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Safety, incentives, and the reporting of work-related injuries among union carpenters: "You're pretty much screwed if you get hurt at work."
Authors
Lipscomb-HJ; Nolan-J; Patterson-D; Sticca-V; Myers-DJ
Source
Am J Ind Med 2013 Apr; 56(4):389-399
Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajim.22128 
NIOSHTIC No.
20041996 
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the high-risk construction industry little is known about the prevalence or effects of programs offering rewards for workers and/or their supervisors for improved safety records or those that punish workers in some way for injury. METHODS: We conducted an anonymous survey of 1,020 carpenter apprentices in three union training programs to document prevalence of their exposure to such efforts. We explored associations between perceptions of the reporting of work-related injury and elements of these programs. RESULTS: Fifty-eight percent (58%; n = 592) reported some safety incentive or negative consequence of work-related injuries on their current jobsite. Reporting of work-related injuries was 50% less prevalent when workers were disciplined for injury experiences. Otherwise, we saw minimal evidence of association between injury reporting practices and safety incentive programs. However, considerable evidence of fear of reprisal for reporting injuries was revealed. Less than half (46.4%) reported that work-related injuries were reported in their current workplace all or most of the time; over 30% said they were almost never or rarely reported. CONCLUSIONS: There are multiple layers of disincentives to the reporting of work-related injuries that hamper understanding of risk and pose threats to workplace safety and productivity. These pressures do not arise in a vacuum and are likely influenced by a host of contextual factors. Efforts that help us understand variation across jobsites and time could be enlightening; such inquiries may require mixed methodologies and should be framed with consideration for the upper tiers of the public health hierarchy of hazard control.
Keywords
Construction; Construction-industry; Construction-workers; Injuries; Safety-practices; Work-practices; Worker-health; Health-surveys; Safety-programs; Work-operations; Behavior; Safety-climate; Control-methods; Hazards; Author Keywords: occupational injury; under-reporting; construction workers; safety incentives; public health hierarchy of hazard control; behavioral-based safety; mixed methods
Contact
Hester Lipscomb, PhD, PO Box 3834, DUMC, Durham, NC 27710
CODEN
AJIMD8
Publication Date
20130401
Document Type
Journal Article
Email Address
hester.lipscomb@duke.edu
Funding Type
Cooperative Agreement; Construction
Fiscal Year
2013
NTIS Accession No.
NTIS Price
Identifying No.
Cooperative-Agreement-Number-U60-OH-009762; B20130124
Issue of Publication
4
ISSN
0271-3586
Priority Area
Construction
Source Name
American Journal of Industrial Medicine
State
NC; MO; IL
Performing Organization
CPWR - The Center for Construction Research and Training, Silver Spring, Maryland
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