Risks of a Lifetime in Construction. Part II: Chronic Occupational Diseases

The second study which looked at the lifetime risk of chronic occupational diseases amongst construction workers. This focused on dust-related occupational lung disease, COPD & hearing loss. Methods Estimates of lifetime risk were performed based on 12,742 radiographic evaluations, 12,679 spirometry tests, and 11,793 audiograms. Control groups from the same dataset were used for comparison.… Continue reading Risks of a Lifetime in Construction. Part II: Chronic Occupational Diseases

Risks of a Lifetime in Construction Part I: Traumatic Injuries

Part 1 of 2 studies that looked at mortality (this study) and morbidity (tomorrow) from a lifetime in construction work. Data from the US between 2003-2007 was used to estimate the lifetime risk for fatal & nonfatal injuries per 100 FTE construction workers for a working lifetime of 45 years. Results: Based on the results,… Continue reading Risks of a Lifetime in Construction Part I: Traumatic Injuries

Upward Voice: Participative Decision Making, Trust in Leadership and Safety Climate Matter

This explored the relationship between Participative decision making (PDM) and Upward Voice (UV), & how trust in leadership and nuclear safety climate affect the relationship. UV facilitates listening to employees` judgements, worries or concerns of problems before they cascade & emphasises employee contribution to safety, rather than seeing them as sources of failure. PDM refers… Continue reading Upward Voice: Participative Decision Making, Trust in Leadership and Safety Climate Matter

How effective is drug testing as a workplace safety strategy – A systematic review of the evidence

This systematically reviewed the evidence (as of Jan 2013) concerning the effectiveness of workplace drug testing (WDT) as a workplace safety strategy. Authors were interested in answering two questions: 1. Does WDT reduce occupational accident injury rates? 2. Does WDT deter employee drug use? Of the 285 studies identified, only 23 met inclusion requirements: 6… Continue reading How effective is drug testing as a workplace safety strategy – A systematic review of the evidence

Construction accidents in Australia: Evaluating the true costs

This may be of interest to those after financial costs of construction accidents in Australia. This paper sought to expand existing research by providing a methodology for calculating more realistic costs. Data was based on work from Safe Work Australia and the Australian Bureau of Statistics. The authors say that employers “commonly underestimate the true… Continue reading Construction accidents in Australia: Evaluating the true costs

Pressure to produce = pressure to reduce accident reporting?

This looked at how production pressure was related to workers experiencing more accidents & how often they reported them. It surveyed 212 copper mining workers in the US. Results found that around 80% of all experienced accidents as indicated by workers went unreported (this is supported by other research from the authors). Production pressure, as… Continue reading Pressure to produce = pressure to reduce accident reporting?