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Issue title: Occupational Ergonomics and Safety, Part 1
Subtitle:
Guest editors: Pedro Arezes
Article type: Research Article
Authors: Rodrigues, Matilde A.a; b; * | Arezes, Pedro M.b | Leão, Celina P.b
Affiliations: [a] Department of Environmental Health, Research Centre on Environment and Health, Allied Health Sciences School of Polytechnic Institute of Porto, Vila Nova de Gaia, Portugal | [b] R&D Centro Algoritmi, Engineering School, University of Minho, Guimarães, Portugal
Correspondence: [*] Corresponding author: M.A. Rodrigues, Rua Valente Perfeito, n°322, 4400-330 Vila Nova de Gaia, Portugal. Tel.: +351 22 206 10 00; Fax: +351 22 206 10 01; E-mail:mar@estsp.ipp.pt
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Furniture companies can analyze their safety status using quantitative measures. However, the data needed are not always available and the number of accidents is under-reported. Safety climate scales may be an alternative. However, there are no validated Portuguese scales that account for the specific attributes of the furniture sector. OBJECTIVE: The current study aims to develop and validate an instrument that uses a multilevel structure to measure the safety climate of the Portuguese furniture industry. METHODS: The Safety Climate in Wood Industries (SCWI) model was developed and applied to the safety climate analysis using three different scales: organizational, group and individual. A multilevel exploratory factor analysis was performed to analyze the factorial structure. The studied companies' safety conditions were also analyzed. RESULTS: Different factorial structures were found between and within levels. In general, the results show the presence of a group-level safety climate. The scores of safety climates are directly and positively related to companies' safety conditions; the organizational scale is the one that best reflects the actual safety conditions. CONCLUSIONS: The SCWI instrument allows for the identification of different safety climates in groups that comprise the same furniture company and it seems to reflect those groups' safety conditions. The study also demonstrates the need for a multilevel analysis of the studied instrument.
Keywords: Furniture, multilevel, safety climate, safety conditions
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-152010
Journal: Work, vol. 51, no. 3, pp. 557-570, 2015
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