Construction Accidents in Thailand: Statistical Data Analysis

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Chaiporn Vongpisal
Nantakrit Yodpijit

Abstract

This research aims to explore the accident causation in Thailand’s construction industry. Macroergonomics and Human Factors Analysis and Classification System (HFACS) were employed to investigate accidents in the construction industry. A total of 1,252 construction accident cases from 31 companies from 2006 to 2014 were analyzed and reported. Findings indicate that accidents occurred more frequently with young and middle ages (25–54 years old) in a large-scale construction company. Based on the reported cases, several major factors were found to predict root causes of accidents, including cuts, falls from height, and awkward working postures. Most construction accidents were associated with unsafe acts (88.97%) and preconditions for unsafe acts (72.92%). It is implied that improvements for changes in human behaviors, together with environmental and personnel factors are critical to increase the safety at the construction site.

Article Details

How to Cite
Vongpisal, C., & Yodpijit, N. (2017). Construction Accidents in Thailand: Statistical Data Analysis. Applied Science and Engineering Progress, 10(1). Retrieved from https://ph02.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/ijast/article/view/77805
Section
Research Articles