification of Occupations, ISCO-88.// 201 +* //International Classification of Status in [[Employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]], ICSE-93.// 202 +* Type of injury, from the //International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-10 (//1992). 203 +* Part of body injured, from the// International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-10 (//1992). 188 188 189 -Classification according to [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] size of establishments, as in the// International Recommendations for Industrial Statistics, //Rev. 1 (1983). 190 - 191 -//International Standard Classification of Occupations, ISCO-88.// 192 - 193 -//International Classification of Status in [[Employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]], ICSE-93.// 194 - 195 -Type of injury, from the //International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-10 (//1992). 196 - 197 -Part of body injured, from the// International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-10 (//1992). 198 - 199 199 The ILO should develop and disseminate classifications to replace or supplement the existing schemes adopted by the Tenth ICLS in 1962 for the variables listed below: 200 200 201 -type of location of the accident; 207 +* type of location of the accident; 208 +* mode of injury; 209 +* material agency of injury. 202 202 203 -mode of injury; 204 - 205 -material agency of injury. 206 - 207 207 28. The ILO should develop and disseminate classifications to replace or supplement the existing schemes adopted by the Tenth ICLS in 1962, for variables such as those given below. Furthermore, the ILO should encourage and help countries to develop their own classifications to give further information which they can use for their purposes. For occupational injuries: 208 208 209 209 * place of occurrence; ... ... @@ -217,520 +217,379 @@ 217 217 218 218 = Further action = 219 219 220 -The ILO should prepare a manual to provide technical guidance on the contents of this resolution. This manual should also cover the collection of information on occupational injuries in the [[informal sector>>doc:working:Glossary.Informal sector.WebHome]] and among child workers, the collection of information through household surveys and establishment surveys, the estimation of under-reporting and of costs of occupational injuries, the classifications to be developed as recommended in paragraphs 27 and 28, and how they should be applied, as well as the establishment of a mapping between ICD-10 and the classifications in Annexes E and F. It should also cooperate, as far as possible, with countries in the development of statistics of occupational injuries by providing technical assistance and training. 224 +29. The ILO should prepare a manual to provide technical guidance on the contents of this resolution. This manual should also cover the collection of information on occupational injuries in the [[informal sector>>doc:working:Glossary.Informal sector.WebHome]] and among child workers, the collection of information through household surveys and establishment surveys, the estimation of under-reporting and of costs of occupational injuries, the classifications to be developed as recommended in paragraphs 27 and 28, and how they should be applied, as well as the establishment of a mapping between ICD-10 and the classifications in Annexes E and F. It should also cooperate, as far as possible, with countries in the development of statistics of occupational injuries by providing technical assistance and training. 221 221 222 -Other areas for future (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) by the ILO include: 226 +30. Other areas for future (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) by the ILO include: 223 223 224 -(a) developing standards for statistics of occupational diseases; and (b) making worldwide estimates of the number of fatal occupational injuries. 228 +* (a) developing standards for statistics of occupational diseases; and 229 +* (b) making worldwide estimates of the number of fatal occupational injuries. 225 225 226 -Annex A 231 += Annex A. Classification of economic activities = 227 227 228 -Classification of economicactivities233 +== International S tandard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities, Revision 3{{footnote}}For full details, see United Nations, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 4, Rev. 3 (New York, UN doc. ST/ESA/STAT/SER.M/4/Rev. 3, 1990).{{/footnote}}(% style="font-size:20.1056px" %) (%%)(tabulation categories and divisions) == 229 229 230 -= International S tandard Industrial Classification of All Economic Activities, Revision 3[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^~[2~]^^>>path:#_ftn2]](%%)(tabulation categories and divisions) = 235 +(% style="width:765.957px" %) 236 +|(% style="width:92px" %) **Code**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Designation** 237 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**A**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Agriculture, hunting and forestry** 238 +|(% style="width:92px" %)01|(% style="width:671px" %)Agriculture, hunting and related service activities 239 +|(% style="width:92px" %)02|(% style="width:671px" %)Forestry, logging and related activities 240 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**B**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Fishing** 241 +|(% style="width:92px" %)05|(% style="width:671px" %)Fishing, operation of fish hatcheries and fish farms; service activities incidental to fishing 242 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**C**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Mining and quarrying** 243 +|(% style="width:92px" %)10|(% style="width:671px" %)Mining of coal and lignite; extraction of peat 244 +|(% style="width:92px" %)11|(% style="width:671px" %)Extraction of crude petroleum and natural gas; service activities incidental to oil and gas extraction, excluding surveying 245 +|(% style="width:92px" %)12|(% style="width:671px" %)Mining of uranium and thorium ores 246 +|(% style="width:92px" %)13|(% style="width:671px" %)Mining of metal ores 247 +|(% style="width:92px" %)14|(% style="width:671px" %)Other mining and quarrying 248 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**D**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Manufacturing** 249 +|(% style="width:92px" %)15|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of food products and beverages 250 +|(% style="width:92px" %)16|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of tobacco products 251 +|(% style="width:92px" %)17|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of textiles 252 +|(% style="width:92px" %)18|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of wearing apparel; dressing and dyeing of fur 253 +|(% style="width:92px" %)19|(% style="width:671px" %)Tanning and dressing of leather; manufacture of luggage, handbags, saddlery, harness and footwear 254 +|(% style="width:92px" %)20|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of wood and of products of wood and cork, except furniture; manufacture of articles of straw and plaiting materials 255 +|(% style="width:92px" %)21|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of paper and paper products 256 +|(% style="width:92px" %)22|(% style="width:671px" %)Publishing, printing and reproduction of recorded media 257 +|(% style="width:92px" %)23|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of coke, refined petroleum products and nuclear fuel 258 +|(% style="width:92px" %)24|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of chemicals and chemical products 259 +|(% style="width:92px" %)25|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of rubber and plastics products 260 +|(% style="width:92px" %)26|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of other non-metallic mineral products 261 +|(% style="width:92px" %)27|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of basic metals 262 +|(% style="width:92px" %)28|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment 263 +|(% style="width:92px" %)29|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of machinery and equipment not elsewhere classified 264 +|(% style="width:92px" %)30|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of office, accounting and computing machinery 265 +|(% style="width:92px" %)31|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of electrical machinery and apparatus not elsewhere classified 266 +|(% style="width:92px" %)32|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of radio, television and communications equipment and apparatus 267 +|(% style="width:92px" %)33|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of medical, precision and optical instruments, watches and clocks 268 +|(% style="width:92px" %)34|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of motor vehicles, trailers and semi-trailers 269 +|(% style="width:92px" %)35|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of other transport equipment 270 +|(% style="width:92px" %)36|(% style="width:671px" %)Manufacture of furniture; manufacturing, not elsewhere classified 271 +|(% style="width:92px" %)37|(% style="width:671px" %)Recycling 272 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**E**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Electricity, gas and water supply** 273 +|(% style="width:92px" %)40|(% style="width:671px" %)Electricity, gas, steam and hot-water supply 274 +|(% style="width:92px" %)41|(% style="width:671px" %)Collection, purification and distribution of water 275 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**F**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Construction** 276 +|(% style="width:92px" %)45|(% style="width:671px" %)Construction 277 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**G**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods** 278 +|(% style="width:92px" %)50|(% style="width:671px" %)Sale, maintenance and repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles; retail sale of automotive fuel 279 +|(% style="width:92px" %)51|(% style="width:671px" %)Wholesale trade and commission trade, except of motor vehicles and motorcycles 280 +|(% style="width:92px" %)52|(% style="width:671px" %)Retail trade, except of motor vehicles and motorcycles; repair of personal and household goods 281 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**H**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Hotels and restaurants** 282 +|(% style="width:92px" %)55|(% style="width:671px" %)Hotels and restaurants 283 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**I**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Transport, storage and communications** 284 +|(% style="width:92px" %)60|(% style="width:671px" %)Land transport; transport via pipelines 285 +|(% style="width:92px" %)61|(% style="width:671px" %)Water transport 286 +|(% style="width:92px" %)62|(% style="width:671px" %)Air transport 287 +|(% style="width:92px" %)63|(% style="width:671px" %)Supporting and auxiliary transport activities; activities of travel agencies 288 +|(% style="width:92px" %)64|(% style="width:671px" %)Post and telecommunications 289 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**J**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Financial intermediation** 290 +|(% style="width:92px" %)65|(% style="width:671px" %)Financial intermediation, except insurance and pension funding 291 +|(% style="width:92px" %)66|(% style="width:671px" %)Insurance and pension funding, except compulsory social security 292 +|(% style="width:92px" %)67|(% style="width:671px" %)Activities auxiliary to financial intermediation 293 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**K**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Real estate, renting and business activities** 294 +|(% style="width:92px" %)70|(% style="width:671px" %)Real estate activities 295 +|(% style="width:92px" %)71|(% style="width:671px" %)Renting of machinery and equipment without operator and of personal and household goods 296 +|(% style="width:92px" %)72|(% style="width:671px" %)Computer and related activities 297 +|(% style="width:92px" %)73|(% style="width:671px" %)Research and development 298 +|(% style="width:92px" %)74|(% style="width:671px" %)Other business activities 299 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**L**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Public administration and defence; compulsory social security ** 300 +|(% style="width:92px" %)75|(% style="width:671px" %)Public administration and defence; compulsory social security 301 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**M**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Education** 302 +|(% style="width:92px" %)80|(% style="width:671px" %)Education 303 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**N**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Health and social work** 304 +|(% style="width:92px" %)85|(% style="width:671px" %)Health and social work 305 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**O**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Other community, social and personal service activities** 306 +|(% style="width:92px" %)90|(% style="width:671px" %)Sewage and refuse disposal, sanitation and similar activities 307 +|(% style="width:92px" %)91|(% style="width:671px" %)Activities of membership organizations, not elsewhere classified 308 +|(% style="width:92px" %)92|(% style="width:671px" %)Recreational, cultural and sporting activities 309 +|(% style="width:92px" %)93|(% style="width:671px" %)Other service activities 310 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**P**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Private households with employed persons** 311 +|(% style="width:92px" %)95|(% style="width:671px" %)Private households with employed persons 312 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**Q**|(% style="width:671px" %)**Extra-territorial organizations and bodies** 313 +|(% style="width:92px" %)99|(% style="width:671px" %)Extra-territorial organizations and bodies 231 231 232 - **Code Designation** 233 233 234 - **A Agriculture, hunting and forestry** 235 235 236 -A griculture, huntingandrelatedserviceactivities317 += Annex B. Classification according to size of enterprise, establishment or local unit = 237 237 238 -Forestry, logging and related activities 319 +The following size classes, expressed in terms of the average number of persons engaged in the enterprise, establishment or local unit are based on those recommended for international comparisons in the 1983 World Programme of Industrial Statistics.{{footnote}}For full details, see United Nations: International Recommendations for Industrial Statistics, Statistical 320 +Papers, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1 (New York, UN doc. ST/ESA/STAT/SER.M/48/Rev. 1, 1983).{{/footnote}} For national purposes, ranges should be established according to each country’s circumstances and needs.** ** 239 239 240 - **B Fishing** 241 - 242 - 05 Fishing, operation of fish hatcheries and fish farms; service activities incidental to fishing 243 - 244 - **C Mining and quarrying** 245 - 246 -Mining of coal and lignite; extraction of peat 247 - 248 -Extraction of crude petroleum and natural gas; service activities incidental to oil and gas extraction, excluding surveying 249 - 250 -Mining of uranium and thorium ores 251 - 252 -Mining of metal ores 253 - 254 -Other mining and quarrying 255 - 256 - **D Manufacturing** 257 - 258 -Manufacture of food products and beverages 259 - 260 -Manufacture of tobacco products 261 - 262 -Manufacture of textiles 263 - 264 -Manufacture of wearing apparel; dressing and dyeing of fur 265 - 266 -Tanning and dressing of leather; manufacture of luggage, handbags, saddlery, harness and footwear 267 - 268 -Manufacture of wood and of products of wood and cork, except furniture; manufacture of articles of straw and plaiting materials 269 - 270 -Manufacture of paper and paper products 271 - 272 -Publishing, printing and reproduction of recorded media 273 - 274 -Manufacture of coke, refined petroleum products and nuclear fuel 275 - 276 -Manufacture of chemicals and chemical products 277 - 278 -Manufacture of rubber and plastics products 279 - 280 -Manufacture of other non-metallic mineral products 281 - 282 -Manufacture of basic metals 283 - 284 -Manufacture of fabricated metal products, except machinery and equipment 285 - 286 -Manufacture of machinery and equipment not elsewhere classified 287 - 288 -Manufacture of office, accounting and computing machinery 289 - 290 -Manufacture of electrical machinery and apparatus not elsewhere classified 291 - 292 -Manufacture of radio, television and communications equipment and apparatus 293 - 294 -Manufacture of medical, precision and optical instruments, watches and clocks 295 - 296 -Manufacture of motor vehicles, trailers and semi-trailers 297 - 298 -Manufacture of other transport equipment 299 - 300 -Manufacture of furniture; manufacturing, not elsewhere classified 301 - 302 -Recycling 303 - 304 - **E Electricity, gas and water supply** 305 - 306 -Electricity, gas, steam and hot-water supply 307 - 308 -Collection, purification and distribution of water 309 - 310 -**Construction **45 Construction 311 - 312 -**Wholesale and retail trade; repair of motor vehicles, motorcycles and personal and household goods** 313 - 314 -Sale, maintenance and repair of motor vehicles and motorcycles; retail sale of automotive fuel 315 - 316 -Wholesale trade and commission trade, except of motor vehicles and motorcycles 317 - 318 -Retail trade, except of motor vehicles and motorcycles; repair of personal and household goods 319 - 320 - **H Hotels and restaurants** 321 - 322 - 55 Hotels and restaurants 323 - 324 - **I Transport, storage and communications** 325 - 326 -Land transport; transport via pipelines 327 - 328 -Water transport 329 - 330 -Air transport 331 - 332 -Supporting and auxiliary transport activities; activities of travel agencies 333 - 334 -Post and telecommunications 335 - 336 - **J Financial intermediation** 337 - 338 -Financial intermediation, except insurance and pension funding 339 - 340 -Insurance and pension funding, except compulsory social security 341 - 342 -Activities auxiliary to financial intermediation 343 - 344 - **K Real estate, renting and business activities** 345 - 346 -Real estate activities 347 - 348 -Renting of machinery and equipment without operator and of personal and household goods 349 - 350 -Computer and related activities 351 - 352 -Research and development 353 - 354 -Other business activities 355 - 356 -**Public administration and defence; compulsory social security **75 Public administration and defence; compulsory social security 357 - 358 -**Education **80 Education 359 - 360 -**Health and social (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) **85 Health and social (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work 361 - 362 -**Other community, social and personal service activities** 363 - 364 -Sewage and refuse disposal, sanitation and similar activities 365 - 366 -Activities of membership organizations, not elsewhere classified 367 - 368 -Recreational, cultural and sporting activities 93 Other service activities 369 - 370 -**Private households with [[employed persons>>doc:working:Glossary.Persons in Employment.WebHome]] **95 Private households with [[employed persons>>doc:working:Glossary.Persons in Employment.WebHome]] 371 - 372 -**Extra-territorial organizations and bodies** 373 - 374 - 99 Extra-territorial organizations and bodies 375 - 376 -Annex B 377 - 378 -= Classification according to size of enterprise, establishment or local unit = 379 - 380 -The following size classes, expressed in terms of the average number of persons engaged in the enterprise, establishment or local unit are based on those recommended for international comparisons in the 1983 World Programme of Industrial Statistics.[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^~[3~]^^>>path:#_ftn3]](%%) For national purposes, ranges should be established according to each country’s circumstances and needs. 381 - 382 - **Code Designation** 383 - 322 +(% style="width:469.957px" %) 323 +|(% style="width:104px" %)**Code**|(% style="width:363px" %)**Designation** 324 +|(% style="width:104px" %)A|(% style="width:363px" %)((( 384 384 1 to 4 persons engaged 385 - 326 +))) 327 +|(% style="width:104px" %)B|(% style="width:363px" %)((( 386 386 5 to 9 persons engaged 387 - 329 +))) 330 +|(% style="width:104px" %)C|(% style="width:363px" %)((( 388 388 10 to 19 persons engaged 389 - 332 +))) 333 +|(% style="width:104px" %)D|(% style="width:363px" %)((( 390 390 20 to 49 persons engaged 391 - 335 +))) 336 +|(% style="width:104px" %)E|(% style="width:363px" %)((( 392 392 50 to 99 persons engaged 393 - 338 +))) 339 +|(% style="width:104px" %)F|(% style="width:363px" %)((( 394 394 100 to 149 persons engaged 395 - 341 +))) 342 +|(% style="width:104px" %)G|(% style="width:363px" %)((( 396 396 150 to 199 persons engaged 397 - 344 +))) 345 +|(% style="width:104px" %)H|(% style="width:363px" %)((( 398 398 200 to 249 persons engaged 347 +))) 348 +|(% style="width:104px" %)I|(% style="width:363px" %)250 to 499 persons engaged 349 +|(% style="width:104px" %)J|(% style="width:363px" %)500 to 999 persons engaged 350 +|(% style="width:104px" %)K|(% style="width:363px" %)1,000 or more persons engaged 351 +|(% style="width:104px" %)Z|(% style="width:363px" %)Size unknown 399 399 400 - 250to499personsengaged353 += Annex C. Classification of occupations = 401 401 402 - 500to999persons engaged355 +== International S tandard Classification of Occupations, IS CO-88{{footnote}}For full details, see ILO International Standard Classification of Occupations: ISCO-88 (Geneva, 1990).{{/footnote}} (major groups and sub-major groups) == 403 403 404 -1,000 or more persons engaged 357 +(% style="width:626.957px" %) 358 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**Code**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Designation** 359 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**1**|(% style="width:513px" %) **Legislators, senior officials and managers** 360 +|(% style="width:111px" %)11|(% style="width:513px" %)Legislators and senior officials 361 +|(% style="width:111px" %)12|(% style="width:513px" %)((( 362 +(% id="cke_bm_503200S" style="display:none" %) (%%)General managers{{footnote}}This sub-major group is intended to include persons who manage enterprises on their own behalf, or on behalf of the proprietor, with some non-managerial help and assistance of no more than one other manager.{{/footnote}} 363 +))) 364 +|(% style="width:111px" %)13|(% style="width:513px" %)((( 365 +(% id="cke_bm_492006S" style="display:none" %) (%%)Corporate managers{{footnote}}This sub-major group is intended to include persons who — as directors, chief executives or department managers — manage enterprises requiring a total of three or more managers.{{/footnote}} 366 +))) 367 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**2**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Professionals** 368 +|(% style="width:111px" %)21|(% style="width:513px" %)Physical, mathematical and engineering science professionals 369 +|(% style="width:111px" %)22|(% style="width:513px" %)Life science and health associate professionals 370 +|(% style="width:111px" %)23|(% style="width:513px" %)Teaching associate professionals 371 +|(% style="width:111px" %)24|(% style="width:513px" %)Other associate professionals 372 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**3**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Technicians and associate professionals** 373 +|(% style="width:111px" %)31|(% style="width:513px" %)Physical and engineering science associate professionals 374 +|(% style="width:111px" %)32|(% style="width:513px" %)Life science and health associate professionals 375 +|(% style="width:111px" %)33|(% style="width:513px" %)Teaching associate professionals 376 +|(% style="width:111px" %)34|(% style="width:513px" %)Other associate professionals 377 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**4**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Clerks** 378 +|(% style="width:111px" %)41|(% style="width:513px" %)Office clerks 379 +|(% style="width:111px" %)42|(% style="width:513px" %)Customer services clerks 380 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**5**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Service workers and shop and market sales workers** 381 +|(% style="width:111px" %)51|(% style="width:513px" %)Personal and protective services workers 382 +|(% style="width:111px" %)52|(% style="width:513px" %)Models, salespersons and demonstrators 383 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**6**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Skilled agricultural and fishery workers** 384 +|(% style="width:111px" %)61|(% style="width:513px" %)Market-oriented skilled agricultural and fishery workers 385 +|(% style="width:111px" %)62|(% style="width:513px" %)Subsistence agricultural and fishery workers 386 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**7**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Craft and related trades workers** 387 +|(% style="width:111px" %)71|(% style="width:513px" %)Extraction and building trades workers 388 +|(% style="width:111px" %)72|(% style="width:513px" %)Metal, machinery and related trades workers 389 +|(% style="width:111px" %)73|(% style="width:513px" %)Precision, handicraft, printing and related trades workers 390 +|(% style="width:111px" %)74|(% style="width:513px" %)Other craft and related trades workers 391 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**8**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Plant and machine operators and assemblers** 392 +|(% style="width:111px" %)81|(% style="width:513px" %)Stationary plant and related operators 393 +|(% style="width:111px" %)82|(% style="width:513px" %)Machinery operators and assemblers 394 +|(% style="width:111px" %)83|(% style="width:513px" %)Drivers and mobile plant operators 395 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**9**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Elementary occupations** 396 +|(% style="width:111px" %)91|(% style="width:513px" %)Sales and services elementary occupations 397 +|(% style="width:111px" %)92|(% style="width:513px" %)Agricultural, fishery and related labourers 398 +|(% style="width:111px" %)93|(% style="width:513px" %)Labourers in mining, construction, manufacturing and transport 399 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**0**|(% style="width:513px" %)**Armed forces** 400 +|(% style="width:111px" %)01|(% style="width:513px" %)Armed forces 405 405 406 - Z Size unknown402 += Annex D. Classification according to status in employment = 407 407 408 - AnnexC404 +== International Classification of Status in Employment, ICS E-93{{footnote}}For full details, see ILO, Report of the Conference, Fifteenth International Conference of Labour Statisticians (Geneva, 19-28 Jan. 1993), (Geneva, doc. ICLS/15/D.6(Rev. 1), 1993).{{/footnote}} == 409 409 410 -Classification of occupations 411 - 412 -International S tandard Classification of Occupations, IS CO-88[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^~[4~]^^>>path:#_ftn4]](%%) (major groups and sub-major groups) 413 - 414 - **Code Designation** 415 - 416 - **1 Legislators, senior officials and managers** 417 - 418 -Legislators and senior officials 419 - 420 -Corporate managers[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^~[5~]^^>>path:#_ftn5]] 421 - 422 -General managers[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^~[6~]^^>>path:#_ftn6]] 423 - 424 - **2 Professionals** 425 - 426 -Physical, mathematical and engineering science professionals 427 - 428 -Life science and health professionals 429 - 430 -Teaching professionals 431 - 432 -Other professionals 433 - 434 - **3 Technicians and associate professionals** 435 - 436 -Physical and engineering science associate professionals 437 - 438 -Life science and health associate professionals 439 - 440 -Teaching associate professionals 34 Other associate professionals 441 - 442 - **4 Clerks** 443 - 444 -Office clerks 445 - 446 -Customer services clerks 447 - 448 - **5 Service workers and shop and market sales workers** 449 - 450 -Personal and protective services workers 451 - 452 -Models, salespersons and demonstrators 453 - 454 - **6 Skilled agricultural and fishery workers** 455 - 456 -Market-oriented skilled agricultural and fishery workers 457 - 458 -Subsistence agricultural and fishery workers 459 - 460 - **7 Craft and related trades workers** 461 - 462 -Extraction and building trades workers 463 - 464 -Metal, machinery and related trades workers 465 - 466 -Precision, handicraft, printing and related trades workers 467 - 468 -Other craft and related trades workers 469 - 470 - **8 Plant and machine operators and assemblers** 471 - 472 -Stationary plant and related operators 473 - 474 -Machinery operators and assemblers 475 - 476 -Drivers and mobile plant operators 477 - 478 - **9 Elementary occupations** 479 - 480 -Sales and services elementary occupations 481 - 482 -Agricultural, fishery and related labourers 483 - 484 -Labourers in mining, construction, manufacturing and transport 485 - 486 - **0 Armed forces** 487 - 488 - 01 Armed forces 489 - 490 -Annex D 491 - 492 -Classification according to status in [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] 493 - 494 -= International Classification of Status in Employment, ICS E-93[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^~[7~]^^>>path:#_ftn7]](%%) = 495 - 496 496 The following text is an extract from the resolution concerning the International Classification of Status in [[Employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] (ICSE) adopted by the Fifteenth International Conference of Labour Statisticians (Geneva, 1993): 497 497 498 -**II. The ICSE-93 groups **[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^~[8~]^^>>path:#_ftn8]] 408 +|**II**|((( 409 +(% id="cke_bm_797480S" style="display:none" %)** **(%%)**The ICSE-93 groups{{footnote}}For linguistic convenience the group titles and definitions have been formulated in a way which corresponds to the situation where each person holds only one job during the reference period. Rules for classifying persons with two or more jobs are given in section V.{{/footnote}}** 410 +))) 411 +|4.|The ICSE-93 consists of the following groups, which are defined in section III: 412 +|1.|employees; 413 +| |among whom countries may need and be able to distinguish “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] with stable contracts” (including “regular [[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]”); 414 +|2.|employees; 415 +|3.|own-account workers; 416 +|4.|members of producers’ cooperatives; 417 +|5.|contributing family workers; 418 +|6.|workers not classifiable by status. 419 +|**III**|**Group definitions** 420 +|5.|The groups in the ICSE-93 are defined with reference to the distinction between “paid [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]]” [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] on the one side and “selfemployment” [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] on the other. Groups are defined with reference to one or more aspects of the economic risk and/or the type of authority which the explicit or implicit [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] contract gives the incumbents or to which it subjects them. 421 +|6.|Paid [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] are those [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] where the incumbents hold explicit (written or oral) or implicit [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] contracts which give them a basic remuneration which is not directly dependent upon the revenue of the unit for which they (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) (this unit can be a corporation, a non-profit institution, a government unit or a household). Some or all of the tools, capital equipment, information systems and/or premises used by the incumbents may be owned by others, and the incumbents may (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) under direct supervision of, or according to strict guidelines set by the owner(s) or persons in the owner’s [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]]. (Persons in “paid [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]]” are typically remunerated by [[wages>>doc:working:Glossary.Earnings.WebHome]] and [[salaries>>doc:working:Glossary.Earnings.WebHome]], but may be paid by commission from sales, by piece-rates, bonuses or in-kind payments such as food, housing or training.) 422 +|7.|Self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] are those [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] where the remuneration is directly dependent upon the profits (or the potential for profits) derived from the goods and services produced (where own consumption is considered to be part of profits). The incumbents make the operational decisions affecting the enterprise, or delegate such decisions while retaining responsibility for the welfare of the enterprise. (In this context, “enterprise” includes one-person operations.) 423 +|8.|1. [[Employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] are all those workers who hold the type of [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] defined as “paid [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 6). [[Employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] with stable contracts are those “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]” who have had, and continue to have, an explicit (written or oral) or implicit contract of [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]], or a succession of such contracts, with the same employer on a continuous basis. “On a continuous basis” implies a period of [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] which is longer than a specified minimum determined according to national circumstances. (If interruptions are allowed in this minimum period, their maximum duration should also be determined according to national circumstances.) Regular [[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] are those “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] with stable contracts” for whom the [[employing>>doc:working:Glossary.Persons in Employment.WebHome]] organization is responsible for payment of relevant taxes and social security contributions and/or where the contractual relationship is subject to national labour legislation. 424 +|9.|2. Employers are those workers who, (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) on their own account or with one or a few partners, hold the type of [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] defined as a “self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 7) and, in this capacity, on a continuous basis (including the reference period) have engaged one or more persons to (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) for them in their business as “[[employee>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]](s)” (cf. paragraph 8). The meaning of “engage on continuous basis” is to be determined by national circumstances, in a way which is consistent with the definition of “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] with stable contracts” (cf. paragraph 8). (The partners may or may not be members of the same family or household.) 425 +|10.|3. Own-account workers are those workers who, (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) on their own account or with one or more partners, hold the type of [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] defined as a “self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 7), and have not engaged on a continuous basis any “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 8) to (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) for them during the reference period. It should be noted that, during the reference period, the members of this group may have engaged “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]”, provided that this is on a non-continuous basis. (The partners may or may not be members of the same family or household.) 426 +|11.|4. Members of producers’ cooperatives are workers who hold “self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]]” [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] (cf. paragraph 7) in a cooperative producing goods and services, in which each member takes part on an equal footing with other members in determining the organization of production, sales and/or other (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of the establishment, the investments and the distribution of the proceeds of the establishment amongst their members. (It should be noted that “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 8) of producers’ cooperatives are not to be classified to this group.) 427 +|12.|5. Contributing family workers are those workers who hold “self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]]” [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] (cf. paragraph 7) in a market-oriented establishment operated by a related person living in the same household, who cannot be regarded as partners, because their degree of commitment to the operation of the establishment, in terms of [[working time>>doc:working:Glossary.Working Time.WebHome]] or other factors to be determined by national circumstances, is not at a level comparable to that of the head of the establishment. (Where it is customary for young persons, in particular, to (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) without pay in an economic enterprise operated by a related person who does not live in the same household, the requirement of “living in the same household” may be eliminated.) 428 +|13.|6. Workers not classifiable by status include those for whom insufficient relevant information is available, and/or who cannot be included in any of the preceding categories. 499 499 500 - 4. TheICSE-93consistsofthe followinggroups,which aredefinedinsection III:430 += Annex E. Classification according to type of injury = 501 501 502 -* [[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]; 503 -* among whom countries may need and be able to distinguish “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] with stable contracts” (including “regular [[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]”); 504 -* employers; 505 -* own-account workers; 506 -* members of producers’ cooperatives; 507 -* contributing family workers; 6. workers not classifiable by status. 432 +The following classification is based on the //International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems//, ICD-10.{{footnote}}For full details, see WHO International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-10 (Geneva, 1992).{{/footnote}} The most serious injury or disease sustained or suffered by the victim should be classified. Where several injuries have been incurred, the most serious one should be classified. The coding given below does not correspond to that given in ICD-10, due to differences in structure. 508 508 509 -**III. Group definitions** 510 - 511 -The groups in the ICSE-93 are defined with reference to the distinction between “paid [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]]” [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] on the one side and “selfemployment” [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] on the other. Groups are defined with reference to one or more aspects of the economic risk and/or the type of authority which the explicit or implicit [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] contract gives the incumbents or to which it subjects them. 512 - 513 -Paid [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] are those [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] where the incumbents hold explicit (written or oral) or implicit [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] contracts which give them a basic remuneration which is not directly dependent upon the revenue of the unit for which they (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) (this unit can be a corporation, a non-profit institution, a government unit or a household). Some or all of the tools, capital equipment, information systems and/or premises used by the incumbents may be owned by others, and the incumbents may (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) under direct supervision of, or according to strict guidelines set by the owner(s) or persons in the owner’s [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]]. (Persons in “paid [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]]” are typically remunerated by [[wages>>doc:working:Glossary.Earnings.WebHome]] and [[salaries>>doc:working:Glossary.Earnings.WebHome]], but may be paid by commission from sales, by piece-rates, bonuses or in-kind payments such as food, housing or training.) 514 - 515 -Self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] are those [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] where the remuneration is directly dependent upon the profits (or the potential for profits) derived from the goods and services produced (where own consumption is considered to be part of profits). The incumbents make the operational decisions affecting the enterprise, or delegate such decisions while retaining responsibility for the welfare of the enterprise. (In this context, “enterprise” includes one-person operations.) 516 - 517 -~1. [[Employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] are all those workers who hold the type of [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] defined as “paid [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 6). [[Employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] with stable contracts are those “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]” who have had, and continue to have, an explicit (written or oral) or implicit contract of [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]], or a succession of such contracts, with the same employer on a continuous basis. “On a continuous basis” implies a period of [[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] which is longer than a specified minimum determined according to national circumstances. (If interruptions are allowed in this minimum period, their maximum duration should also be determined according to national circumstances.) Regular [[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] are those “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] with stable contracts” for whom the [[employing>>doc:working:Glossary.Persons in Employment.WebHome]] organization is responsible for payment of relevant taxes and social security contributions and/or where the contractual relationship is subject to national labour legislation. 518 - 519 -2. Employers are those workers who, (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) on their own account or with one or a few partners, hold the type of [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] defined as a “self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 7) and, in this capacity, on a continuous basis (including the reference period) have engaged one or more persons to (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) for them in their business as “[[employee>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]](s)” (cf. paragraph 8). The meaning of “engage on continuous basis” is to be determined by national circumstances, in a way which is consistent with the definition of “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]] with stable contracts” (cf. paragraph 8). (The partners may or may not be members of the same family or household.) 520 - 521 -3. Own-account workers are those workers who, (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)working(%%) on their own account or with one or more partners, hold the type of [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] defined as a “self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]] [[job>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 7), and have not engaged on a continuous basis any “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 8) to (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) for them during the reference period. It should be noted that, during the reference period, the members of this group may have engaged “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]”, provided that this is on a non-continuous basis. (The partners may or may not be members of the same family or household.) 522 - 523 -4. Members of producers’ cooperatives are workers who hold “self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]]” [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] (cf. paragraph 7) in a cooperative producing goods and services, in which each member takes part on an equal footing with other members in determining the organization of production, sales and/or other (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) of the establishment, the investments and the distribution of the proceeds of the establishment amongst their members. (It should be noted that “[[employees>>doc:working:Glossary.Employees.WebHome]]” (cf. paragraph 8) of producers’ cooperatives are not to be classified to this group.) 524 - 525 -5. Contributing family workers are those workers who hold “self-[[employment>>doc:working:Glossary.Employment Work.WebHome]]” [[jobs>>doc:working:Glossary.Work Activity.WebHome]] (cf. paragraph 7) in a market-oriented establishment operated by a related person living in the same household, who cannot be regarded as partners, because their degree of commitment to the operation of the establishment, in terms of [[working time>>doc:working:Glossary.Working Time.WebHome]] or other factors to be determined by national circumstances, is not at a level comparable to that of the head of the establishment. (Where it is customary for young persons, in particular, to (% style="color:#e74c3c" %)work(%%) without pay in an economic enterprise operated by a related person who does not live in the same household, the requirement of “living in the same household” may be eliminated.) 526 - 527 -6. Workers not classifiable by status include those for whom insufficient relevant information is available, and/or who cannot be included in any of the preceding categories. 528 - 529 -= Annex E = 530 - 531 -== Classification according to type of injury == 532 - 533 -The following classification is based on the //International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems//, ICD-10.[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^~[9~]^^>>path:#_ftn9]](%%) The most serious injury or disease sustained or suffered by the victim should be classified. Where several injuries have been incurred, the most serious one should be classified. The coding given below does not correspond to that given in ICD-10, due to differences in structure. 534 - 535 - **Code Designation** 536 - 537 -**Superficial injuries and open wounds** 538 - 539 -Superficial injuries (including abrasions, blisters (non-thermal), contusions, puncture wounds (without major open wounds), insect bites (non-venomous) 540 - 541 -Open wounds (including cuts, lacerations, puncture wounds (with penetrating foreign body), animal bites) 542 - 543 -**Fractures** 544 - 545 -Closed fractures 546 - 547 -Open fractures 548 - 549 -Other fractures (dislocated, displaced) 550 - 551 -**Dislocations, sprains and strains** 552 - 434 +(% style="width:815.957px" %) 435 +|(% style="width:111px" %) **Code**|(% style="width:702px" %)**Designation** 436 +|(% style="width:111px" %)1|(% style="width:702px" %)**Superficial injuries and open wounds** 437 +|(% style="width:111px" %)1.01|(% style="width:702px" %)Superficial injuries (including abrasions, blisters (non-thermal), contusions, puncture wounds (without major open wounds), insect bites (non-venomous) 438 +|(% style="width:111px" %)1.02|(% style="width:702px" %)Open wounds (including cuts, lacerations, puncture wounds (with penetrating foreign body), animal bites) 439 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**2**|(% style="width:702px" %)**Fractures** 440 +|(% style="width:111px" %)2.01|(% style="width:702px" %)Closed fractures 441 +|(% style="width:111px" %)2.02|(% style="width:702px" %)Open fractures 442 +|(% style="width:111px" %)2.03|(% style="width:702px" %)Other fractures (dislocated, displaced) 443 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**3**|(% style="width:702px" %)**Dislocations, sprains and strains** 553 553 (Including avulsions, lacerations, sprains, strains, traumatic haemarthroses, ruptures, subluxations and tears of joints and ligaments) 554 - 555 -Dislocations and subluxations 556 - 557 -Sprains and strains 558 - 559 -**Traumatic amputations** 560 - 445 +|(% style="width:111px" %)3.01|(% style="width:702px" %)Dislocations and subluxations 446 +|(% style="width:111px" %)3.02|(% style="width:702px" %)Sprains and strains 447 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**4**|(% style="width:702px" %)**Traumatic amputations** 561 561 (Including traumatic enucleation of the eye) 562 - 449 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**5**|(% style="width:702px" %)((( 563 563 **Concussion and internal injuries** 564 - 565 565 (Including blast injuries, bruises, concussion, crushing, lacerations, traumatic haematoma, punctures, ruptures and tears of internal organs) 452 +))) 453 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**6**|(% style="width:702px" %)**Burns, corrosions, scalds and frostbite** 454 +|(% style="width:111px" %)6.01|(% style="width:702px" %)Burns (thermal) (including from electrical heating appliances, electricity, flames, friction, hot air and hot gases, hot objects, lightning, radiation) 455 +|(% style="width:111px" %)6.02|(% style="width:702px" %)Chemical burns (corrosions) 456 +|(% style="width:111px" %)6.03|(% style="width:702px" %)Scalds 457 +|(% style="width:111px" %)6.04|(% style="width:702px" %)Frostbite 458 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**7**|(% style="width:702px" %)**Acute poisonings and infections** 459 +|(% style="width:111px" %)7.01|(% style="width:702px" %)Acute poisonings (acute effects of the injection, ingestion, absorption or inhalation of toxic, corrosive or caustic substances; including toxic effects of contact with venomous animals) 460 +|(% style="width:111px" %)7.02|(% style="width:702px" %)Infections (including intestinal infectious diseases, specified zoonoses, protozoal diseases, viral diseases, mycoses) 461 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**8**|(% style="width:702px" %)**Other specified types of injury** 462 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.01|(% style="width:702px" %)Effects of radiation 463 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.02|(% style="width:702px" %)Effects of heat and light 464 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.03|(% style="width:702px" %)Hypothermia 465 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.04|(% style="width:702px" %)Effects of air pressure and water pressure 466 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.05|(% style="width:702px" %)Asphyxiation 467 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.06|(% style="width:702px" %)Effects of maltreatment (including physical abuse, psychological abuse) 468 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.07|(% style="width:702px" %)Effects of lightning (shock from lightning, struck by lightning not otherwise specified) 469 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.08|(% style="width:702px" %)Drowning and non-fatal submersion 470 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.09|(% style="width:702px" %)Effects of noise and vibration (including acute hearing loss) 471 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.10|(% style="width:702px" %)Effects of electric current (electrocution, shock from electric current) 472 +|(% style="width:111px" %)8.19|(% style="width:702px" %)Other specified injuries 473 +|(% style="width:111px" %)**10**|(% style="width:702px" %)**Type of injury, unspecified** 566 566 567 - **Burns,corrosions,scalds andfrostbite**475 += Annex F. Classification according to the part of body injured = 568 568 569 -Burns (thermal) (including from electrical heating appliances, electricity, flames, friction, hot air and hot gases, hot objects, lightning, radiation) 570 - 571 -Chemical burns (corrosions) 572 - 573 -Scalds 574 - 575 -Frostbite 576 - 577 -**Acute poisonings and infections** 578 - 579 -Acute poisonings (acute effects of the injection, ingestion, absorption or inhalation of toxic, corrosive or caustic substances; including toxic effects of contact with venomous animals) 580 - 581 -Infections (including intestinal infectious diseases, specified zoonoses, protozoal diseases, viral diseases, mycoses) 582 - 583 -**Other specified types of injury** 584 - 585 -Effects of radiation 586 - 587 -Effects of heat and light 588 - 589 -Hypothermia 590 - 591 -Effects of air pressure and water pressure 592 - 593 -Asphyxiation 594 - 595 -Effects of maltreatment (including physical abuse, psychological abuse) 596 - 597 -Effects of lightning (shock from lightning, struck by lightning not otherwise specified) 598 - 599 -Drowning and non-fatal submersion 600 - 601 -Effects of noise and vibration (including acute hearing loss) 602 - 603 -Effects of electric current (electrocution, shock from electric current) 604 - 605 - 8.19 Other specified injuries 606 - 607 - **10 Type of injury, unspecified** 608 - 609 -Annex F 610 - 611 -== Classification according to the part of body injured == 612 - 613 613 The following classification is based on the //International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related// 614 614 615 -//Health Problems//, ICD-10. [[(% class="wikiinternallinkwikiinternallinkwikiinternallinkwikiinternallinkwikiinternallink"%)^^~[10~]^^>>path:#_ftn10]](%%)The groups relating to multiple locations should be used only to classify cases where the victim suffers from several injuries to different parts of the body and no injury is obviously more severe than the others. In order to designate the side of the body injured, a further digit may be added to the code for the part of body injured, where relevant, as follows:479 +//Health Problems//, ICD-10.{{footnote}}For full details, see WHO International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-10 (Geneva, 1992).{{/footnote}} The groups relating to multiple locations should be used only to classify cases where the victim suffers from several injuries to different parts of the body and no injury is obviously more severe than the others. In order to designate the side of the body injured, a further digit may be added to the code for the part of body injured, where relevant, as follows: 616 616 617 - 1:right side481 +1: right side 618 618 619 - 2:left side483 +2: left side 620 620 621 - 3:both sides485 +3: both sides 622 622 623 623 The coding given below does not correspond to that given in the ICD-10, due to differences in structure. 624 624 625 - **Code Designation**626 - 627 -**Head** 628 - 489 +(% style="width:723.957px" %) 490 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**Code**|(% style="width:614px" %)**Designation** 491 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**1**|(% style="width:614px" %)**Head** 492 +|(% style="width:107px" %)1.1|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 629 629 Scalp, skull, brain and cranial nerves and vessels 630 - 494 +))) 495 +|(% style="width:107px" %)1.2|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 631 631 Ear(s) 632 - 497 +))) 498 +|(% style="width:107px" %)1.3|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 633 633 Eye(s) 634 - 500 +))) 501 +|(% style="width:107px" %)1.4|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 635 635 Tooth, teeth 636 - 503 +))) 504 +|(% style="width:107px" %)1.5|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 637 637 Other specified parts of facial area 638 - 506 +))) 507 +|(% style="width:107px" %)1.7|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 639 639 Head, multiple sites affected 640 - 641 -Head, other specified parts not elsewhere classified 1.9 Head, unspecified 642 - 643 -**Neck, including spine and vertebrae in the neck **2.1 Spine and vertebrae 644 - 645 -2.8 Neck, other specified parts not elsewhere classified 2.9 Neck, unspecified 646 - 647 -**Back, including spine and vertebrae in the back** 648 - 649 -Spine and vertebrae 650 - 651 - 509 +))) 510 +|(% style="width:107px" %)1.8|(% style="width:614px" %)Head, other specified parts not elsewhere classified 511 +|(% style="width:107px" %)1.9|(% style="width:614px" %)Head, unspecified 512 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**2**|(% style="width:614px" %)**Neck, including spine and vertebrae in the neck ** 513 +|(% style="width:107px" %)2.1|(% style="width:614px" %)Spine and vertebrae 514 +|(% style="width:107px" %)2.8|(% style="width:614px" %)Neck, other specified parts not elsewhere classified 515 +|(% style="width:107px" %)2.9|(% style="width:614px" %)Neck, unspecified 516 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**3**|(% style="width:614px" %)**Back, including spine and vertebrae in the back** 517 +|(% style="width:107px" %)3.1|(% style="width:614px" %)Spine and vertebrae 518 +|(% style="width:107px" %)3.8|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 652 652 Back, other specified parts not elsewhere classified 653 - 654 -Back, unspecified 655 - 656 -**Trunk and internal organs** 657 - 520 +))) 521 +|(% style="width:107px" %)3.9|(% style="width:614px" %)Back, unspecified 522 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**4**|(% style="width:614px" %)**Trunk and internal organs** 523 +|(% style="width:107px" %)4.1|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 658 658 Rib cage (ribs including sternum and shoulder blades) 659 - 525 +))) 526 +|(% style="width:107px" %)4.2|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 660 660 Other parts of thorax, including internal organs 661 - 528 +))) 529 +|(% style="width:107px" %)4.3|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 662 662 Pelvic and abdominal area, including internal organs 663 - 531 +))) 532 +|(% style="width:107px" %)4.4|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 664 664 External genitalia 665 - 534 +))) 535 +|(% style="width:107px" %)4.7|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 666 666 Trunk, multiple sites affected 667 - 537 +))) 538 +|(% style="width:107px" %)4.8|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 668 668 Trunk, other specified parts not elsewhere classified 669 - 670 -Trunk and internal organs, unspecified 671 - 672 -**Upper extremities** 673 - 540 +))) 541 +|(% style="width:107px" %)4.9|(% style="width:614px" %)Trunk and internal organs, unspecified 542 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**5**|(% style="width:614px" %)**Upper extremities** 543 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.1|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 674 674 Shoulder and shoulder joints 675 - 545 +))) 546 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.2|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 676 676 Arm, including elbow 677 - 548 +))) 549 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.3|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 678 678 Wrist 679 - 551 +))) 552 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.4|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 680 680 Hand 681 - 554 +))) 555 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.5|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 682 682 Thumb 683 - 557 +))) 558 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.6|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 684 684 Other finger(s) 685 - 560 +))) 561 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.7|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 686 686 Upper extremities, multiple sites affected 687 - 563 +))) 564 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.8|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 688 688 Upper extremities, other specified parts not elsewhere classified 689 - 690 -Upper extremities, unspecified 691 - 692 -**Lower extremities** 693 - 566 +))) 567 +|(% style="width:107px" %)5.9|(% style="width:614px" %)Upper extremities, unspecified 568 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**6**|(% style="width:614px" %) **Lower extremities** 569 +|(% style="width:107px" %)6.1|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 694 694 Hip and hip joint 695 - 571 +))) 572 +|(% style="width:107px" %)6.2|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 696 696 Leg, including knee 697 - 574 +))) 575 +|(% style="width:107px" %)6.3|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 698 698 Ankle 699 - 577 +))) 578 +|(% style="width:107px" %)6.4|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 700 700 Foot 701 - 580 +))) 581 +|(% style="width:107px" %)6.5|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 702 702 Toe(s) 703 - 583 +))) 584 +|(% style="width:107px" %)6.7|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 704 704 Lower extremities, multiple sites affected 705 - 586 +))) 587 +|(% style="width:107px" %)6.8|(% style="width:614px" %)((( 706 706 Lower extremities, other specified parts not elsewhere classified 589 +))) 590 +|(% style="width:107px" %)6.9|(% style="width:614px" %)Lower extremities, unspecified 591 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**7**|(% style="width:614px" %)**Whole body and multiple sites** 592 +|(% style="width:107px" %)7.1|(% style="width:614px" %)Systemic effect (for example, from poisoning or infection) 593 +|(% style="width:107px" %)7.8|(% style="width:614px" %)Multiple sites of the body affected 594 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**9**|(% style="width:614px" %)**Other parts of body injured** 595 +|(% style="width:107px" %)**10**|(% style="width:614px" %) **Part of body injured, unspecified** 707 707 708 -Lower extremities, unspecified 709 - 710 -**Whole body and multiple sites** 711 - 712 -Systemic effect (for example, from poisoning or infection) 713 - 714 -7.8 Multiple sites of the body affected **9 Other parts of body injured** 715 - 716 - **10 Part of body injured, unspecified** 717 - 718 718 ---- 719 719 720 -[[~[2~]>>path:#_ftnref2]] For full details, see United Nations, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 4, Rev. 3 (New York, UN doc. ST/ESA/STAT/SER.M/4/Rev. 3, 1990). 721 - 722 -[[~[3~]>>path:#_ftnref3]] For full details, see United Nations~:// International Recommendations for Industrial Statistics//, Statistical Papers, Series M, No. 48, Rev. 1 (New York, UN doc. ST/ESA/STAT/SER.M/48/Rev. 1, 1983). 723 - 724 -[[~[4~]>>path:#_ftnref4]] For full details, see ILO //International Standard Classification of Occupations//: ISCO-88 (Geneva, 1990). 725 - 726 -[[~[5~]>>path:#_ftnref5]] This sub-major group is intended to include persons who — as directors, chief executives or department managers — manage enterprises requiring a total of three or more managers. 727 - 728 -[[~[6~]>>path:#_ftnref6]] This sub-major group is intended to include persons who manage enterprises on their own behalf, or on behalf of the proprietor, with some non-managerial help and assistance of no more than one other manager. 729 - 730 -[[~[7~]>>path:#_ftnref7]] For full details, see ILO, //Report of the Conference//, Fifteenth International Conference of Labour Statisticians (Geneva, 19-28 Jan. 1993), (Geneva, doc. ICLS/15/D.6(Rev. 1), 1993). 731 - 732 -[[~[8~]>>path:#_ftnref8]] For linguistic convenience the group titles and definitions have been formulated in a way which corresponds to the situation where each person holds only one job during the reference period. Rules for classifying persons with two or more jobs are given in section V. 733 - 734 -[[~[9~]>>path:#_ftnref9]] For full details, see WHO// International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-10 //(Geneva, 1992). 735 - 736 -[[~[10~]>>path:#_ftnref10]] For full details, see WHO //International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, ICD-10 //(Geneva, 1992). 599 +{{putFootnotes/}}