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Human injuries associated with the transport of horses by road
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Human injuries associated with the transport of horses by road

Christopher B. Riley, Barbara Padalino, Chris W. Rogers and Kirrilly R. Thompson
Animals, Vol.13(10), pp.1-12
10/05/2023
PMCID: PMC10215915
PMID: 37238024
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Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open Access
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Human Injuries Associated with the TransportView
Published (Version of record)CC BY V4.0 Open

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Abstract

Agriculture Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science Life Sciences & Biomedicine Science & Technology Veterinary Sciences Zoology
There is an increased understanding of shared human–animal risk in terms of “one welfare”, whereby when animals are at risk, so are people, so preventing injury to one species may also prevent injury to the other. Because transport-related injuries to horses are common, the authors considered this paradigm to study road equine transport-related injuries to humans in New Zealand. The aim was to determine their frequency and associated factors by distributing a survey to horse industry participants through industry organisations asking about their horse activities, road transport experiences, and any related self-injury. There were 112/1067 (10.5%) handlers injured while preparing (13/112), loading (39/112), traveling (6/112), or unloading (33/112). Of these, 40% had multiple injury types, and 33% had several body regions affected. Hand injuries were most common (46%), followed by the foot (25%), arm (17%), and head or face (15%). Median recovery time was 7 days. Injuries were associated with the responder’s industry educational background, years of driving experience, and reporting a horse injured during road transport in the past two years. Wearing helmets and gloves, and adopting strategies designed to eliminate equine injuries associated with the road transport of horses to reduce the risk of injury to their handlers are recommended.

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