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  5. The Effect of the 'Tendency to Report Injuries' on Minor Accident Statistics
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The Effect of the 'Tendency to Report Injuries' on Minor Accident Statistics

Date Issued
May 1, 1958
Author(s)
Barker, James A.
Advisor(s)
Gerald H. Whitlock
Abstract

This study is concerned with the effect of the "tendency to report injuries" on minor accident statistics. Assuming that individuals with the largest number of voluntary visits for nonoccupational illnesses to the Dispensary would be those who most readily report to the Dispensary in the event of minor injuries, the individuals may be defined as those who have a tendency to report injuries. The hypothesis to be tested in this thesis is: The tendency to report injuries has no significant effect on the systematic variance in reported injuries between two successive one-year exposure intervals.

Disciplines
Management Sciences and Quantitative Methods
Operations and Supply Chain Management
Degree
Master of Science
Major
Management Science
Embargo Date
May 18, 1958
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

BarkerJamesA_1958_OCRed.pdf

Size

3.91 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

74c859a4272ad2194f88a1e117bacd3c

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