Work Pressure and Safety Behaviors among Health Workers in Ghana: The Moderating Role of Management Commitment to Safety

Background: safety and healthy working environment has received numerous research attention over the years. Majority of these researches seem to have been conducted in the construction industry, with little attention in the health sector. Nonetheless, there are couple of studies conducted in Africa...

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Main Authors: Kwesi Amponsah-Tawaih, Michael Appiah Adu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-12-01
Series:Safety and Health at Work
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791116300166
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spelling doaj-92cd9e86dc8740fcb4af12e8e947c0692020-11-24T22:20:10ZengElsevierSafety and Health at Work2093-79112016-12-017434034610.1016/j.shaw.2016.05.001Work Pressure and Safety Behaviors among Health Workers in Ghana: The Moderating Role of Management Commitment to SafetyKwesi Amponsah-TawaihMichael Appiah AduBackground: safety and healthy working environment has received numerous research attention over the years. Majority of these researches seem to have been conducted in the construction industry, with little attention in the health sector. Nonetheless, there are couple of studies conducted in Africa that suggest pressure in hospitals. Therefore the aim of the study was to examine how pressure influence safety behavior in the hospitals. With reference to the relevance of safety behavior in primary health care delivery, there was the need for the study. Method: Data was obtained from 422 public hospital employees. Respondents were assured that all information would be kept confidential to increase the response rate and acquire more accurate information. Collection of questionnaires from participants took four weeks (20 working days), after which the data was analyzed. Results: The result of the study showed that work pressure correlated negatively with safety behavior. General safety climate significantly correlated positively with safety behavior and negatively with work pressure, although the effect size for the latter was smaller. Hierarchical regression analysis showed management commitment to safety to moderate the relationship between work pressure and safety behavior. Conclusion: When employees perceive safety communication, safety systems and training to be positive, they seem to comply with safety rules and procedures than voluntarily participate in safety activities.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791116300166Ghanahealth care workersmanagement commitment to safetysafety behaviorswork pressure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kwesi Amponsah-Tawaih
Michael Appiah Adu
spellingShingle Kwesi Amponsah-Tawaih
Michael Appiah Adu
Work Pressure and Safety Behaviors among Health Workers in Ghana: The Moderating Role of Management Commitment to Safety
Safety and Health at Work
Ghana
health care workers
management commitment to safety
safety behaviors
work pressure
author_facet Kwesi Amponsah-Tawaih
Michael Appiah Adu
author_sort Kwesi Amponsah-Tawaih
title Work Pressure and Safety Behaviors among Health Workers in Ghana: The Moderating Role of Management Commitment to Safety
title_short Work Pressure and Safety Behaviors among Health Workers in Ghana: The Moderating Role of Management Commitment to Safety
title_full Work Pressure and Safety Behaviors among Health Workers in Ghana: The Moderating Role of Management Commitment to Safety
title_fullStr Work Pressure and Safety Behaviors among Health Workers in Ghana: The Moderating Role of Management Commitment to Safety
title_full_unstemmed Work Pressure and Safety Behaviors among Health Workers in Ghana: The Moderating Role of Management Commitment to Safety
title_sort work pressure and safety behaviors among health workers in ghana: the moderating role of management commitment to safety
publisher Elsevier
series Safety and Health at Work
issn 2093-7911
publishDate 2016-12-01
description Background: safety and healthy working environment has received numerous research attention over the years. Majority of these researches seem to have been conducted in the construction industry, with little attention in the health sector. Nonetheless, there are couple of studies conducted in Africa that suggest pressure in hospitals. Therefore the aim of the study was to examine how pressure influence safety behavior in the hospitals. With reference to the relevance of safety behavior in primary health care delivery, there was the need for the study. Method: Data was obtained from 422 public hospital employees. Respondents were assured that all information would be kept confidential to increase the response rate and acquire more accurate information. Collection of questionnaires from participants took four weeks (20 working days), after which the data was analyzed. Results: The result of the study showed that work pressure correlated negatively with safety behavior. General safety climate significantly correlated positively with safety behavior and negatively with work pressure, although the effect size for the latter was smaller. Hierarchical regression analysis showed management commitment to safety to moderate the relationship between work pressure and safety behavior. Conclusion: When employees perceive safety communication, safety systems and training to be positive, they seem to comply with safety rules and procedures than voluntarily participate in safety activities.
topic Ghana
health care workers
management commitment to safety
safety behaviors
work pressure
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2093791116300166
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