America's Most Dangerous Jobs

Posted by Ivica Miskovic | Tuesday, September 15, 2009 | | 25 comments »

10. Police Sheriffs and Patrol Officers



Deaths per 100,000 workers: 21.4

Total deaths: 143

What they do: Police pursue and apprehend criminals. A large proportion of their time is spent writing reports and maintaining records of incidents. Most police officers patrol their jurisdictions and investigate any suspicious activity they notice.

Dangers: In addition to the obvious dangers of confrontations with criminals, police officers and detectives must always be alert and prepared to deal with a variety of other threatening situations. Many law enforcement officers witness death and suffering resulting from accidents and criminal behavior. In addition to the physical rigors of the job, a career in law enforcement could take a toll on their private lives.

9. Refuse and Recyclable Material Collectors

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 22.8

Total deaths: 18

What they do: There are two basic types of collector: Operators use heavy machinery to move construction materials around factories or construction sites. Laborers typically handle materials manually and feed material into machines.

Dangers: Some work is done at great heights, occasionally in extreme weather. Workers are often exposed to fumes and hazardous materials that can affect their respiratory systems. Safety has increased over the years thanks to improvements in equipment.

8. Drivers (truckers and salespeople)

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 26.2

Total deaths: 908

What they do: Travel the nation's roads to deliver goods and make sales calls.

Dangers: On an absolute basis (as opposed to a per capita basis), highway fatalities are the No. 1 killer of people on the job. The majority of accidents stem from tired drivers veering off the road, rather than multi-car accidents.

7. Electrical Power Line Installers and Repairers

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 29.1

Total deaths: 30

What they do: Install and repair lines and polls that deliver electrical power to homes and businesses.

Dangers: Power lines are typically located higher up than phone and cable lines. Dangers include both slip and falls from high altitude and electrocution risk from high voltage lines.

6. Roofers

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 29.4

Total deaths: 79

What they do: Repair and install roofs for commercial and residential buildings, usually working with tar, asphalt or gravel.

Dangers: The most common causes of injury or death are slip and falls from roofs, ladders or scaffolds. Heat-related illness can also occur on hot days.

5. Farmers and Ranchers

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 38.4

Total deaths: 285

What they do: Owners or leasers of farmland who grow and cultivate crops or livestock.

Dangers: Many farmers' duties include operating heavy machinery, the biggest sources of hazards on the job.

4. Iron and Steel Workers

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 45.5

Total deaths: 40

What they do: Place iron or steel girders, columns and other construction materials to form buildings, bridges and other structures.

Dangers: Most work at great heights, with the greatest cause of injury or death coming from falls. The majority wear harnesses and most job sites provide safety nets.

3. Pilots and Flight Engineers

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 66.7

Total deaths 82

What they do: Pilots and co-pilots fly planes and helicopters for transporting passengers or cargo, or for crop dusting, seed spreading or other tasks. Flight engineers assist pilots by monitoring instruments.

Dangers: Full crashes are relatively rare. Conditions and risks are most acute for test pilots, who check equipment for new, experimental plans, and crop dusters, who are exposed to toxins and sometimes lack a regular landing strip. Helicopter pilots often engage in dangerous rescue.

2. Loggers

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 86.4

Total deaths: 76

What they do: Cut down trees with hand-held power chain saws or mobile felling machines. They use tree harvesters to fell the trees, shear the limbs off tees, cut logs, drive tractors and transport logs from the felling site in the woods to the log landing area. They also operate grapple loaders, which lift and load logs into trucks.

Dangers: Highly concentrated in Alaska and Maine, loggers are susceptible to high winds, falling branches and hidden roots or vines that present great risks around chain saws and other heavy equipment.

1. Fishers and related workers

Deaths per 100,000 workers: 111.8

Total deaths: 38

What they do: Work on commercial boats. Fishers catch fish and other aquatic animals to sell as food, animal feed, bait and other uses.

Dangers: Commercial fishers work in all kinds of weather, often hundreds of miles from shore with no help readily available. Crew members risk falling on slippery decks, which can result in serious injuries or even going overboard. There are also potential hazards of malfunctioning fishing gear and becoming entangled in large nets.

credited to forbes.com



25 comments

  1. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 3:45 AM  

    And all have lower than average salaries...

  2. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 5:28 AM  

    Um . . . maybe all except fishermen. Those guys pull in thousands for just a few weeks' work. It's a hard few weeks, but still a lot of cash in a short period of time.

  3. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 5:42 AM  

    Electricians make less than average salaries?

  4. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 7:41 AM  

    Anon 5:28am- stop watching so much television and educate yourself. not everything you see on 'deadliest catch' is the commercial fishing industry as a whole, nor do those men make great fortunes. shrimpers and fishers all over the world work all year around for falling prices in harvest vs. rising costs of fuel. how many fishermen with mansions do you know?

  5. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 10:42 AM  

    Okay, It looks like we always forget to show Militarys.

  6. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 2:33 PM  

    Salespeople by no means have a less than average salary. Salespeople are some of the highest paid people, the good ones making more than doctors or athletes

  7. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 5:12 PM  

    Anon 7:41 - go fuck yourself. have a nice day! :-)

  8. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 6:38 PM  

    oil rig workers!

  9. Anonymous // September 16, 2009 at 11:04 PM  

    where is convenience store clerks?

  10. Anonymous // September 17, 2009 at 1:28 AM  

    What do you consider average? I'm an electrical lineman and make over 100,000 yearly.

  11. Anonymous // September 17, 2009 at 3:20 AM  

    are you retarded all these jobs have unions these guys pull in more money then you'll ever make

  12. Anonymous // September 17, 2009 at 11:51 AM  

    I'm a logger and there is NO union here Anonymous you ass,fisherman don't have unions either.And to all the treehugging assholes out there,what do you wipe your ass with,a corncob,what kind of house do you live in?,a mud hut?Loggers wish people would just realize how much wood is used every minute.

  13. Anonymous // September 17, 2009 at 9:08 PM  

    Almost everything has one or multple union syou dipshit. Go to google and type in "fisherman's union". They exist.

  14. Anonymous // September 17, 2009 at 10:42 PM  

    This is wrong. Not only is it wrong, it's fucking stolen. The original #1 most dangerous job was a US Army Soldier...

  15. Anonymous // September 17, 2009 at 11:52 PM  

    Fuck the author this is a boring attempt at an interesting concept, info seems made up and writer sucks dog dick. "Police pursue and apprehend criminals" No fucking way, I thought they only delivered pizzas you dumb fucking mook.

  16. Anonymous // September 18, 2009 at 12:30 AM  

    You forgot the one job that is waaaay ahead in deaths per 100k

    US President

    Deaths in 100.000: 9,091
    Total Deaths: 4

  17. Anonymous // September 18, 2009 at 3:14 AM  

    acutally us army soldier the deaths arnt really that high at all it seems that way but not compared to these other occupations. the main things soldiers die from is friendly fire and accidents the enemy rarely kill us. and these jobs being below average is wrong my man they all all make above taht the lowest paid occupation is the cop or the garbage man and with years of experience can actually pay out.

  18. Petes blog // September 18, 2009 at 5:11 PM  

    These crab fishermen and women put there lives at risk so we can have this delicacy on our tables. So i have dedicated my blog to them http://hubpages.com/hub/danger- and -the -crab
    Take care out there.
    Pete

  19. Anonymous // September 19, 2009 at 12:03 AM  

    Um, yea that may have been true before we were bogged down in Iraq. We have lost 4,344 soldiers since 2003 in Iraq. Very little of that is friendly fire, most of it is from IEDs and such which directly equates to enemy action.

  20. Anonymous // September 21, 2009 at 7:07 PM  

    No, IED don't kill as often as specialists driving like assholes in Iraq kill themselves. You don't know what you're talking about shit bag.

  21. Anonymous // September 29, 2009 at 4:08 AM  

    Exactly right. Accidents happen that kill people more often than IED's kill people.

  22. Anonymous // November 3, 2009 at 4:30 AM  

    I guess they forgot about coal miners.

  23. Daniel Ramos // November 17, 2009 at 8:45 PM  

    Actually electrician, or more appropriately outside linemen (who rig up poles and fix electrical lines) make on average over $25/hr plus overtime.

  24. Josh // November 28, 2009 at 4:54 PM  

    all of the comments about the soldiers being in the "most dangerous" field would be acurate if they were factoring work realted "life altering" injuries and not just death... there are alot of factors that are not being looked at. Anyone that goes downrange knows that just doing your job and coming home afterwords may constitue a "life altering" injury with the amount of PTSD cases that are being reported.

  25. Anonymous // January 2, 2011 at 7:51 AM  

    Fuck you anonymous fucking retard

    SPAZZERRRRRRR!!!!!!!!!!!!!