• Am. J. Ind. Med. · Apr 2015

    Non-reporting of work injuries and aspects of jobsite safety climate and behavioral-based safety elements among carpenters in Washington State.

    • Hester J Lipscomb, Ashley L Schoenfisch, and Wilfrid Cameron.
    • Division of Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Duke University Medical Center Durham, North Carolina.
    • Am. J. Ind. Med. 2015 Apr 1; 58 (4): 411-21.

    BackgroundDeclining work injury rates may reflect safer work conditions as well as under-reporting.MethodsUnion carpenters were invited to participate in a mailed, cross-sectional survey designed to capture information about injury reporting practices. Prevalence of non-reporting and fear of repercussions for reporting were compared across exposure to behavioral-based safety elements and three domains of the Nordic Safety Climate Questionnaire (NOSACQ-50).ResultsThe majority (>75%) of the 1,155 participants felt they could report work-related injuries to their supervisor without fear of retribution, and most felt that the majority of injuries on their jobsites got reported. However, nearly half indicated it was best not to report minor injuries, and felt pressures to use their private insurance for work injury care. The prevalence of non-reporting and fear of reporting increased markedly with poorer measures of management safety justice (NOSACQ-50).ConclusionsFormal and informal policies and practices on jobsites likely influence injury reporting.© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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