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Hazard Recognition Patterns Demonstrated by Construction Workers

Construction workers fail to recognize a large number of safety hazards. These unrecognized safety hazards can lead to unintended hazard exposure and tragic safety incidents. Unfortunately, traditional hazard recognition interventions (e.g., job hazard analyses and safety training) have been unable...

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Autores principales: Uddin, S M Jamil, Albert, Alex, Alsharef, Abdullah, Pandit, Bhavana, Patil, Yashwardhan, Nnaji, Chukwuma
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7663096/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33114347
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17217788
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author Uddin, S M Jamil
Albert, Alex
Alsharef, Abdullah
Pandit, Bhavana
Patil, Yashwardhan
Nnaji, Chukwuma
author_facet Uddin, S M Jamil
Albert, Alex
Alsharef, Abdullah
Pandit, Bhavana
Patil, Yashwardhan
Nnaji, Chukwuma
author_sort Uddin, S M Jamil
collection PubMed
description Construction workers fail to recognize a large number of safety hazards. These unrecognized safety hazards can lead to unintended hazard exposure and tragic safety incidents. Unfortunately, traditional hazard recognition interventions (e.g., job hazard analyses and safety training) have been unable to tackle the industry-wide problem of poor hazard recognition levels. In fact, emerging evidence has demonstrated that traditional hazard recognition interventions have been designed without a proper understanding of the challenges workers experience during hazard recognition efforts. Interventions and industry-wide efforts designed based on a more thorough understanding of these challenges can yield substantial benefits—including superior hazard recognition levels and lower injury rates. Towards achieving this goal, the current investigation focused on identifying hazard categories that workers are more proficient in recognizing and others that they are less proficient in recognizing (i.e., hazard recognition patterns). For the purpose of the current study, hazards were classified on the basis of the energy source per Haddon’s energy release theory (e.g., gravity, motion, electrical, chemical, etc.). As part of the study, 287 workers representing 57 construction workplaces in the United States were engaged in a hazard recognition activity. Apart from confirming previous research findings that workers fail to recognize a disproportionate number of safety hazards, the results demonstrate that the workers are more proficient in recognizing certain hazard types. More specifically, the workers on average recognized roughly 47% of the safety hazards in the gravity, electrical, motion, and temperature hazard categories while only recognizing less than 10% of the hazards in the pressure, chemical, and radiation hazard categories. These findings can inform the development of more robust interventions and industry-wide initiatives to tackle the issue of poor hazard recognition levels in the construction industry.
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spelling pubmed-76630962020-11-14 Hazard Recognition Patterns Demonstrated by Construction Workers Uddin, S M Jamil Albert, Alex Alsharef, Abdullah Pandit, Bhavana Patil, Yashwardhan Nnaji, Chukwuma Int J Environ Res Public Health Article Construction workers fail to recognize a large number of safety hazards. These unrecognized safety hazards can lead to unintended hazard exposure and tragic safety incidents. Unfortunately, traditional hazard recognition interventions (e.g., job hazard analyses and safety training) have been unable to tackle the industry-wide problem of poor hazard recognition levels. In fact, emerging evidence has demonstrated that traditional hazard recognition interventions have been designed without a proper understanding of the challenges workers experience during hazard recognition efforts. Interventions and industry-wide efforts designed based on a more thorough understanding of these challenges can yield substantial benefits—including superior hazard recognition levels and lower injury rates. Towards achieving this goal, the current investigation focused on identifying hazard categories that workers are more proficient in recognizing and others that they are less proficient in recognizing (i.e., hazard recognition patterns). For the purpose of the current study, hazards were classified on the basis of the energy source per Haddon’s energy release theory (e.g., gravity, motion, electrical, chemical, etc.). As part of the study, 287 workers representing 57 construction workplaces in the United States were engaged in a hazard recognition activity. Apart from confirming previous research findings that workers fail to recognize a disproportionate number of safety hazards, the results demonstrate that the workers are more proficient in recognizing certain hazard types. More specifically, the workers on average recognized roughly 47% of the safety hazards in the gravity, electrical, motion, and temperature hazard categories while only recognizing less than 10% of the hazards in the pressure, chemical, and radiation hazard categories. These findings can inform the development of more robust interventions and industry-wide initiatives to tackle the issue of poor hazard recognition levels in the construction industry. MDPI 2020-10-24 2020-11 /pmc/articles/PMC7663096/ /pubmed/33114347 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17217788 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Uddin, S M Jamil
Albert, Alex
Alsharef, Abdullah
Pandit, Bhavana
Patil, Yashwardhan
Nnaji, Chukwuma
Hazard Recognition Patterns Demonstrated by Construction Workers
title Hazard Recognition Patterns Demonstrated by Construction Workers
title_full Hazard Recognition Patterns Demonstrated by Construction Workers
title_fullStr Hazard Recognition Patterns Demonstrated by Construction Workers
title_full_unstemmed Hazard Recognition Patterns Demonstrated by Construction Workers
title_short Hazard Recognition Patterns Demonstrated by Construction Workers
title_sort hazard recognition patterns demonstrated by construction workers
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7663096/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33114347
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17217788
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