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Predicting safe employee behavior in the steel industry: Development and test of a sociotechnical model

โœ Scribed by Karen A Brown; P.Geoffrey Willis; Gregory E Prussia


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
255 KB
Volume
18
Category
Article
ISSN
0272-6963

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Industrial safety is an important issue for operations managers โ€” it has implications for cost, delivery, quality, and social responsibility. Minor accidents can interfere with production in a variety of ways, and a serious accident can shut down an entire operation. In this context, questions about the causes of workplace accidents are highly relevant. There is a popular notion that employees' unsafe acts are the primary causes of workplace accidents, but a number of authors suggest a perspective that highlights influences from operating and social systems. The study described herein addresses this subject by assessing steelworkers' responses to a survey about social, technical, and personal factors related to safe work behaviors. Results provide evidence that a chain reaction of technical and social constructs operate through employees to influence safe behaviors. These results demonstrate that safety hazards, safety culture, and production pressures can influence safety efficacy and cavalier attitudes, on a path leading to safe or unsafe work behaviors. Based on these results, we conclude with prescriptions for operations managers and others who play roles in the causal sequence.


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