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The association between safety climate and noncombat injury events among United States Air Force workers.
Authors
Socias-Morales CM; Haas EJ; Gwilliam M; Yorio PL; Delaney NB; Falcon RG; Stallings HA; Burnham BR; Stuever DM; Stouder SM; Ewing GL; Collins JW; Chaumont Menendez CK
Source
J Safety Res 2024 Feb; 88:16-23
NIOSHTIC No.
20068767
Abstract
Introduction: Work-related injuries are a common lagging safety indicator whereas safety climate assessments can help identify constructs serving as leading indicators. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) partnered with the U.S. Department of the Air Force (DAF) Safety Center to examine the association between perceptions of safety climate survey constructs and the number of injury events within the DAF workforce. Methods: The DAF administers voluntary, anonymous, occupation-specific safety climate surveys to DAF workers using the internal Air Force Combined Mishap Reduction System (AFCMRS). Survey responses from 2014 to 2018 provided by DAF workers and injury events in maintenance, support, and operations occupations were shared with NIOSH. Exploratory Factor Analysis revealed five constructs: Leadership and Communication; Organizational Safety Priority; Error Management; Resource Adequacy; and Deployment/Official Travel Impact. Squadron-level analysis included bivariate correlations and estimated Rate Ratios (RRs). Results: 1,547 squadrons administered the survey, averaging 144 workers and 15.8 reportable injuries per squadron. Higher (more favorable) squadron-level construct scores were consistently correlated with fewer reported injuries (p < 0.001). Controlling for the number of workers, RRs revealed significant reductions in injury rates with each one-unit increase in responses: Leadership and Communication RR = 0.40 (95%CI: 0.32-0.48); Organizational Safety Priority RR = 0.50 (95%CI: 0.40-0.64); Error Management RR = 0.37 (95%CI: 0.30-0.47); Deployment/Official Travel Impact RR = 0.36 (95%CI: 0.29-0.45). Resource Adequacy revealed a non-significant lower injury rate RR = 0.87 (95%CI: 0.73-1.04). Conclusions: This unique study quantified safety climate and the association with injuries across a multi-year period. While safety climate measurements may be limited by frequent turnover and the self-reported, voluntary, anonymous nature of AFCMRS, the strength of this study is in the census of injuries. Practical Applications: Future research should include longitudinal analyses to examine the impact on injuries when squadron leaders are provided feedback on safety climate survey results.
Keywords
Safety climate; Injuries; Military personnel; Work organization; Hazard communication; Safety research; Author Keywords: Safety climate; Military populations; Occupational injuries; Leading/lagging indicators
CODEN
JSFRAV
Publication Date
20240201
Document Type
Journal Article
Email Address
wzo4@cdc.gov
Fiscal Year
2024
NTIS Accession No.
NTIS Price
ISSN
0022-4375
NIOSH Division
DSR; NPPTL
Priority Area
Construction
Source Name
Journal of Safety Research
State
WV; PA; NM
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Page last reviewed: December 9, 2020
Content source: National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Education and Information Division