Abstract:
Data from a number of industrialized countries show that construction workers are 3 to 4 times more
likely than other workers to die from accidents at work. In the developing world, the risks associated
with construction work may be 3 to 6 times greater. Construction is one of the world’s biggest
industrial sectors, including the building, civil engineering, demolition and maintenance industries,
and in Oman it accounts for approximately 10% of the total GDP. Statistics indicate that a total of
723,243 residents including 91% foreigners were working in 100,000 construction organizations in
2014 and was having second larger rate of occupational injuries after manufacturing industry with an
estimated cost of 3,700,000 US$ per year. Construction workers are exposed to a wide variety of
hazards on the job, including dusts and vapours, asbestos, awkward working positions, heavy loads,
adverse weather conditions, work at heights, noise, vibration from tools, and therefore more closer to
occupational accidents. In recent years the awareness of the importance for safety performance of
organizational, managerial and social factors, has increased. Safety climate is an aspect of
organizational climate, and offers a route for safety management, complementing the often
predominant engineering approach. Safety climate investigations are more sensitive and proactive
bases for developing safety, rather than reactive information from accident rates and accident and
incident reports. Based on a thorough literature review, relevant safety climate dimensions including
(1) management safety priority, commitment and competence; (2) management safety empowerment;
(3) management safety justice; (4) workers’ safety commitment; (5) workers’ safety priority and risk
non-acceptance; (6) safety communication, learning, and trust in co-workers’ safety competence; and
(7) workers’ trust in the efficacy of safety systems, are identified and discussed. This paper further
describes how construction organizations in Oman can improve their safety performance by using and
assessing leading safety climate dimensions/ factors among their workers.
Citation:
Umar, T., & Wamuziri, S.C. (2016). Using safety climate as a tool for improvement of safety performance in construction organizations. In Y.G. Sandanayake, G.I. Karunasena & T. Ramachandra (Eds.), Greening environment, eco-innovations & entrepreneurship (pp. 545-554). Ceylon Institute of Builders. https://ciobwcs.com/downloads/WCS2016-Proceedings.pdf