Results of a community-based survey of construction safety climate for Hispanic workers

Roelofs, Cora; Cifuentes, Manuel; Marin, Luz S.

Abstract

Background: Hispanic construction workers experience high rates of occupational injury, likely influenced by individual, organizational, and social factors. Objectives: To characterize the safety climate of Hispanic construction workers using worker, contractor, and supervisor perceptions of the workplace. Methods: We developed a 40-item interviewer-assisted survey with six safety climate dimensions and administered it in Spanish and English to construction workers, contractors, and supervisors. A safety climate model, comparing responses and assessing contributing factors was created based on survey responses. Results: While contractors and construction supervisors' (n=128) scores were higher, all respondents shared a negative perception of safety climate. Construction workers had statistically significantly lower safety climate scores compared to supervisors and contractors (30.6 vs 46.5%, P0.05). Safety climate scores were not associated with English language ability or years lived in the United States. Conclusions: We found that Hispanic construction workers in this study experienced a poor safety climate. The Hispanic construction safety climate model we propose can serve as a framework to guide organizational safety interventions and evaluate safety climate improvements.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000361631500006 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH
Volumen: 21
Número: 3
Editorial: Maney Publishing
Fecha de publicación: 2015
Página de inicio: 223
Página final: 231
DOI:

10.1179/2049396714Y.0000000086

Notas: ISI