Controlling Electrical Hazards

Retrieved from: Occupational Safety & Health Administration

Electricity has long been recognized as a serious workplace hazard, exposing employees to electric shock, electrocution, burns, fires, and explosions. In 1999, for example, 278 workers died from electrocutions at work, accounting for almost 5 percent of all on-the-job fatalities that year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. What makes these statistics more tragic is that most of these fatalities could have been easily avoided.

https://web.uri.edu/ehs/files/June-2012-Electrical-Safety.pdf