Safety and Health at Work Vol. 10 Issue 2 2019
The Interplay Between Supervisor Safety Support and Occupational Health and Safety Vulnerability on Work Injury (Original Article)
Dublin Core
Title
Safety and Health at Work Vol. 10 Issue 2 2019
The Interplay Between Supervisor Safety Support and Occupational Health and Safety Vulnerability on Work Injury (Original Article)
The Interplay Between Supervisor Safety Support and Occupational Health and Safety Vulnerability on Work Injury (Original Article)
Subject
Occupational health and safety, Vulnerability, Work injury, Supervisor
Description
Background: Workers exposed to hazards without adequate protections are at greater risk of injury and illness. Supervisor activities have also been associated with injury risk. We examined the interplay between supervisor safety support and occupational health and safety (OHS) vulnerability on workplace injury and illness.
Methods: A survey was administered to 2,390 workers employed for more than 15 hrs/week in work-places with at least five employees who had a direct supervisor. We examined the combined effects of hazard exposure with inadequate protection (OHS vulnerability) and supervisor support on workplace injury and illness, using additive interactions in log-binomial regression models.
Results: OHS vulnerability and lack of supervisor support independently increased the likelihood of
physical injuries at work. Crude and adjusted models showed that the risk of physical injury was at least 3.5 times higher among those experiencing both OHS vulnerability and a lack of supervisor support than individuals without OHS vulnerability and with a supportive direct supervisor. Workers who experienced vulnerability were at less risk if they had a supervisor who was supportive.
Conclusion: In workplaces where workers experience one or more types of OHS vulnerability, having a supportive supervisor may play an important role in reducing the risk of injury and protecting workers.
Methods: A survey was administered to 2,390 workers employed for more than 15 hrs/week in work-places with at least five employees who had a direct supervisor. We examined the combined effects of hazard exposure with inadequate protection (OHS vulnerability) and supervisor support on workplace injury and illness, using additive interactions in log-binomial regression models.
Results: OHS vulnerability and lack of supervisor support independently increased the likelihood of
physical injuries at work. Crude and adjusted models showed that the risk of physical injury was at least 3.5 times higher among those experiencing both OHS vulnerability and a lack of supervisor support than individuals without OHS vulnerability and with a supportive direct supervisor. Workers who experienced vulnerability were at less risk if they had a supervisor who was supportive.
Conclusion: In workplaces where workers experience one or more types of OHS vulnerability, having a supportive supervisor may play an important role in reducing the risk of injury and protecting workers.
Creator
Basak Yanar, Morgan Lay, Peter M. Smith
Publisher
Elsevier Korea LLC
Date
June 2019
Contributor
Sri Wahyuni
Format
PDF
Language
English
Type
Text
Coverage
Safety and Health at Work Vol. 10 Issue 2 2019
Files
Citation
Basak Yanar, Morgan Lay, Peter M. Smith, “Safety and Health at Work Vol. 10 Issue 2 2019
The Interplay Between Supervisor Safety Support and Occupational Health and Safety Vulnerability on Work Injury (Original Article),” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed November 21, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/1926.
The Interplay Between Supervisor Safety Support and Occupational Health and Safety Vulnerability on Work Injury (Original Article),” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed November 21, 2024, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/1926.