The development of a conceptual model and self-reported measure of occupational health and safety vulnerability.

Injuries at work have a substantial economic and societal burden. Often groups of labour market participants, such as young workers, recent immigrants or temporary workers are labelled as being "vulnerable" to work injury. However, defining groups in this way does little to enable a better understanding of the broader factors that place workers at increased risk of injury. In this paper we describe the development of a new measure of occupational health and safety (OH&S) vulnerability. The purpose of this measure was to allow the identification of workers at increased risk of injury, and to enable the monitoring and surveillance of OH&S vulnerability in the labour market. The development included a systematic literature search, and conducting focus groups with a variety of stakeholder groups, to generate a pool of potential items, followed by a series of steps to reduce these items to a more manageable pool. The final measure is 29-item instrument that captures information on four related, but distinct dimensions, thought to be associated with increased risk of injury. These dimensions are: hazard exposure; occupational health and safety policies and procedures; OH&S awareness; and empowerment to participate in injury prevention. In a large sample of employees in Ontario and British Columbia the final measure displayed minimal missing responses, reasonably good distributions across response categories, and strong factorial validity. This new measure of OH&S vulnerability can identify workers who are at risk of injury and provide information on the dimensions of work that may increase this risk. This measurement could be undertaken at one point in time to compare vulnerability across groups, or be undertaken at multiple time points to examine changes in dimensions of OH&S vulnerability, for example, in response to a primary prevention intervention.

[1]  Diane Hughes,et al.  Using focus groups to facilitate culturally anchored research , 1993 .

[2]  J. Dul,et al.  Dutch Musculoskeletal Questionnaire: description and basic qualities , 2001, Ergonomics.

[3]  Nick Turner,et al.  Young worker safety behaviors: development and validation of measures. , 2011, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[4]  M N Vinodkumar,et al.  Safety management practices and safety behaviour: assessing the mediating role of safety knowledge and motivation. , 2010, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[5]  Chin-Shan Lu,et al.  Safety leadership and safety behavior in container terminal operations , 2010 .

[6]  David L Streiner,et al.  Being Inconsistent About Consistency: When Coefficient Alpha Does and Doesn't Matter , 2003, Journal of personality assessment.

[7]  Emile Tompa,et al.  The relationship between job tenure and work disability absence among adults: a prospective study. , 2008, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[8]  F. Breslin,et al.  Trial by fire: a multivariate examination of the relation between job tenure and work injuries , 2005, Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

[9]  Chin-Shan Lu,et al.  The effects of safety climate on vessel accidents in the container shipping context. , 2008, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[10]  J. Larson The MOS 36-Item Short form Health Survey , 1997, Evaluation & the health professions.

[11]  A. Lamontagne,et al.  A hazardous substance exposure prevention rating method for intervention needs assessment and effectiveness evaluation: the Small Business Exposure Index , 2009, Environmental health : a global access science source.

[12]  Lucie Laflamme,et al.  A better understanding of occupational accident genesis to improve safety in the workplace , 1990 .

[13]  Lise Desmarais,et al.  A preliminary validation of a new measure of occupational health and safety. , 2006, Journal of safety research.

[14]  Nick Turner,et al.  Safety voice among young workers facing dangerous work: A policy-capturing approach , 2014 .

[15]  D. Weil Rethinking the Regulation of Vulnerable Work in the USA: A Sector-based Approach , 2009 .

[16]  Stephanie Premji,et al.  Education-to-job mismatch and the risk of work injury , 2012, Injury Prevention.

[17]  P. Smith,et al.  Comparing the risk of work-related injuries between immigrants to Canada and Canadian-born labour market participants , 2008, Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

[18]  C. Terwee,et al.  Development of a methodological PubMed search filter for finding studies on measurement properties of measurement instruments , 2009, Quality of Life Research.

[19]  Peter M. Smith,et al.  A Commentary on the Unique Developmental Considerations of Youth: Integrating the Teenage Cortex into the Occupational Health and Safety Context , 2010, International journal of occupational and environmental health.

[20]  Lisa Brosseau,et al.  A comparison of the perceptions and beliefs of workers and owners with regard to workplace safety in small metal fabrication businesses. , 2007, American journal of industrial medicine.

[21]  Arlene Walker,et al.  The development and validation of a psychological contract of safety scale. , 2010, Journal of safety research.

[22]  David C Christiani,et al.  An exposure prevention rating method for intervention needs assessment and effectiveness evaluation. , 2003, Applied occupational and environmental hygiene.

[23]  Michael Quinlan,et al.  The Implications of Labour Market Restructuring in Industrialized Societies for Occupational Health and Safety , 1999 .

[24]  Gordon S. Smith,et al.  Socioeconomic inequalities in injury: critical issues in design and analysis. , 2002, Annual review of public health.

[25]  B Kirshner,et al.  A methodological framework for assessing health indices. , 1985, Journal of chronic diseases.

[26]  C. Runyan,et al.  Epidemiology and prevention of injuries among adolescent workers in the United States. , 2000, Annual review of public health.

[27]  J. Sim,et al.  The kappa statistic in reliability studies: use, interpretation, and sample size requirements. , 2005, Physical therapy.

[28]  I. Ajzen Perceived behavioral control, self-efficacy, locus of control, and the theory of planned behavior. , 2002 .

[29]  D. Streiner,et al.  Health measurement scales , 2008 .

[30]  I. Ajzen The theory of planned behavior , 1991 .

[31]  Beatriz Fernández-Muñiz,et al.  Safety culture: analysis of the causal relationships between its key dimensions. , 2007, Journal of safety research.

[32]  M. Lesch,et al.  A reliability study of potential risk factors for acute traumatic occupational hand injuries. , 2002, American journal of industrial medicine.

[33]  E. Viikari-Juntura,et al.  The distribution and co-occurrence of physical and psychosocial risk factors for musculoskeletal disorders in a general working population , 2011, International archives of occupational and environmental health.

[34]  G. Guyatt,et al.  Measuring disease-specific quality of life in clinical trials. , 1986, CMAJ : Canadian Medical Association journal = journal de l'Association medicale canadienne.

[35]  E. Shin,et al.  Inequalities in nonfatal work injury: the significance of race, human capital, and occupations. , 2003, Social science & medicine.

[36]  M. Bouvy,et al.  Evaluation of the Pharmacy Safety Climate Questionnaire in European community pharmacies. , 2012, International journal for quality in health care : journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care.

[37]  D. Streiner,et al.  Health Measurement Scales: A practical guide to thier development and use , 1989 .

[38]  R. Lilley,et al.  Surveillance of working conditions and the work environment: development of a national hazard surveillance tool in New Zealand , 2010, International Journal of Public Health.

[39]  A Neal,et al.  Perceptions of safety at work: a framework for linking safety climate to safety performance, knowledge, and motivation. , 2000, Journal of occupational health psychology.

[40]  Christina Wiktorin,et al.  Validity of a Self-Administered Questionnaire for Assessing Physical Work Loads in a General Population , 2002, Journal of occupational and environmental medicine.

[41]  J. Prochaska,et al.  Transtheoretical therapy: Toward a more integrative model of change. , 1982 .

[42]  J. Morse,et al.  Qualitative Research Methods for Health Professionals , 1995 .

[43]  R. Eisenberger,et al.  Perceived organizational support. , 1986 .

[44]  R Andersson,et al.  On the prevention of accidents and injuries. A comparative analysis of conceptual frameworks. , 1995, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[45]  Gordon S Smith,et al.  Using Process Control Concepts to Model Conditions Required for Sudden-Onset Occupational Injuries , 2007, Journal of occupational and environmental hygiene.

[46]  Inés Tomás,et al.  Linking empowering leadership to safety participation in nuclear power plants: a structural equation model. , 2012, Journal of safety research.

[47]  F Curtis Breslin,et al.  Age-related differences in work injuries: a multivariate, population-based study. , 2005, American journal of industrial medicine.

[48]  J. Fleiss,et al.  Intraclass correlations: uses in assessing rater reliability. , 1979, Psychological bulletin.

[49]  P. Johnson,et al.  Bias in Telephone Surveys That do not Sample Cell Phones: Uses and Limits of Poststratification Adjustments , 2011, Medical care.

[50]  Shail J. Butani,et al.  Relative risk analysis of injuries in coal mining by age and experience at present company , 1988 .

[51]  N. Kawakami,et al.  Measuring Workplace Bullying: Reliability and Validity of the Japanese Version of the Negative Acts Questionnaire , 2010, Journal of occupational health.

[52]  Z. M. Wang,et al.  Safety Climate Measurement at Workplace in China: A Validity and Reliability Assessment , 2008 .

[53]  R. Habeck,et al.  Successful Employer Strategies for Preventing and Managing Disability. , 1998 .

[54]  Robert B. Keller,et al.  Measuring the Impact of Organizational Behaviors on Work Disability Prevention and Management , 2000, Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation.

[55]  J. Katz,et al.  Management and Employee Agreement on Reports of Organizational Policies and Practices Important in Return to Work Following Carpal Tunnel Surgery , 2005, Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation.

[56]  Duane T. Wegener,et al.  Evaluating the use of exploratory factor analysis in psychological research. , 1999 .

[57]  Jennifer Hayes,et al.  Patient Safety Climate in 92 US Hospitals: Differences by Work Area and Discipline , 2009, Medical care.

[58]  Chin-Shan Lu,et al.  Safety climate and safety behavior in the passenger ferry context. , 2011, Accident; analysis and prevention.

[59]  D. Streiner,et al.  Selecting the items , 2008 .

[60]  S. Walter,et al.  Sample size and optimal designs for reliability studies. , 1998, Statistics in medicine.