首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


Perspectives on safety: The impact of group membership,work factors and trust on safety performance in UK and Norwegian drilling company employees
Authors:JE Tharaldsen  KJ Mearns  K Knudsen
Institution:1. University of Stavanger, Faculty of Social Science, Societal Risk and Safety, Norway and International Research Institute of Stavanger, Work Life and Business Development, Professor Olav Hanssensvei 15, 4017 Stavanger, Norway;2. University of Aberdeen, Industrial Psychology Research Centre, Scotland, United Kingdom;3. University of Stavanger, Faculty of Social Science, Change Management, Norway
Abstract:This study is anchored in a contractor company providing well services for platform drilling on the Norwegian (NCS) and the UK Continental Shelves (UKCS). The research project has as its point of departure the potential influences of group level characteristics, structural work factors, trust, and safety behaviour on safety performance. Do perceptions and performance differ across Shelves? Are “nomadic” groups or employees that have more unpredictable shift rotations more exposed to accidents than others? Is high trust and sound safety behaviour enhancing good safety performance? The results are based on questionnaire data from two samples of personnel distributed across three installations on the UKCS and nine on the NCS with a response rate of 67%: N = 170 (UKCS) and N = 621 (NCS). In addition, two focus group interviews were held in each country, with 15 participants in each. The results show that our model makes sense. Shelf shows a significant influence on safety performance in all but the final stage in our five-step logistic regression model, indicating that the effect may be mediated by safety compliance and safety participation. Installations and different work teams have different exposure and structural work factors matter significantly. Somewhat counter-intuitively, employees who have a “nomadic” status and who hold the least regular shift rotations appear to have a lower risk of being involved in incidents. High trust in workmates buffers against incident involvement and the same applies for high safety compliance. The results, challenges and implications for research and safety practitioners are discussed.
Keywords:
本文献已被 ScienceDirect 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号