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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 chart illustrates the number of fatal work injuries in New Zealand from 1992 to 2010.
Overall, the number of deadly injuries witnessed a downfall with minor fluctuations. Throughout the period shown, the figures for the years 1994 and 2009 were the highest and the lowest respectively.
At the beginning of the period, there were more than 6200 cases of deadly injuries reported. This number slightly increased to reach the peak of 6632 deaths in the following two years before undergoing a considerable decline to 5534 in 2002.
After this fall, a rise in deaths was seen until 2006, with more than 5800 fatal injuries. Over the next three years, this figure kept decreasing significantly by approximately 1300 cases, hitting the lowest value in the chart with 4551 fatalities in 2009. The last year experienced a slight increase in the number of faral work injuries with nearly 4700 cases.
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