Assessment of health and safety culture maturity in the construction industry in developing economies: A case of Ghanaian construction industry

被引:28
|
作者
Williams, Justice [1 ]
Fugar, Frank [1 ]
Adinyira, Emmanuel [1 ]
机构
[1] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Construct Technol & Management, Kumasi, Ghana
关键词
Health and safety culture; Developing countries; Safety maturity ladder; Construction industry; Safety climate; Construction project management; Building technology; Construction management; Safety management; CLIMATE; ISSUES;
D O I
10.1108/JEDT-06-2019-0151
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
Purpose The degree to which accidents happen or are prevented in any organisation is the function of both the health and safety culture and the safety culture maturity level of the organisation. Therefore, this paper aims to determine the state of health and safety culture in the construction industry in developing economies and to assess their category on the safety maturity ladder using the Ghanaian construction industry as an example. This is to help construction companies in developing countries become conscious of the state of health and safety in the industry so they can be motivated to improve along the ladder. Design/methodology/approach In total, 250 contractors made up of 155 building contractor,s and 95 road contractors took part in the survey. The sample size was determined by Yamane's (1967) formula with stratified simple random sampling technique adopted in selecting the companies in the survey. This paper also uses (Guttman Scale) Scalogram analysis to measure the state of health and safety culture in the Ghanaian construction industry. Findings The results show that health and safety culture of the Ghanaian construction industry is at the first level, the pathological stage. Even though Ghanaian contractors have health and safety policies and codes of conduct in place, safety is not seen as a key business risk. Consequently, management and most frontline staff do not emphasise the importance of integration of safety measures in the various activities on the site. Thus, safety is not seen as unavoidable and a part of the construction activity. Practical implications The findings of this study inform state authorities, consultants and contractors of areas that they need to focus more on improving health and safety culture in developing countries. This would go a long way in protecting construction workers in the industry. Originality/value This study, to the best of the authors' current knowledge, is the first of its kind in the Ghanaian construction industry. The study brings to the fore the actual state of health and safety in the construction industry in developing countries such as Ghana. The value of the findings lies in the fact that it will provide the motivation for construction companies in developing countries to develop a commitment to safety, and to provide appropriate and effective safety improvement techniques to progress to the subsequent stages of the safety culture maturity ladder.
引用
收藏
页码:865 / 881
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Critical Determinants of the Competitiveness of the Ghanaian Construction Industry
    Osman, Abdul Manaan
    Sheng, Liu Yi
    JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, 2023, 28 (01) : 267 - 291
  • [32] Developing a knowledge-based safety culture instrument for construction industry Reliability and validity assessment in Indian context
    Deepak, M. D.
    Mahesh, Gangadhar
    ENGINEERING CONSTRUCTION AND ARCHITECTURAL MANAGEMENT, 2019, 26 (11) : 2597 - 2613
  • [33] Fire safety attitudes and management culture in the construction industry
    Puybaraud, MC
    Hinks, J
    Barham, R
    IMPLEMENTATION OF SAFETY AND HEALTH ON CONSTRUCTION SITES, 1999, : 131 - 138
  • [34] A model for establishing resilience safety culture for the construction industry
    Yao, Haihui
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND ERGONOMICS, 2023, 29 (02) : 931 - 940
  • [35] Nourishing safety culture in the construction industry of Hong Kong
    Tam, CM
    Chan, APC
    IMPLEMENTATION OF SAFETY AND HEALTH ON CONSTRUCTION SITES, 1999, : 117 - 122
  • [36] Impacts of accidents and hazards on the Ghanaian construction industry
    Osei-Asibey, Dickson
    Ayarkwa, Joshua
    Acheampong, Alex
    Adinyira, Emmanuel
    Amoah, Peter
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CONSTRUCTION MANAGEMENT, 2023, 23 (04) : 708 - 717
  • [37] Exploring the multidimensional challenges in integrating Design for Safety (DfS) in the Ghanaian construction industry
    Acheampong, Alex
    Adjei, Elvis Konadu
    Adade-Boateng, Anita Odame
    Kissi, Ernest
    Manu, Patrick
    Atibila, David Wireko
    JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING DESIGN AND TECHNOLOGY, 2024,
  • [38] Construction disability management maturity model: case study within the Manitoban construction industry
    Quaigrain, Rhoda Ansah
    Issa, Mohamed Hassan
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WORKPLACE HEALTH MANAGEMENT, 2021, 14 (03) : 274 - 291
  • [39] ISSUES OF HEALTH AND SAFETY IN THE IRISH CONSTRUCTION-INDUSTRY
    OREILLY, MG
    OLOMOLAIYE, PO
    TYLER, AH
    ORR, T
    BUILDING RESEARCH AND INFORMATION, 1994, 22 (05): : 247 - 251
  • [40] Occupational safety and health management in the construction industry: a review
    Jaafar, Mohd Hafiidz
    Arifin, Kadir
    Aiyub, Kadaruddin
    Razman, Muhammad Rizal
    Ishak, Muhammad Izzuddin Syakir
    Samsurijan, Mohamad Shaharudin
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND ERGONOMICS, 2018, 24 (04) : 493 - 506