Types of information compiled
(a) personal characteristics of persons injured;
(b) amount of worktime lost;
(c) characteristics of accidents;
(d) characteristics of injuries;
(e) characteristics of employers or workplaces: economic activity; size.
(...) Data published by ILO:
The following data are furnished regularly to the ILO for publication in the Yearbook of Labour Statistics relating to compensated occupational injuries (including commuting accidents), according to major division of economic activity: number of persons fatally injured, number of persons injured with lost workdays, total of these two groups; rates of fatal injuries; number of workdays lost by persons with lost workdays. (...) Data reported:
The following information is provided in the report:
information about the employer: employer name or firm name, exact address of establishment, economic activity, registration, number of employees at time of accident;
information about the injured person: name, place of birth, date of birth, nationality (country of origin: France, North Africa, EU member state, foreign country), address, social security number, family situation (married, single, divorced, separated), job, category, date hired;
information about the accident and the injury: date, time, number of hours between time the injured person started work or came back to work and the accident, injured person's work schedule the day of the accident, nature of injuries, accident leading to death, accident requiring the injured person to stop working, bodily location (including which side) of the injuries, detailed circumstances of the accident, place to which injured person was transported (hospital, dispensary, clinic, home, etc. and address), comments, probable outcome, type of work being performed at the time of the accident, number of previous accidents suffered by the injured person and their severity, name and address of witnesses, name, address and insurance company of the third party in the event the accident was caused by a third party;
reference wage: wage received by the injured person 30 days before the accident: principal wages pertaining to reference period (date of payment, gross amount, benefits in kind and compensation paid at the same time as wages, professional expenses, comments) and deferred back pay, compensation and bonuses effectively paid out (transfer date, period corresponding to payment, amount).
Language:English
Score: 1562156.4
-
http://www.ilo.org/ilostat-files/SSM/SSM8/E/NE.html
Data Source: un
Other:
All accidents in which technical equipment was the cause should be included, even if they are not employment-related (e.g. children injured in accidents involving tractors, accidents with lifts).
(...) Estimates
Total number of persons injured.
Average number of injuries per full-time worker.
(...) Data published by ILO:
The following data are furnished regularly to the ILO for publication in the Yearbook of Labour Statistics , relating to reported injuries according to major division of economic activity: number of persons fatally injured, number of persons injured with lost workdays, total of these two groups; rates of fatal injuries.
Language:English
Score: 1480978.1
-
http://www.ilo.org/ilostat-files/SSM/SSM8/E/DK.html
Data Source: un
Last year, some 143 security incidents against humanitarian workers were recorded in 14 countries and territories affected by conflict , along with 93 humanitarian deaths.
Of those killed, injured or kidnapped, 98 per cent were national staff.
(...) Recalling that ICRC has been briefing the Council year after year on the plight of civilians, he argued that civilian protection should be made more of a strategic priority by States, in the planning and conduct of all military operations “in populated areas, which includes avoiding the use of heavy explosive weapons.”
‘New muscle’ needed
David Miliband, President of the International Rescue Committee, and a former British Foreign Secretary, stressed that early warning mechanisms must not be allowed to “gather dust.”
(...) Miliband also maintained the need for “new muscle” to prevent “the strangulation and weaponization of aid,” and more determination to uphold existing rights.
Language:English
Score: 1471014
-
https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/05/1119062
Data Source: un
Last year, some 143 security incidents against humanitarian workers were recorded in 14 countries and territories affected by conflict , along with 93 humanitarian deaths.
Of those killed, injured or kidnapped, 98 per cent were national staff.
(...) Recalling that ICRC has been briefing the Council year after year on the plight of civilians, he argued that civilian protection should be made more of a strategic priority by States, in the planning and conduct of all military operations “in populated areas, which includes avoiding the use of heavy explosive weapons.”
‘New muscle’ needed
David Miliband, President of the International Rescue Committee, and a former British Foreign Secretary, stressed that early warning mechanisms must not be allowed to “gather dust.”
(...) Miliband also maintained the need for “new muscle” to prevent “the strangulation and weaponization of aid,” and more determination to uphold existing rights.
Language:English
Score: 1471014
-
https://news.un.org/story/2022/05/1119062
Data Source: un
The Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine is administered as a single dose, into the muscle.
The Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine may not protect everyone.
(...) Common symptoms may include: fever or
chills; cough; shortness of breath; fatigue; muscle or body aches; headache; new loss of taste or
smell; sore throat; congestion or runny nose; nausea or vomiting; diarrhea.
(...) The Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine will be given to you as an injection into the muscle.
The Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine vaccination schedule is a single dose.
Language:English
Score: 1432675.7
-
https://www.un.org/sites/un2.u...ccine-recipient-fact-sheet.pdf
Data Source: un
The 11-year-old boy is suffering from fractures to his right leg and muscle loss in his left. “Moustafa will eventually recover, but this will take time, efforts and money,” says his father, Adnan. (...) WHO
Since 2011, over 190 000 people have been killed, almost 1 million injured and almost 6.5 million internally displaced. (...) The delays faced in referring patients with trauma wounds to public hospitals increases the risk of people losing injured limbs due to heightened exposure to infection, resulting in disability.
Language:English
Score: 1429038.7
-
https://www.who.int/features/2014/syria-health-tragedy/en/
Data Source: un
Diego Ibarra Sánchez
Nazih and his cousin Hassan, both 13, were severely injured after they stepped on a landmine in May 2015.
(...) Through support from the Lebanon Mine Action Center (LMAC), the University of Balamand and UNICEF, Nazih and tens of survivors like him are receiving necessary psycho-social support and rehabilitation activities needed, like for example, the medical center where Nazih swims daily to strengthen the muscles in his leg.
Diego Ibarra Sánchez
UNICEF, LMAC & BALAMAND UNIVERSITY IN ACTION
While it takes decades to clear away most of the landmines, protecting children from it is a major commitment to us.
Language:English
Score: 1360259.9
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https://www.unicef.org/lebanon...g-keep-children-safe-landmines
Data Source: un
EXISTING POWER-ASSIST FOOT disabilities, which increases their risk of falling and PROSTHETIC consequently injuring themselves [2]. One main cause of this is due to their inability to raise their heel and swing their toes In this section, we introduce existing powered foot up because of muscle weakness [3]. prosthetics.
Language:English
Score: 1360259.9
-
https://www.itu.int/en/publica...e/files/basic-html/page53.html
Data Source: un
IDENTICAL LETTERS DATED 11 MAY 2018 FROM THE PERMANENT OBSERVER OF THE STATE OF PALESTINE TO THE UNITED NATIONS ADDRESSED TO THE SECRETARY-GENERAL, THE PRESIDENT OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY AND THE PRESIDENT OF THE SECURITY COUNCIL
It is clear that, absent serious measures of
accountability, Israel, the occupying Power, will continue, as it has over the past six
weeks, to kill and injure Palestinian civilians with complete impunity. (...) Of those injured, more than 1,900 had been shot with live ammunition and
many are in serious or critical condition. (...) The director of the
emergency department at Al-Shifa, Gaza’s largest hospital, stated that most of the
casualties had been wounded by live ammunition, mostly shot in the lower limbs,
crushing large parts of the bones, cutting into veins, nerves and muscles, and losing
skin in the injured area. At least 28 Palestinian civilian protesters have lost limbs as
a result of Israeli sniper fire.
Language:English
Score: 1345244.7
-
https://daccess-ods.un.org/acc...get?open&DS=A/ES-10/780&Lang=E
Data Source: ods
The Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine is administered as a single dose, into the muscle.
The Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine may not protect everyone.
(...) Common symptoms may include: fever or
chills; cough; shortness of breath; fatigue; muscle or body aches; headache; new loss of taste or
smell; sore throat; congestion or runny nose; nausea or vomiting; diarrhea.
(...) The Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine will be given to you as an injection into the muscle.
The Janssen COVID-19 Vaccine vaccination schedule is a single dose.
Language:English
Score: 1343513.6
-
https://www.un.org/sites/un2.u...ccine-recipient-fact-sheet.pdf
Data Source: un