2018
DOI: 10.1007/s10869-018-9538-9
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Examining Attitudes, Norms, and Control Toward Safety Behaviors as Mediators in the Leadership-Safety Motivation Relationship

Abstract: Research on occupational safety has been on the rise in recent years, owing to the high rates of deaths and disabilities that occur in the workplace. Findings suggest that unsafe behaviors and work-related accidents and injuries can be reduced through increasing employee safety motivation. Additional research has recognized leadership as a source of employee safety motivation. However, most studies have empirically assessed safety motivation and its antecedents using a cross-sectional design. Therefore, the ai… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The literature supports the importance of safety climate, yet there remains an ongoing debate in the literature concerning the relative importance of factors characterizing positive safety climates (Halligan & Zecevic, 2011). Most authors agree that management and coworker commitment to safety practices are two factors that are critical to the employee safety experience (Christian et al, 2009;Cook et al, 2016;Hayes, Perandan, Smecko, & Trask, 1998;Huang et al, 2006;Sawhney & Cigularov, 2019). Our current study focused on these two factors of safety climate and their possible association with workrelated injuries and subsequent injury outcomes.…”
Section: Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…The literature supports the importance of safety climate, yet there remains an ongoing debate in the literature concerning the relative importance of factors characterizing positive safety climates (Halligan & Zecevic, 2011). Most authors agree that management and coworker commitment to safety practices are two factors that are critical to the employee safety experience (Christian et al, 2009;Cook et al, 2016;Hayes, Perandan, Smecko, & Trask, 1998;Huang et al, 2006;Sawhney & Cigularov, 2019). Our current study focused on these two factors of safety climate and their possible association with workrelated injuries and subsequent injury outcomes.…”
Section: Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…All items were associated to a 7-point Likert scale. Promotive safety voice was measured by four items taken from the Simard and Marchand scale [69] and the Hofmann et al safety initiative scale [21]. Preventive safety voice was measured by four items taken from the Hofmann et al [26] and Tucker and Turner [27] voice scales.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Preventive safety voice was measured by four items taken from the Hofmann et al [26] and Tucker and Turner [27] voice scales. Prohibitive safety voice was measured by three items taken from the whistleblowing scale developed by Hofmann et al [21] and one item from the voice scale used by Tucker et al [70]. Hostile safety voice was measured by four items adapted from the Maynes and Podsakoff scale [29].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A total of 5 items for safety coaching and safety concern with 6 items for safety monitoring were adapted and modified from T. C. Wu (2008). For safety behaviour, the 7 items were adapted from (Kao et al 2019), whilst 5 items of safety knowledge (Vinodkumar and Bhasi 2010) and 4 items of safety attitude (Sawhney and Cigularov 2019) were adapted and modified to suite the study settings. The details of questionnaire's items are presented in Appendix A.…”
Section: Research Instrumentmentioning
confidence: 99%