Browse Workplace Injuries
4 OSHA severe injury reports matching "Six Flags Over Georgia".
OSHA Severe Injury Reports Database
Browse 4 workplace severe injury reports with employer names, locations, and incident details. Each report documents a hospitalization, amputation, or eye loss as reported to OSHA. Use the filters below to narrow results.
| Date | Employer | Location | Event | Nature | Body Part | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov 2, 2024 | SIX FLAGS OVER GEORGIA II, L.P. | AUSTELL, GEORGIA | Other fall to lower level unspecified | Severe wounds or internal injuries and soft tissue injuries | Leg(s) unspecified | Hospitalized |
| Apr 3, 2024 | Six Flags Over Georgia | AUSTELL, GEORGIA | Contact with hot objects or substances | Thermal burns degree unspecified | Hand(s) and finger(s) | Hospitalized |
| Mar 30, 2019 | Six Flags Over Georgia II, L.P | AUSTELL, GEORGIA | Hitting, kicking, beating, shoving | Fractures | Chest, except internal location of diseases or disorders | Hospitalized |
| Oct 12, 2017 | Six Flags Over Georgia | AUSTELL, GEORGIA | Compressed or pinched by shifting objects or equipment | Amputations | Finger(s), fingernail(s), unspecified | Hospitalized, Amputation |
Frequently Asked Questions
OSHA requires employers to report all workplace injuries resulting in hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye within 24 hours. Each report in this database includes the employer name, full address, a description of the event, the nature of injury, and a detailed narrative of what happened.
The most common severe workplace injuries include amputations, fractures, crushing injuries, burns, and multiple injuries. Falls, being struck by objects, caught-in/between incidents, and exposure to harmful substances are among the most common event types.
Use the employer search field in the filter bar above. Enter a company name or partial name and click Filter. The search is case-insensitive and matches partial names, so you can find all reports for a company even if the exact legal name varies across reports.