105,313Records 71,083Employers 85,290Hospitalizations 27,770Amputations 2015-01-01 2025-10-31
Safety Incidents OSHA Severe Injury Reports · 2015–2025

University of Rochester

Federal OSHA safety record across 14 records in NEW YORK.

Federal OSHA records for University of Rochester include 14 Severe Injury Reports, 0 Form 300/301 injury filings, and 0 OSHA inspections, spanning NEW YORK, with incidents dated between and . Aggregated from three OSHA data feeds; per-record detail and source citations are linked below.

SIR14 records Injuries0 records Inspections0 records

Date range to

Most recent 14 of 14 reports for this employer.

University of Rochester

EventOther fall to lower level less than 6 feet

Hospitalized

University of Rochester

EventFall on same level due to tripping over an object

Hospitalized

University of Rochester

EventContact with hot objects or substances

Hospitalized

University of Rochester

EventInhalation of harmful substance-single episode

Hospitalized

University of Rochester

EventFall on same level while climbing stairs, steps, or curbs

Hospitalized

University of Rochester

EventOverexertion in pushing, pulling, or turning-single episode

Hospitalized

University of Rochester

EventFall on same level due to slipping

Hospitalized

University of Rochester

EventOther fall to lower level, unspecified

Hospitalized

University of Rochester

EventStruck by or caught in swinging door or gate

Hospitalized

No ITA Form 300/301 injury filings recorded for this employer.

No OSHA inspections recorded for this employer.

No OSHA citations recorded for this employer.

ROCHESTER, NEW YORK
12 records
BROCKPORT, NEW YORK
1 record
ELLICOTTVILLE, NEW YORK
1 record
NAICS 611310
NAICS 621493

This profile aggregates federal OSHA records from three published feeds: OSHA Severe Injury Reports, the ITA Establishment-Specific Injury and Illness Data (Form 300/301), and the U.S. Department of Labor Open Data API (OSHA inspections). Records are matched to this employer by normalized name; small variations in spelling, punctuation, and capitalization collapse to one profile, while materially different legal entities (e.g. parent vs. subsidiary with distinct hyphenated names) remain separate.