Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Talking Safety: Health and Safety Communication and Safety Climate in Subcontracted Construction Workgroups
The practice of subcontracting out construction work has been identified as a contributing factor in poor work health and safety (WHS) performance. Relatively few studies have considered the processes through which safety climates develop within subcontracted workgroups. This study sought to examine the relationship between intragroup communication relating to WHS and the workgroup safety climate. Data were collected from 39 subcontracted workgroups in the Australian construction industry using social network analysis to examine worker-to-worker, supervisor-to-worker, and worker-to-supervisor patterns of WHS-related communication. The relationship between group social network metrics and group safety climate were examined. Network density was a predictor of the workgroup safety climate. Furthermore, a suppressor effect was found such that WHS-related communication between group members and the group supervisor increased the variance in group safety climate explained in a regression model. The results highlight the importance of intragroup communication in creating a shared understanding about the priority placed on WHS within subcontracted construction workgroups. In using subcontracted workgroups as the unit of analysis and linking within-group communication patterns to the workgroup safety climate, the research makes an original contribution to knowledge in empirically demonstrating the safety benefits associated with fostering a dense communication network and encouraging frequent supervisor–worker communication in subcontracted workgroups.
Talking Safety: Health and Safety Communication and Safety Climate in Subcontracted Construction Workgroups
The practice of subcontracting out construction work has been identified as a contributing factor in poor work health and safety (WHS) performance. Relatively few studies have considered the processes through which safety climates develop within subcontracted workgroups. This study sought to examine the relationship between intragroup communication relating to WHS and the workgroup safety climate. Data were collected from 39 subcontracted workgroups in the Australian construction industry using social network analysis to examine worker-to-worker, supervisor-to-worker, and worker-to-supervisor patterns of WHS-related communication. The relationship between group social network metrics and group safety climate were examined. Network density was a predictor of the workgroup safety climate. Furthermore, a suppressor effect was found such that WHS-related communication between group members and the group supervisor increased the variance in group safety climate explained in a regression model. The results highlight the importance of intragroup communication in creating a shared understanding about the priority placed on WHS within subcontracted construction workgroups. In using subcontracted workgroups as the unit of analysis and linking within-group communication patterns to the workgroup safety climate, the research makes an original contribution to knowledge in empirically demonstrating the safety benefits associated with fostering a dense communication network and encouraging frequent supervisor–worker communication in subcontracted workgroups.
Talking Safety: Health and Safety Communication and Safety Climate in Subcontracted Construction Workgroups
Lingard, Helen (Autor:in) / Pirzadeh, Payam (Autor:in) / Oswald, David (Autor:in)
08.03.2019
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Unbekannt
Emerald Group Publishing | 2019
|Health and safety on site as perceived by the South African subcontracted workforce
British Library Conference Proceedings | 2003
|Strategies for insuring subcontracted works
British Library Online Contents | 1999
|