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Exploratory analysis of the safety climate and safety behavior relationship.
J Safety Res. 2004; 35(5):497-512.JS

Abstract

PROBLEM

Safety climate refers to the degree to which employees believe true priority is given to organizational safety performance, and its measurement is thought to provide an "early warning" of potential safety system failure(s). However, researchers have struggled over the last 25 years to find empirical evidence to demonstrate actual links between safety climate and safety performance.

METHOD

A safety climate measure was distributed to manufacturing employees at the beginning of a behavioral safety initiative and redistributed one year later.

RESULTS

Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that perceptions of the importance of safety training were predictive of actual levels of safety behavior. The results also demonstrate that the magnitude of change in perceptual safety climate scores will not necessarily match actual changes (r=0.56, n.s.) in employee's safety behavior.

DISCUSSION

This study obtained empirical links between safety climate scores and actual safety behavior. Confirming and contradicting findings within the extant safety climate literature, the results strongly suggest that the hypothesized climate-behavior-accident path is not as clear cut as commonly assumed.

SUMMARY

A statistical link between safety climate perceptions and safety behavior will be obtained when sufficient behavioral data is collected.

IMPACT ON INDUSTRY

The study further supports the use of safety climate measures as useful diagnostic tools in ascertaining employee's perceptions of the way that safety is being operationalized.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Applied Health Sciences, Indiana University, IN 47405, USA. domcoope@indiana.eduNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

15530924

Citation

Cooper, M D., and R A. Phillips. "Exploratory Analysis of the Safety Climate and Safety Behavior Relationship." Journal of Safety Research, vol. 35, no. 5, 2004, pp. 497-512.
Cooper MD, Phillips RA. Exploratory analysis of the safety climate and safety behavior relationship. J Safety Res. 2004;35(5):497-512.
Cooper, M. D., & Phillips, R. A. (2004). Exploratory analysis of the safety climate and safety behavior relationship. Journal of Safety Research, 35(5), 497-512.
Cooper MD, Phillips RA. Exploratory Analysis of the Safety Climate and Safety Behavior Relationship. J Safety Res. 2004;35(5):497-512. PubMed PMID: 15530924.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Exploratory analysis of the safety climate and safety behavior relationship. AU - Cooper,M D, AU - Phillips,R A, PY - 2004/06/01/received PY - 2004/08/11/accepted PY - 2004/11/9/pubmed PY - 2005/1/28/medline PY - 2004/11/9/entrez SP - 497 EP - 512 JF - Journal of safety research JO - J Safety Res VL - 35 IS - 5 N2 - PROBLEM: Safety climate refers to the degree to which employees believe true priority is given to organizational safety performance, and its measurement is thought to provide an "early warning" of potential safety system failure(s). However, researchers have struggled over the last 25 years to find empirical evidence to demonstrate actual links between safety climate and safety performance. METHOD: A safety climate measure was distributed to manufacturing employees at the beginning of a behavioral safety initiative and redistributed one year later. RESULTS: Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that perceptions of the importance of safety training were predictive of actual levels of safety behavior. The results also demonstrate that the magnitude of change in perceptual safety climate scores will not necessarily match actual changes (r=0.56, n.s.) in employee's safety behavior. DISCUSSION: This study obtained empirical links between safety climate scores and actual safety behavior. Confirming and contradicting findings within the extant safety climate literature, the results strongly suggest that the hypothesized climate-behavior-accident path is not as clear cut as commonly assumed. SUMMARY: A statistical link between safety climate perceptions and safety behavior will be obtained when sufficient behavioral data is collected. IMPACT ON INDUSTRY: The study further supports the use of safety climate measures as useful diagnostic tools in ascertaining employee's perceptions of the way that safety is being operationalized. SN - 0022-4375 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/15530924/Exploratory_analysis_of_the_safety_climate_and_safety_behavior_relationship_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -