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Occupational and Environmental Medicine logoLink to Occupational and Environmental Medicine
. 2006 Feb 23;63(6):416–421. doi: 10.1136/oem.2005.022301

Associations between temporary employment and occupational injury: what are the mechanisms?

F G Benavides 1,2,3, J Benach 1,2,3, C Muntaner 1,2,3, G L Delclos 1,2,3, N Catot 1,2,3, M Amable 1,2,3
PMCID: PMC2078100  PMID: 16497853

Abstract

Objective

To determine whether observed higher risks of occupational injury among temporary workers are due to exposure to hazardous working conditions and/or to lack of job experience level.

Methods

Data systematically recorded for 2000 and 2001 by the Spanish Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs on fatal and non‐fatal traumatic occupational injuries were examined by type of employment and type of accident, while adjusting for gender, age, occupation, and length of employment in the company. In the study period there were 1500 fatal and 1 806 532 non‐fatal traumatic occupational injuries that occurred at the workplace. Incidence rates and rate ratios (RR) were estimated using Poisson regression models.

Results

Temporary workers showed a rate ratio of 2.94 for non‐fatal occupational injuries (95% CI 2.40 to 3.61) and 2.54 for fatal occupational injuries (95% CI 1.88 to 3.42). When these associations were adjusted by gender, age, occupation, and especially length of employment, they loose statistic significance: 1.05 (95% CI 0.97 to 1.12) for non‐fatal and 1.07 (95% CI 0.91 to 1.26) for fatal.

Conclusions

Lower job experience and knowledge of workplace hazards, measured by length of employment, is a possible mechanism to explain the consistent association between temporary workers and occupational injury. The role of working conditions associated with temporary jobs should be assessed more specifically.

Keywords: occupational injury, temporary workers, occupational health


Current global economic trends have increased new forms of flexible employment (for example, temporary work, contingent, part‐time contract, unregulated work, home based work, and other non‐traditional work arrangements). Most flexible jobs are defined as precarious. Precarious employment is a complex labour market situation with several characteristics: temporary work status, job vulnerability, low social protection (for example, unemployment and sickness absence benefits) and low income level.1,2 Temporary employment may be considered a practical indicator of this construct, because it is usually recorded in labour statistics.3

Evidence in this area has advanced quickly, and some adverse health consequences of new forms of flexible employment have been reported.4 For example, job insecurity over time has been associated with poor mental health,5 whereas job insecurity due to downsizing has been associated with sickness absence.6 Temporary employment has been related with job dissatisfaction, and with a higher prevalence of fatigue, backache, and muscular pains than permanent employment.7 More recently, one study reported that temporary workers have a higher mortality rate than permanent workers, particularly for alcohol and smoking related causes of death.8

There are several reasons why Spain has an important role in the study of health effects of flexible employment. In the European Union (EU‐15) as a whole,9 the number of temporary workers in 2002 was 13.2 million, or 11.9% of the total employed labour force. Spain had the highest percentage of temporary workers (31.2%) in the EU‐15. In fact, even among Spanish workers age 40 years and over, temporary employment still reaches 17%. On the other hand, occupational injuries are still a high priority on the occupational health agenda.10 Spain also has one of the highest incidence rates of fatal and non‐fatal occupational injuries in the EU‐15.11

There have been some studies addressing the relation between temporary employment and occupational injuries. A recent revision has reported that seven of 13 relevant studies show a consistent increased risk of occupational injuries among temporary workers.12 In that revision, it is suggested that the association among temporary workers may be related to their greater inexperience and lack of safety training at the workplace, although the association may be biased by confounding related to occupation. In Spain a descriptive study found that temporary workers had a twofold or greater risk of occupational injury than permanent workers.13 This difference in risk has been observed in Spain since the beginning of the last decade.14

Therefore, the next question is to explore the mechanisms that could explain these differences. The hypothesis considered in this paper is that the higher risk of occupational injury among temporary workers is due to two mechanisms acting simultaneously: temporary workers are exposed to more hazardous working conditions and to less job experience than permanent workers.

We tested this hypothesis by comparing fatal and non‐fatal traumatic occupational injury rates between temporary and permanent workers in Spain, taking into account occupational category (as an indicator of working conditions) and length of employment (as an indicator of worker experience).

Subjects and methods

Occupational injury data

Occupational injuries among salaried workers have been systematically recorded in Spain since 1989 by the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs in accordance with compulsory rules.15 In order for workers to receive medical care and social protection, an official work accident form must be completed by a physician from an insurance company for any occupational injury resulting in the loss of at least one working day for a non‐fatal occupational injury. The Spanish labour statistics administration endorses the Eurostat11 definition of fatal occupational injury: “an injury which causes the death of the victim during the year following the date of the injury”. The quality of these occupational injury statistics in terms of sensitivity, predictability, and representativeness has previously been found to be adequate.16,17 The reporting of fatal occupational injuries is estimated to be 99%.18

The present study was based on the complete data files on all occupational injuries occurring at the workplace (excluding relapses, commuting accidents, and non‐traumatic injuries) from the two most recently available years—2000 and 2001. Incident traumatic occupational injuries at work were selected for study because their work relatedness is more straightforward. The sample size was 1 808 032 (1500 fatal) occupational injuries: 898 955 (773 fatal) in 2000 and 909 077 (727 fatal) in 2001.

Type of employment at the time of the injury is recorded on the occupational injury form, and is classified as either permanent (unlimited permanent contract) or temporary (employed on a fixed term contract, temporary employment agency contract, apprenticeship, or other training scheme, etc) by the National Institute of Statistics according to type of contract. For each occupational injury the following information was used: gender and age (six groups) as demographic variables, occupation (nine categories) as an indicator of working conditions, and length of employment in the company (three categories) as an indicator of worker experience in the specific workplace. Occupation titles were classified according to the International Standard Occupational Classification19 in nine categories. In the last category (non‐qualified and elementary occupations) are included cleaners, janitors, shop assistants, bricklayers, miners, etc. The length of employment categories were selected according to percentile distribution for both temporary and permanent workers (P25 = 2.4 months, P50 = 9.6 months, and P75 = 45.6 months).

Occupational injuries were classified according to the type of accident, given that some notified occupational injuries could be not work related, as they could happen during leisure time. For this study, based on expert opinions from a previous study,14 they were divided into two groups: occupational injuries clearly related to work (fall from a height, being hit by falling objects, falling object being manipulated, projectile fragments or particles, trapped by or between objects, trapped by vehicles or machinery rollover, exposure to extreme temperatures, thermal contact, contact with electrical current, exposure to harmful substances, exposure to caustics or corrosive substances, exposure to ionising radiation, explosions, and fires) and occupational injuries possibly related to work (fall on the same level, stepped on object, struck against stationary object, struck by a moving object, struck by an object or tool, overexertion, and pedestrian run over or struck by vehicle). During the study period, in the first group there were 511 924, and in the second group, there were 1 296 108 events.

At risk population data

The National Institute of Statistics labour force survey data on salaried workers for 2000 and 2001 were used as the best available denominator in the analysis.20 Although the true population at risk is composed of workers registered under the national social security insurance system, this database is not accessible and does not contain information on worker occupations. The labour force survey has been found to provide a good denominator estimate, except for the agriculture and fishing economic sectors.21 A large proportion of workers in these two latter sectors are under a special social security system for self‐employed workers, which is not as well accounted for as salaried workers in the labour force survey.

Statistical analysis

Incidence rates were estimated for fatal and non‐fatal occupational injuries. In order to improve accuracy, mainly for fatal occupational injury rates, both years were analysed jointly, after observing that there were no meaningful differences between the two years. Poisson regression models were used to estimate the rate ratio (RR) and 95% confidence intervals (95% CI), using permanent workers as the reference group. In addition to the calculation of crude estimates, the ratios were also adjusted for gender, age (categorical), occupation, and length of employment in the company. Adjustment by occupation and length of employment was done to assess their mediating role, since these two variables, according the study hypothesis, were considered as explanatory variables rather than confounding factors. A stratified analysis of the two groups by type of accident was carried out.

The likelihood ratio test, based on the Fisher‐Snedecor distribution, was used to assess the goodness‐of‐fit of models, as well as a marginal approach to correct Poisson overdispersion (standard errors scaled using square root of deviance based dispersion).22 SPSS statistical software was used for processing data file, and STATA for all analyses. All p values were two‐sided, with values less than 0.05 indicating statistical significance.

Results

Compared with permanent workers, temporary workers showed significantly higher RR of traumatic occupational injuries (tables 1 and 2), almost threefold greater for non‐fatal (RR = 2.94; 95% CI 1.88 to 3.42) and two and half times greater for fatal occupational injuries (RR = 2.54; 95% CI 1.88 to 3.42). This was particularly apparent in men, and for older age groups.

Table 1 Incidence and rate ratio (RR) of non‐fatal occupational injuries in temporary and permanent workers by gender, age, length of employment, and occupation; Spain 2000–01.

Non‐fatal RR 95% CI p Value
Permanent Temporary
Injury Population at risk Incidence* Injury Population at risk Incidence*
Gender
 Male 617146 10711368 57.6 867285 4676785 185.4 3.22 2.52–4.09 0.000
 Female 141706 6285581 22.5 180680 3289099 54.9 2.44 1.85–3.21 0.000
Age group (years)
 <20 10127 103053 98.3 82454 551285 149.6 1.52 0.93–2.49 0.092
 20–24 72855 991021 73.5 240876 1753346 137.4 1.87 1.21–2.89 0.005
 25–34 229166 5100155 44.9 355930 3091752 115.1 2.56 1.69–3.87 0.000
 35–44 210398 5214363 40.3 212869 1560713 136.4 3.38 2.32–4.92 0.000
 45–54 153887 3805100 40.4 114885 749844 153.2 3.79 2.69–5.32 0.000
 >54 82419 1783257 46.2 40951 258944 158.1 3.42 2.37–4.94 0.000
Length of employment in company†
 <6 months 80758 516638 156.3 660009 3560499 185.4 1.19 0.74–1.87 0.482
 6–24 months 160689 1867164 86.1 290600 2955725 98.3 1.14 0.82–1.60 0.419
 >24 months 517398 14613147 35.4 97353 1449660 67.2 1.90 1.20–3.03 0.006
Occupations (ISCO‐88)‡
 Legislators, senior officials and managers 2764 468775 5.9 598 34817 17.2 2.91 1.72–4.81 0.000
 Professionals 12340 2470441 5.0 7360 707093 10.4 2.08 1.46–2.98 0.000
 Technicians and associate professionals 23206 2158923 10.7 13210 554688 23.8 2.22 1.60–3.06 0.000
 Clerks 27773 2250525 12.3 20638 671213 30.7 2.49 1.63–3.80 0.000
 Service workers and shop and market sales workers 115429 2604908 44.3 105683 1242312 85.1 1.92 1.32–2.79 0.001
 Skilled agricultural and fishery workers 12933 204822 63.1 14939 123981 120.5 1.91 1.34–2.72 0.000
 Craft and related trades workers 275976 2636609 104.7 398894 1713002 232.9 2.22 1.62–3.05 0.000
 Plant and machine operators and assemblers 134928 2000849 67.4 101570 788387 128.8 1.91 1.34–2.73 0.000
 Non‐qualified and elementary occupations 153393 2077399 73.8 384933 2081132 185.0 2.50 1.54–4.08 0.000
Total 758852 16996949 44.6 1047965 7965884 131.6 2.94 2.40–3.61 0.000

*Incidence per 1000 workers.

†Ten missing values.

‡Excluded “Armed Forces”.

Table 2 Incidence and rate ratio (RR) of fatal occupational injuries in temporary and permanent workers by gender, age, length of employment, and occupation; Spain 2000–01.

Fatal RR 95% CI p Value
Permanent Temporary
Injury Population at risk Incidence* Injury Population at risk Incidence*
Gender
 Male 667 10711368 6.2 799 4676785 17.1 2.74 2.01–3.73 0.000
 Female 18 6285581 0.3 16 3289099 0.5 1.70 0.92–3.13 0.088
Age group (years)
 <20 3 103053 2.9 22 551285 4.0 1.37 0.52–3.66 0.538
 20–24 21 991021 2.1 87 1753346 5.0 2.34 1.11–4.91 0.025
 25–34 141 5100155 2.8 241 3091752 7.8 2.82 1.61–4.96 0.000
 35–44 214 5214363 4.1 236 1560713 15.1 3.68 2.17–6.26 0.000
 45–54 177 3805100 4.7 161 749844 21.5 4.62 2.74–7.79 0.000
 >54 129 1783257 7.2 68 258944 26.3 3.63 2.07–6.38 0.000
Length of employment in company†
 <6 months 73 516638 14.1 521 3560499 14.6 1.04 0.47–2.26 0.940
 6–24 months 138 1867164 7.4 221 2955725 7.5 1.01 0.61–1.69 0.952
 >24 months 474 14613147 3.2 73 1449660 5.0 1.55 0.78–3.11 0.205
Occupations (ISCO‐88)†
 Legislators, senior officials and managers 14 468775 3.0 0 34817 0.0 0.00
 Professionals 20 2470441 0.8 7 707093 1.0 1.22 0.48–3.13 0.675
 Technicians and associate professionals 56 2158923 2.6 26 554688 4.7 1.81 0.78–4.19 0.168
 Clerks 16 2250525 0.7 7 671213 1.0 1.47 0.51–4.22 0.477
 Service workers and shop and market sales workers 37 2604908 1.4 14 1242312 1.1 0.79 0.26–2.42 0.685
 Skilled agricultural and fishery workers 53 204822 25.9 14 123981 11.3 0.44 0.17–1.11 0.082
 Craft and related trades workers 194 2636609 7.4 269 1713002 15.7 2.13 1.31–3.49 0.002
 Plant and machine operators and assemblers 230 2000849 11.5 252 788387 32.0 2.78 1.42–5.43 0.003
 Non‐qualified and elementary occupations 65 2077399 3.1 226 2081132 10.9 3.47 1.38–8.73 0.008
Total 685 16996949 4.0 815 7965884 10.2 2.54 1.88–3.42 0.000

*Incidence per 100 000 workers.

†Excluded “Armed Forces”.

The highest non‐fatal occupational injury incidence rates, for either permanent or temporary employment, were observed among workers with less than six months of employment in the company (156.3/103 and 185.4/103, respectively), and the lowest rates were for those with more than 24 months' tenure in companies (35.4/103 and 67.2/103, respectively). However, among workers with more than 24 months of employment in a company, temporary workers had higher incidence rates compared with permanent workers (RR = 1.90; 95% CI 1.20 to 3.03). A similar pattern was observed for fatal occupational injuries.

For all occupational categories, temporary workers showed significantly higher risks than permanent workers for non‐fatal occupational injuries. In the case of fatal occupational injuries, significant associations were only found for manual categories: craft and related trades workers, plant and mechanic operators, and non‐qualified and elementary occupations. For service workers and skilled agricultural and fishery workers the risk of fatal injuries was highest, but not significant among permanent workers.

These crude relative risks showed a remarkable decrease in magnitude after adjusting by occupation, and particularly by length of employment (table 3), and were no longer significant after adjusting by gender, age, occupation, and length of employment. However, when the analysis was repeated by type of accident (table 4), a significant association emerged for fatal injury clearly related to work (RR = 1.30; 95% CI 1.08 to 1.57).

Table 3 Type of employment and occupational injuries (referent category: permanent workers). Rate ratio (RR) and 95% confidence interval (95% CI) adjusted by gender, age (categorical), occupation, and length of employment; Spain 2000–01.

Non‐fatal Fatal
RR 95% CI p Value RR (*) 95% CI (*) p Value
Crude 2.94 2.40–3.61 0.000 2.54 1.88–3.42 0.000
Adjusted individually by:
 Gender 3.06 2.56–3.65 0.000 2.71 2.16–3.39 0.000
 Age 2.95 2.37–3.66 0.000 3.40 2.52–4.59 0.000
 Occupation 2.21 1.94–2.50 0.000 2.22 1.76–2.81 0.000
 Length of employment 1.35 1.04–1.74 0.023 1.15 0.77–1.72 0.490
Adjusted jointly by gender, age, occupation, and length of employment 1.04 0.97–1.12 0.276 1.07 0.91–1.26 0.402

Table 4 Type of employment and occupational injuries by type of accident: clearly and possibly work related (referent category: permanent workers). Rate ratio (RR) and 95% confidence interval (95% CI) adjusted by gender, age (categorical), occupation, and length of employment; Spain 2000–01.

Clearly work related Possibly work related
RR 95% CI p Value RR 95% CI p Value
Non‐fatal
Crude 3.13 2.50–3.91 0.000 2.87 2.36–3.51 0.000
Adjusted individually by:
 Gender 3.27 2.72–3.93 0.000 2.98 2.50–3.55 0.000
 Age 3.14 2.48–3.97 0.000 2.88 2.33–3.55 0.000
 Occupation 2.32 2.02–2.67 0.000 2.16 1.91–2.44 0.000
 Length of employment 1.39 1.05–1.84 0.022 1.33 1.04–1.71 0.024
 Adjusted jointly by gender, age, occupation, and length of employment 1.05 0.98–1.13 0.184 1.04 0.96–1.12 0.327
Fatal
Crude 3.14 2.28–4.32 0.000 1.95 1.40–2.72 0.000
Adjusted individually by:
 Gender 3.36 2.64–4.28 0.000 2.08 1.58–2.73 0.000
 Age 4.42 3.23–6.04 0.000 2.45 1.74–3.46 0.000
 Occupation 2.38 1.86–3.04 0.000 2.04 1.58–2.62 0.000
 Length of employment 1.60 1.04–2.47 0.034 0.77 0.50–1.18 0.229
 Adjusted jointly by gender, age, occupation, and length of employment 1.30 1.08–1.57 0.006 0.84 0.69–1.04 0.110

Discussion

Results from this study show that the risk of occupational injury is unequally distributed between temporary and permanent employment: temporary workers have higher risk than permanent workers. However, after adjusting by occupation, and particularly length of employment, the risk of occupational injury among temporary workers approximates that of permanent workers. These findings provide some evidence about the link between type of employment and the risk of occupational injury.

Our results confirm earlier studies that found an excess risk of occupational injury among temporary workers,12 and provides new insight into the mechanism underlying the association. These findings need to be replicated before they are taken as causal evidence. The study of this association in other countries, especially those with a lower proportion of temporary workers, would seem to be a logical next step since there is no guarantee that temporary employment has the same meaning and health effect impact in different countries.

Despite occupational injury statistics being considered complete in Spain,16,18 the accuracy of specific items such as type of employment or length of employment is unknown, and it is possible that temporary workers might be more likely to have inaccurate data than permanent workers. Furthermore, temporary workers may be underreporting occupational injuries because of fears of being stigmatised or fired,23 which would lead to an underestimate of the strength of the association. Primary data collection is needed to improve the measurement of temporary employment and confirm our findings. Indeed, given that temporary workers are likely to have fewer work hours actually worked, the true risk may actually be understated by the population denominator used in this study.

Conversely, the cross sectional design of the study could lead to an overestimation of the strength of reported association, because an inverse relation could be possible: workers with a high frequency of occupational injuries could lose opportunities to become permanent in their jobs. This hypothesis should be tested in a longitudinal framework study, although it is likely that this selection bias influence would be small.

According to our hypothesis, the association between temporary employment and occupational injuries can be explained by two mechanisms. Firstly, temporary workers are exposed to more hazardous working conditions than permanent workers. As observed from the distribution of workers by occupation: 26.1% of temporary workers versus 12.2% of permanent workers had non‐qualified and elementary occupations, and 16.3% versus 30%, respectively, had management, professional, or technical occupations. In fact, the Third European Survey on Working Conditions has shown that workers with non‐permanent contracts are more likely to have unfavourable working conditions such as repetitive movements, painful and tiring positions, discrimination, low time control, and/or less freedom to choose when to take personal leave.24 Spanish surveys on working conditions show a similar pattern, especially in relation to ergonomic and psychosocial risk factors.25 In conclusion, on the whole, temporary workers toil in occupations with more hazardous working conditions. However, within occupational groups, temporary workers show significantly higher risks than permanent workers in almost all occupations, especially for non‐fatal injuries. An explanation for this remarkable finding could be that temporary workers have less experience and knowledge of the workplace than permanent workers. In fact, when the length of employment is taken into account the observed association disappears in each group (data not shown), except for skilled agricultural and fishery workers. An alternative explanation could be that there were only nine occupational categories, and within each category there are different types of jobs. This may have led to underadjustment of the role of occupationally linked working conditions in the study. However, the persistent effect of temporary work in relatively homogeneous strata of occupations suggests that the first explanation has substantial merit. The role of working conditions in the observed association should be further assessed with more detailed information on work organisation and workplace hazards.

An unexpected inverse association was observed between permanent services workers, and skilled agricultural and fishery workers and fatal occupational injuries. A plausible explanation could be that many temporary workers in these occupations are self‐employed, and do not record suffering occupational injuries.21

A second mechanism should be considered as a possible explanation for these findings: permanent workers are likely to have better knowledge and experience of the workplace, tools, and activities than temporary workers. The results show, on the one hand, a clear inverse trend between length of employment and occupational injury risk, among both permanent and temporary workers: risk decreases when length of employment increases. However on the other hand, the RR was only statistically significant for permanent workers. These patterns did not change significantly after taking into account occupation. Both results are not paradoxical. Less than six months is the most hazardous employment situation in any case, and experience within the workplace protects against occupational injury risk, but this protection is less in the case of a worker with a temporal contract of less than 24 months of duration.

Conversely, despite older workers having more experience and compensating ability (safer work behaviours),26 aging seemed to increase the risk of occupational injuries, especially fatal occupational injuries, among temporary workers. This could be partly due to the cumulative effect of hazardous exposures among temporary workers, to a lesser capacity of adaptation to changes in working conditions, and also to their age related weakness and vulnerability when facing occupational exposures.

This significant role played by the length of employment has to be considered with caution, because given the cross sectional design of the study and the time related nature of the length of employment, it is likely that some potential bias could affect the results. For instance, workers with less than six months of employment, where the risk of occupational injury was highest, have less probability of being included in a cross sectional study than workers with more than 24 months. However, this bias, if present, could underestimate the magnitude of the association.

Finally, a significant association persisted for fatal injuries clearly related to work after adjusting by occupation and length of employment. Other mechanisms could explain this excess risk among temporary workers. A new hypothesis is that temporary workers are exposed to more stressful circumstances due to greater job vulnerability than permanent workers. Recently, it has been observed that the relation between psychosocial risk factors and sickness absence was stronger among non‐permanent workers than permanent workers.27 This association has been explained in terms of an increase in effort and productivity. It could, therefore, be suggested that temporary workers have a greater risk of occupational injury because they work at a more accelerated pace. The need to save time and tighter schedules, which significantly affect subcontractors, have been identified as risk factors in a series of 99 serious occupational injuries.28

Main messages

  • Findings confirm that temporary workers have a significantly higher risk of having fatal and non‐fatal occupational injuries than permanent workers.

  • Lower job experience of temporary workers may partially explain why they are at a higher risk of experiencing occupational injuries.

  • The role of working conditions should be specifically investigated regarding the association between temporary employment and occupational injuries.

Policy implications

  • Promoting a higher level of permanent employment, with all of its benefits, is an important way towards preventing occupational injuries.

  • Increasing workers' knowledge of workplace hazards, especially among temporary workers, is an additional way of reducing the risk of occupational injuries.

The association found in this study, attributed to the multiple vulnerabilities associated with temporary employment, should be assessed more specifically and in greater detail. Other mechanisms related to precarious employment such as the structural characteristics of the workplace (lack of unionisation or social benefits), or discrimination by both supervisors and permanent workers, should also be taken into account in further analyses.12

In conclusion, promoting a higher level of permanent employment, with all of its attendant benefits, is clearly one way to prevent the risk of occupational injury, especially in Spain where the level of temporary employment is extremely high. However, increasing workers' knowledge of their workplace, especially among temporary workers, could be an additional way to reduce the risk of occupational injury.

Acknowledgements

Project support was provided by a grant from the Ministry of Science and Technology (BSA2001‐0965) and the Carlos III Health Institute (RCESP C03/09).

Footnotes

Competing interests: none.

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