The given bar chart provide data concerning annual workplace injuries in different ages ranging from 15 to 60 in 2018.
Overall, it is obvious from the graph that older people, who are between 50-60 ages, showed higher percentages in suffering from injuries in both education-health and leisure and hospitality workplaces. It is also worth mentioning that getting injuries among younger people showed the highest figures only in mining and construction work.
Leisure and hospitality showed the figures that people suffer from more injuries as they get older, increasing by around 7% at each stage. Likewise, in manufacturing, injured younger employees made up the smallest proportion. Injured people who are in 25-34 and 35-49 age groups exhibited 25 and 35 percents respectively, and injured older people saw the same figures as the former age groups.
25-34 age group accounted for just 5% of total employees in education and health. 25% of people in 35-49 ages were suffered from injuries, which is 5% less than young people. Furthermore, in mining and construction, young and old employees showed similar and higher figures, which are 40 and 35% respectively.
