Posted By J Knight
Hi Folks,
This is not, in accordance with Martin's post, intended as a personal put-down in any way; both sides in the discussion about the 'world death figure' are making valid points, and they are worth addressing. Salus, while not necessarily accepting the 2.2 million figure, I did find this on the internet:
'In 2003, the State Administration of Work Safety reported 963,976 work-related accidents in China, with 136,340 fatalities. That number was a decrease of 2,591 fatalities from 2002.' Remember, this is reported deaths, and a lot of places are worse than China when it comes to safety.
China has about 20% of the world's population, so if everywhere reported the same death rate as China that would come out at about 700,000, and then adding on the estimated 400,000 deaths from exposure we end up with a figure of 1,100,000, which is not so far removed from 2.2 million.
I think it is important to realise just how poor H&S is in other countries, and how likely you are to die at work compared with the UK. I was shocked while in NZ (hardly a developing country, afetr all) to hear their industrial death record for 1999 was over 200 killed; this is about 10 times worse than the UK on a per capita basis. Taking all this into consideration, I think 2.2 million is certainly possible. come what may, even if its a 'mere' 1.1 million, its still dreadful,
John