Making workplaces safer: The influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviour

Current work health and safety practices focus predominately on fostering a safety climate to promote safety behaviours and reduce workplace accidents. Despite the importance of safety climates in accident prevention, recent research has demonstrated that individual factors can also predict work saf...

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Main Authors: Michelle Ann Toppazzini, Karl Kilian Konrad Wiener
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-06-01
Series:Heliyon
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844017308952
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spelling doaj-6f065d163bee4ae79d1bdb976689fea92020-11-25T02:14:04ZengElsevierHeliyon2405-84402017-06-0136e00334Making workplaces safer: The influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviourMichelle Ann Toppazzini0Karl Kilian Konrad Wiener1Wavelengths Allied Health, 260 Soldiers Point Road, Salamander Bay, NSW, 2317, AustraliaCharles Sturt University, Locked Bag 588, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2678, Australia; Corresponding author.Current work health and safety practices focus predominately on fostering a safety climate to promote safety behaviours and reduce workplace accidents. Despite the importance of safety climates in accident prevention, recent research has demonstrated that individual factors can also predict work safety behaviour. This study considered the importance of organisational climate together with individual characteristics including differences in personality, impulsiveness, and perceptions of safety within the workplace on safety behaviour. 203 participants consisting of 67 males and 136 females aged 18 to 71 years, completed an online questionnaire. Results revealed that safety behaviour was directly related to safety climate, and conscientiousness. In contrast, neuroticism, and impulsiveness were not significantly related to safety behaviour. The present study findings support previous findings in the literature regarding the importance of safety climate as well as the personality trait of conscientiousness in applying safety behaviours. However, the present study findings did not support previous research in relation to the personality trait of high neuroticism resulting in decreased safety behaviour, nor did not confirm an inverse relationship between high impulsivity and low safety behaviour as theoretical models would suggest. This new finding may warrant further research into the precursors for safety behaviour.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844017308952PsychologySociologyIndustry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michelle Ann Toppazzini
Karl Kilian Konrad Wiener
spellingShingle Michelle Ann Toppazzini
Karl Kilian Konrad Wiener
Making workplaces safer: The influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviour
Heliyon
Psychology
Sociology
Industry
author_facet Michelle Ann Toppazzini
Karl Kilian Konrad Wiener
author_sort Michelle Ann Toppazzini
title Making workplaces safer: The influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviour
title_short Making workplaces safer: The influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviour
title_full Making workplaces safer: The influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviour
title_fullStr Making workplaces safer: The influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviour
title_full_unstemmed Making workplaces safer: The influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviour
title_sort making workplaces safer: the influence of organisational climate and individual differences on safety behaviour
publisher Elsevier
series Heliyon
issn 2405-8440
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Current work health and safety practices focus predominately on fostering a safety climate to promote safety behaviours and reduce workplace accidents. Despite the importance of safety climates in accident prevention, recent research has demonstrated that individual factors can also predict work safety behaviour. This study considered the importance of organisational climate together with individual characteristics including differences in personality, impulsiveness, and perceptions of safety within the workplace on safety behaviour. 203 participants consisting of 67 males and 136 females aged 18 to 71 years, completed an online questionnaire. Results revealed that safety behaviour was directly related to safety climate, and conscientiousness. In contrast, neuroticism, and impulsiveness were not significantly related to safety behaviour. The present study findings support previous findings in the literature regarding the importance of safety climate as well as the personality trait of conscientiousness in applying safety behaviours. However, the present study findings did not support previous research in relation to the personality trait of high neuroticism resulting in decreased safety behaviour, nor did not confirm an inverse relationship between high impulsivity and low safety behaviour as theoretical models would suggest. This new finding may warrant further research into the precursors for safety behaviour.
topic Psychology
Sociology
Industry
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2405844017308952
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