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U.S. Department of Labor
Industrie: Government; Labor
Number of terms: 77176
Number of blossaries: 0
Company Profile:
Signifies the manner in which an occupational injury or illness was produced or inflicted—for example, overexertion while lifting, or a fall from a ladder.
Industry:Labor
Shortages occur in a market economy when the demand for workers for a particular occupation is greater than the supply of workers who are qualified, available, and willing to do that job.
Industry:Labor
Persons 16 years and over in the civilian noninstitutional population who, during the reference week, (a) did any work at all (at least 1 hour) as paid employees; worked in their own business, profession, or on their own farm, or worked 15 hours or more as unpaid workers in an enterprise operated by a member of the family; and (b) all those who were not working but who had jobs or businesses from which they were temporarily absent because of vacation, illness, bad weather, childcare problems, maternity or paternity leave, labor-management dispute, job training, or other family or personal reasons, whether or not they were paid for the time off or were seeking other jobs. Each employed person is counted only once, even if he or she holds more than one job. Excluded are persons whose only activity consisted of work around their own house (painting, repairing, or own home housework) or volunteer work for religious, charitable, and other organizations.
Industry:Labor
Respondents are asked the number of hours per week they usually work. This provides a measure of the usual full-time or part-time status of employed persons. All employed persons, both those who were at work and those who were absent from work, are asked about the number of hours they usually work.
Industry:Labor
Represents the number of injuries and/or illnesses per 100 full-time workers, calculated as follows: (N/EH) X 200,000, where: N = number of injuries and/or illnesses, EH = total hours worked by all employees during the calendar year, and 200,000 = base for 100 full-time equivalent workers (working 40 hours per week, 50 weeks per year).
Industry:Labor
Represents the number of fatal injuries per 100,000 workers, calculated as follows: (N/W) X 100,000, where N = number of fatal injuries, W = number of workers employed, and 100,000 = base to express the fatality rate per 100,000 workers.
Industry:Labor
Remuneration (pay, wages) of a worker or group of workers for services performed during a specific period of time. The term usually carries a defining word or phrase, such as straight-time average hourly earnings. Because a statistical concept is usually involved in the term and its variations, the producers and users of earnings data should define them clearly. In the absence of such definitions, the following may serve as rough guidelines: * Hourly, daily, weekly, annual: period of time to which earnings figures, as stated or computed, relate. The context in which annual earnings (sometimes weekly earnings) are used may indicate whether the reference includes earnings from one employer only or from all employment plus other sources of income. * Average: usually refers to the arithmetic mean; that is, total earnings (as defined) of a group of workers (as identified) divided by the number of workers in the group. * Gross: usually refers to total earnings, before any deductions (such as tax withholding) including, where applicable, overtime payments, shift differentials, production bonuses, cost-of-living allowances, commissions, etc. * Straight-time: usually refers to gross earnings excluding overtime payments and (with variations at this point) shift differentials and other monetary payments.
Industry:Labor
Si riferisce ai lavoratori di salario e stipendio che segnalano che sono membri di un sindacato o un'associazione dipendente simile a un'Unione.
Industry:Labor
Refers to persons who identified themselves in the enumeration process as being Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino. Persons of Hispanic or Latino ethnicity may be of any race.
Industry:Labor
Registrabili casi comprendono infortuni e le malattie che provocano uno o più dei seguenti: morte, perdita di coscienza, di giorni lontano dal lavoro, attività lavorativa limitata o trasferimento di lavoro, cure mediche (di là di primo soccorso), infortuni significativi o malattie che sono diagnosticati da un medico o licenza professionale di cura brughiera (questi includono qualsiasi caso legati al lavoro che coinvolge il cancro, malattia cronica irreversibileuna frattura ossea cracking o un timpano perforato); criteri supplementari includono qualsiasi pregiudizio del ago-bastone o tagliato da un oggetto tagliente contaminato con sangue di un'altra persona o altri materiali potenzialmente infettivi, qualsiasi caso richiedendo un dipendente per essere medicamente rimosso sotto i requisiti di un salute OSHA standard, infezione di tubercolosi, come evidenziato da una prova positiva della pelle o la diagnosi di un medico o altro operatore sanitario autorizzato dopo esposizione ad un noto caso di tubercolosi attiva.
Industry:Labor
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