Safety Perception and its Effects on Safety Climate in Industrial Construction

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
G. Eaton
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
9
File Size:
174 KB
Publication Date:
Aug 1, 2013

Abstract

Safety management is an important mortal and business function in construction. Contractors have traditionally tracked and reported lagging indicators, e.g. fatalities and lost-time accident rates, to measure their safety performance and stay in compliance with relevant regulations. Over the last several decades, contractors became more proactive in their approach to safety and developed programs that track leading indicators, e.g. safety audits and safety climate. In particular, safety climate measures workers? perception of safety management and its effectiveness in the workplace. Past literatures indicated that, while some industrial construction contractors ignore safety climate measures, others are limited by a lack of a formal means to measure safety climate. In this study, a survey approach is used to measure an industrial construction contractor?s safety climate through three key areas: management commitment, job control, and general safety climate. As a pilot study, a total of 214 individuals at a fabrication facility participated in the survey to verify the validity and effectiveness of the proposed survey approach. This survey study also confirms that job control and management commitment have a positive correlation and that worker demographics have an effect on respondents? perceptions of management commitment.
Citation

APA: G. Eaton  (2013)  Safety Perception and its Effects on Safety Climate in Industrial Construction

MLA: G. Eaton Safety Perception and its Effects on Safety Climate in Industrial Construction. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2013.

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