Literature DB >> 31235234

The Safety Climate Assessment Tool (S-CAT): A rubric-based approach to measuring construction safety climate.

Tahira M Probst1, Linda M Goldenhar2, Jesse L Byrd3, Eileen Betit2.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: This paper presents the development and validation of a new rubric-based Safety Climate Assessment Tool (S-CAT). The S-CAT gives companies the opportunity to use rubric descriptors, rather than traditional Likert scale responses, to self-assess their level of safety climate maturity and receive a composite score benchmarked against others in the S-CAT database.
METHOD: The S-CAT is composed of 37 separate indicators of 8 safety climate factors identified by construction industry subject matter experts. The eight factors have between three and six indicators each with its own rubric-based response-scale. The scales comprise descriptors for five levels of safety climate maturity ranging from "inattentive" to "exemplary." Nine hundred and eighty-five respondents working in the construction industry completed the S-CAT via our online safety climate website. We used company recordable incident rates (RIR) to assess the S-CAT's criterion-related validity.
RESULTS: Cronbach alphas for each factor ranged from 0.77 to 0.90 and a confirmatory factor analysis supported the hypothesized eight factor structure with a higher-order safety climate factor. Seven of the eight factor scores, as well as the overall S-CAT score, were significantly negatively correlated with RIR. Moreover, a relative weights analysis indicated that a weighted combination of the eight safety climate factors explained 27% of the variance in organizational RIR.
CONCLUSIONS: These findings provide evidence that the S-CAT is a reliable tool allowing construction companies to self-assess their safety climate along eight different factors. Moreover, the S-CAT was significantly associated with organizational injury rates. Practical applications: We discuss how companies can use the rubric descriptors to strengthen their safety management systems and improve their safety climate maturity.
Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd and National Safety Council. All rights reserved.

Keywords:  Construction; Rubric scale; Safety climate; Scale development and validation

Mesh:

Year:  2019        PMID: 31235234     DOI: 10.1016/j.jsr.2019.02.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Safety Res        ISSN: 0022-4375


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