Publication | Closed Access
Comparative Analysis of Safety Culture Perceptions among HomeSafe Managers and Workers in Residential Construction
48
Citations
30
References
2011
Year
Safety Culture PerceptionsEngineeringSafety ScienceInjury PreventionHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorHomesafe ManagersBuilt EnvironmentOccupational Health And SafetySafety ManagementSafety CultureRisk ManagementManagementHigher LevelPublic HealthComparative AnalysisConstruction WorkersWork SafetyHuman SafetyCultureBusinessConstruction ManagementCulture Change
Construction workers continue to experience high rates of injury and illness compared with many other industries. Growing evidence suggests that safety culture has a direct effect on safety performance. This study investigated measures of safety culture and risk perception among a residential-home-building cohort within the HomeSafe Pilot Program in the Denver metro area of Colorado. Investigators compared group-level responses of management to frontline construction workers. Results indicate that managers appraised the overall safety culture at higher levels compared with the workers. Managers also perceived a higher level of management commitment to safety and health than that reported by workers.
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