A multilevel safety climate survey was conducted in three Australian organizations in the construction supply chain. A principal components analysis (with varimax rotation) yielded six distinct safety climate factors reflecting aspects of the organizational safety response (OSR), supervisors’ safety response (SSR), and coworkers’ safety response (CSR). Perceptions of top management’s commitment to safety (an aspect of OSR) and supervisors’ safety expectations (an aspect of SSR) were both significantly and inversely correlated with the combined medical treatment and lost time injury rate of workgroups in the analysis. Further, regression analysis revealed that perceptions of supervisors’ safety expectations fully mediated the relationship be...
Safety climate (SC) has been one of the most frequently studied antecedents of safety performance si...
This study probes the influence of a perceived safety climate on task and contextual performance. Us...
AbstractDifferent levels of management influence safety practices within organizations in a differen...
A multi‐level safety climate model was tested in the Australian construction industry. Subcontracted...
A multi-level safety climate model was tested in the Australian construction industry. Subcontracted...
A multi-level safety climate model was tested in the Australian construction industry. Subcontracted...
The health and safety of construction jobsites in the United States has been a concern for a long ti...
There has been emerging evidence that safety climate is not stable but changes over time. In the com...
Literature examining the relationship between job control and safety climate dimensions, such as man...
What are the different perceptions on safety climate (SC) by workers and managers/supervisors engage...
The character of construction projects exposes front-line workers to dangers and accidents. Safety c...
BACKGROUND:There is growing empirical evidence that as safety climate improves work site safety prac...
Studies of safety climate in construction revealed a significant positive association between safety...
The purpose of this study was to explore the correlation between employee perceptions of their super...
The character of construction projects exposes front-line workers to dangers and accidents. Safety c...
Safety climate (SC) has been one of the most frequently studied antecedents of safety performance si...
This study probes the influence of a perceived safety climate on task and contextual performance. Us...
AbstractDifferent levels of management influence safety practices within organizations in a differen...
A multi‐level safety climate model was tested in the Australian construction industry. Subcontracted...
A multi-level safety climate model was tested in the Australian construction industry. Subcontracted...
A multi-level safety climate model was tested in the Australian construction industry. Subcontracted...
The health and safety of construction jobsites in the United States has been a concern for a long ti...
There has been emerging evidence that safety climate is not stable but changes over time. In the com...
Literature examining the relationship between job control and safety climate dimensions, such as man...
What are the different perceptions on safety climate (SC) by workers and managers/supervisors engage...
The character of construction projects exposes front-line workers to dangers and accidents. Safety c...
BACKGROUND:There is growing empirical evidence that as safety climate improves work site safety prac...
Studies of safety climate in construction revealed a significant positive association between safety...
The purpose of this study was to explore the correlation between employee perceptions of their super...
The character of construction projects exposes front-line workers to dangers and accidents. Safety c...
Safety climate (SC) has been one of the most frequently studied antecedents of safety performance si...
This study probes the influence of a perceived safety climate on task and contextual performance. Us...
AbstractDifferent levels of management influence safety practices within organizations in a differen...