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The image is a vertical bar chart depicting the number of fatal work injuries from 1992 to 2010; the years are displayed along the horizontal axis, and the number of injuries along the vertical axis ranging from 0 to 7,000. In 1992, the figure is 6,217; in 1993, 6,331; in 1994, 6,632; in 1995, 6,275; in 1996, 6,202; in 1997, 6,238; in 1998, 6,055; in 1999, 6,054; in 2000, 5,920; in 2001, 5,915; in 2002, 5,534; in 2003, 5,575; in 2004, 5,764; in 2005, 5,840; in 2006, 5,657; in 2007, 5,214; in 2008, 4,551; in 2009, 4,690; in 2010, data not visible. The trend shows a general decrease in fatal work injuries over the 18-year span, with fluctuations, particularly a notable decrease after 2007.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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The bar chart illustrates the number of people who suffered from occupational fatality spanning the years from 1992 to 2010.
Overall, there was an downtrend in this figure over the period. The number of victims of fatal work injuries started at 6217 in 1992 and ended the period in 2010 with its figure at 4690.
There was an upward trend seen in the first three years, where the figure for this experienced a slight increase to peak at 6632 in 1994 before witnessing a longlasting fall to 5534 throughout the next eight years from 1994 to 2002. This followed by a gradual rise of around 400 people before witnessing an unprecedent decrease to bottom out at 4551 in 2009. Afterwards, this saw a marginal recover to 4690 to end the period in 2010.
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