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The use of questionnaires in safety culture research – an evaluation
Affiliation:1. School of Industrial Engineering and Management, Lappeenranta University of Technology, P.O. Box 20, 53810 Lappeenranta, Finland;2. Faculty of Process and Environmental Engineering, Lodz University of Technology, Wolczanska 213, 90-924 Lodz, Poland;1. Research Institute on Personnel Psychology, Organizational Development, and Quality of Working Life (IDOCAL), University of Valencia, Spain;2. Valencian Institute of Economic Research (IVIE), Spain;3. University of Bologna, Italy;1. Sapienza – University of Rome, Italy;2. Washington State University Vancouver, USA;1. Comissão Nacional de Energia Nuclear, Instituto de Engenharia Nuclear, Cidade Universitária, Ilha do Fundão, Rio de Janeiro CEP 21945-970, RJ, Brazil;2. COPPE/UFRJ, Laboratório de Lógica e Matemática Fuzzy (LabFuzzy), Programa de Engenharia de Produção, CEP 21.945-970 Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil;3. COPPE/UFRJ, Grupo de Ergonomia e Novas Tecnologias (GENTE), Programa de Engenharia de Produção, CEP 21.945-970, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
Abstract:Questionnaires have not been particularly successful in exposing the core of an organisational safety culture. This is clear both from the factors found and the relations between these and safety indicators. The factors primarily seem to denote an overall evaluation of management, which does not say much about cultural basic assumptions. In addition, methodology requires that levels of theory and measurement are properly recognised and distinguished. That is, measurements made at one level cannot be employed at other levels just like that unless certain conditions are met.Safety management has been described through nine separate processes that together encompass the safety management system (SMS) of an organisation. Policies developed at the organisational level shape the organisational context and working conditions of the group and individual levels and therefore also attitudes within the organisation. The questionnaires seem to expose only those attitudes that are shared throughout the whole of the organisation. The workforce could very well recognise the safety policies of higher management as concern for their well-being and the overall value attached to safety. Pictured this way, safety climate (attitudes) and safety culture are not separate entities but rather different approaches towards the same goal of determining the importance of safety within an organisation.
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