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America’s Most Dangerous Jobs, Ranked by Injury Rate

New federal workplace data show sharp differences in injury risk across U.S. industries, with nursing and residential care facilities reporting the highest injury rate in the country. What’s Related The rankings, compiled by EDGE Fall Protection using injury rates per 10,000 full-time workers, highlight which jobs are most likely to result in nonfatal injuries, and which […]

New federal workplace data show sharp differences in injury risk across U.S. industries, with nursing and residential care facilities reporting the highest injury rate in the country.

What’s Related

The rankings, compiled by EDGE Fall Protection using injury rates per 10,000 full-time workers, highlight which jobs are most likely to result in nonfatal injuries, and which remain relatively safe.

Industries with the highest injury totals

Several large industries reported the highest number of nonfatal workplace injuries overall:

  • Health care and social assistance: 90.9 thousand injuries
  • Manufacturing: 29.4 thousand
  • Hospitals: 23.9 thousand
  • Retail trade: 19.1 thousand

For supply chain and logistics roles specifically:

  • Transportation and warehousing: 10.4 thousand injuries
  • Couriers and messengers: 4.2 thousand
  • Warehousing and storage: 2.5 thousand

While these totals vary by industry size, they show how often injuries occur in jobs tied to moving, storing, and delivering goods.

 

Injury rates highlight higher-risk work

Injury rates paint a different picture than raw totals, showing where injuries are more frequent relative to workforce size.

Industries with the highest injury rates include:

  • Nursing and residential care facilities: 171.8 injuries per 10,000 workers
  • Couriers and messengers: 51
  • Transportation equipment manufacturing: 40.7
  • Food manufacturing: 38.6
  • Air transportation: 34

In the supply chain, the courier and last-mile delivery categories stand out, posting one of the highest injury rates in the entire dataset despite a smaller workforce.

Warehousing and transportation in focus

Several core logistics roles appear consistently in the data:

Warehousing and storage:

  • 2.5 thousand injuries
  • Injury rate of 15.6

Truck transportation:

  • 1 thousand injuries
  • Injury rate of 5.9

Air transportation:

  • 1.4 thousand injuries
  • Injury rate of 34

Together, these numbers show that injury risk varies widely across transportation types, but remains a factor across the supply chain.

Manufacturing injury rates vary by subsector

Manufacturing as a whole reports high injury totals, but injury rates vary sharply by work type.

  • Manufacturing subsectors with higher injury rates include:
  • Transportation equipment manufacturing
  • Food manufacturing
  • Fabricated metal product manufacturing
  • Wood product manufacturing
  • Paper manufacturing

Other subsectors, such as computer and electronic product manufacturing, report lower injury rates, showing how work environment and job tasks shape risk even within the same industry.

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