Management commitment to safety vs. employee perceived safety training and association with future injury

被引:36
作者
Huang, Yueng-Hsiang [1 ]
Verma, Santosh K. [2 ,4 ,5 ]
Chang, Wen-Ruey [3 ]
Courtney, Theodore K. [2 ,4 ]
Lombardi, David A. [2 ,4 ]
Brennan, Melanye J. [2 ]
Perry, Melissa J. [5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Liberty Mutual Res Inst Safety, Ctr Behav Sci, Hopkinton, MA 01748 USA
[2] Liberty Mutual Res Inst Safety, Ctr Injury Epidemiol, Hopkinton, MA 01748 USA
[3] Liberty Mutual Res Inst Safety, Ctr Phys Ergon, Hopkinton, MA 01748 USA
[4] Harvard Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Environm Hlth, Boston, MA 02115 USA
[5] Univ Massachusetts, Sch Med, Dept Family Med & Community Hlth, Worcester, MA USA
[6] George Washington Univ, Dept Environm & Occupat Hlth, Sch Publ Hlth & Hlth Serv, Washington, DC USA
关键词
Management commitment to safety; Employee perceived safety training; Future injury; Restaurant workers; LONGITUDINAL DATA-ANALYSIS; INTERRATER RELIABILITY; PSYCHOLOGICAL CLIMATE; MODEL; AGREEMENT; WORKERS; ORGANIZATION; ACCIDENTS; BEHAVIOR; JOBS;
D O I
10.1016/j.aap.2011.12.001
中图分类号
TB18 [人体工程学];
学科分类号
1201 ;
摘要
Objectives: The purpose of this study is to explore and examine, specific to the restaurant industry, two important constructs emerging from the safety climate literature: employee perceptions of safety training and management commitment to safety. Are these two separate constructs? Are there both individual- and shared group-level safety perceptions for these two constructs? What are the relationships between these two constructs and future injury outcomes? Methods: A total of 419 employees from 34 limited-service restaurants participated in a prospective cohort study. Employees' perceptions of management commitment to safety and safety training and demographic variables were collected at the baseline. The survey questions were made available in three languages: English, Spanish, and Portuguese. For the following 12 weeks, participants reported their injury experience and weekly work hours. A multivariate negative binomial generalized estimating equation model with compound symmetry covariance structure was used to assess the association between the rate of self-reported injuries and measures of safety perceptions. Results: Even though results showed that the correlation between employees' perceived safety training and management commitment to safety was high, confirmatory factor analysis of measurement models showed that two separate factors fit the model better than as two dimensions of a single factor. Homogeneity tests showed that there was a shared perception of the factor of management commitment to safety for the restaurant workers but there was no consistent perception among them for the factor of perceived safety training. Both individual employees' perceived management commitment to safety and perceptions of safety training can predict employees' subsequent injuries above and beyond demographic variables. However, there was no significant relationship between future injury and employees' shared perception of management commitment to safety. Further, our results suggest that the variable of employees' perceived safety training could be a proximal predictor of future injury outcome which mediated the relationship between employees' perceived management commitment to safety (a distal predictor) and injury outcome. We propose that when employees perceive their management as having a high level of commitment to safety, they will also perceive that the safety training of the organization is good, which will then further predict future injury experience of the employees. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:94 / 101
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Psychosocial Safety Climate as a Management Tool for Employee Engagement and Performance: A Multilevel Analysis
    Idris, Mohd Awang
    Dollard, Maureen F.
    Tuckey, Michelle R.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF STRESS MANAGEMENT, 2015, 22 (02) : 183 - 206
  • [22] The mediating role of Organizational identification and Employee organizational commitment on the association between Employee empowerment and management innovation
    Alshumrani, Salha
    Baird, Kevin
    Munir, Rahat
    APPLIED ECONOMICS, 2024, 56 (54) : 6935 - 6953
  • [23] ICU nurses' safety performance related to respect for safety and management commitment: A cross-sectional study
    Al-Bsheish, Mohammad
    Jarrar, Mu'taman
    Bin Mustafa, Munauwar
    Zubaidi, Faraj
    Bin Ismail, Mohd Azril
    Meri, Ahmed
    Dauwed, Mohammed
    CONTEMPORARY NURSE, 2022, 58 (5-6) : 446 - 459
  • [24] Leaders as motivators and meaning makers: How perceived leader behaviors and leader safety commitment attributions shape employees' safety behaviors
    Fruhen, Laura S.
    Andrei, Daniela M.
    Griffin, Mark A.
    SAFETY SCIENCE, 2022, 152
  • [25] Examining the Mediating Role of Psychological Capital between Perceived Management Commitment and Safety Compliance/Participation of Graduate Students in Research Laboratories
    Han, Xue
    Wang, Xiaoyan
    Jin, Xinglong
    Zhou, Minghua
    ACS CHEMICAL HEALTH & SAFETY, 2024, 31 (04) : 300 - 305
  • [26] The effect of employees' management commitment to safety and consciousness on unsafe performance: The mediating role of safety self-efficacy
    Pordanjani, T. Rahimi
    Ebrahimi, A. Mohammadzade
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH AND SAFETY AT WORK, 2015, 4 (04) : 69 - +
  • [27] Tower crane safety: Organizational preventive measures vs. technical conditions
    Carrillo-Castrillo, J. A.
    Rubio-Romero, J. C.
    Pardo-Ferreira, M. C.
    OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HYGIENE VI, 2018, : 121 - 124
  • [28] Incremental Realization of Safety Requirements: Non-determinism vs. Modularity
    Ebnenasir, Ali
    FUNDAMENTALS OF SOFTWARE ENGINEERING, FSEN 2015, 2015, 9392 : 159 - 175
  • [29] School Violent Victimization Among Youth: Is There an Association With Perceived School Safety?
    Vidourek, Rebecca A.
    Woodson, Kenneth D.
    King, Keith A.
    VIOLENCE AND VICTIMS, 2017, 32 (01) : 181 - 192
  • [30] Are employee surveys biased? Impression management as a response bias in workplace safety constructs
    Keiser, Nathanael L.
    Payne, Stephanie C.
    SAFETY SCIENCE, 2019, 118 : 453 - 465