- Truck driver at-work deaths differed from non-truck controls in the distribution of manners of death.
- Truck driver at-work deaths occurred more frequently in underserved census tracts characterised as medical deserts.
- Case-control analysis of Harris County data demonstrated these differences predicted truck driver at-work deaths, indicating vulnerability to natural deaths at work.
J Occup Environ Med. 2026 Jun 16. doi: 10.1097/JOM.0000000000003797. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the distribution, risks, and geospatial attributes of truck driver at-work deaths.
METHODS: At-work medical examiner death data from Harris County, Texas were extracted and analyzed using a case-control design. Truck driver cases (n = 52) were matched on age characteristics to non-truck driver controls (n = 156). These data included place of injury/collapse, manner of death, anthropometrics, and demographics. Medical center and American Community Survey data were extracted for geospatial analyses.
RESULTS: Truck driver at-work deaths differed from controls in the distribution of manners of death, and they occurred more commonly in underserved census tracts. Truck driver at-work deaths were predicted by both of these differences.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings provide preliminary evidence for truck driver vulnerability to natural deaths at work and the characterization of truck driver worksites as medical deserts.
PMID:42302236 | DOI:10.1097/JOM.0000000000003797
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