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EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY

Year 2016, Volume: 8 Issue: 2, 106 - 121, 01.12.2016

Abstract

The inability to follow occupational health and safety standards typically results in accidents that place severe financial burdens on both employees as well as organisations. The aim of this study is to explore the perceptions of employees in the steel industry towards occupational health and safety standards in the steel industry in South Africa. A survey was conducted in which a structured questionnaire was distributed to a purposive sample of 165 employees employed by a large steel processing company in Gauteng Province. The collected data were analysed using SPSS (Version 22.0). A combination of descriptive statistics and analysis of mean scores was applied to meet the aim of the study. The results reveal that employees in the steel industry perceived that occupational health and safety standards were satisfactory in all seven occupational health and safety dimensions considered in this study. These are (1) information and training, (2) health and safety awareness, (3) employee behaviour (4) role of the supervisor, (5) health and safety reporting mechanisms, (6) workplace inspection, and (7) workplace environment. Among these dimensions, safety awareness emerged as the most important dimension to employees. The results may be utilised by managers in the steel industry to identify and direct their attention to the key occupational health and safety factors in their different contexts

References

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Year 2016, Volume: 8 Issue: 2, 106 - 121, 01.12.2016

Abstract

References

  • Ali, H., Abdullah, N.A.C. & Subramaniam, C. 2009. Management practice in safety culture and its influence on workplace injury: An industrial Study in Malaysia, Vol. 18, No. 5, pp. 470-477.
  • Bosak, J., Coetsee, W.J. & Cullinane, S.J. 2013. Safety climate dimensions as predictors of risk behaviour. Accident Analysis and Prevention Vol. 55, pp. 256
  • Cantor, D.E. 2008. Workplace safety in the supply chain: review of the literature and call for research. International Journal of Logistics Management, Vol. 1, No. , pp. 65-83.
  • Capriotti, P. 2007. Risk communication strategies in chemical industry in Spain:
  • An examination of the web content of companies on issues related to chemical risk. Journal of Communication Management, Vol. 2, No. 11, pp. 150-169. Clough, P. & Nutbrown, C. 2012. A student’s guide to methodology. 3rd ed.
  • London: Sage Publication. Department of Labour 2008. Industrial structures and skills in the metals beneficiation sector of South Africa. Available at: documents/Metals%20Benification_DoL_Report.pdf. Accessed: 8/09/2015. http://www.labour.gov.za/DOL/downloads/documents/research
  • Edington, D.W. & Schultz, A.B. 2008. The Total Value of Health. International
  • Journal of Workplace Health Management, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 8-19. Edwards, J.R.D., Davey, J. & Armstrong, K.A. 2014. Profiling contextual factors, which influence safety in heavy vehicle industries. Accident Analysis and Prevention, Vol 73, pp. 340-350.
  • Feinberg, F.M., Kinnear, T.C. & Taylor, J.R. 2013. Modern Marketing Research
  • Concepts, Methods and Cases. 2 nd ed. Cengage Learning. United States. Finnemore, M. & Van Rensburg, R. 2002. Contemporary Labour Relations. 2nd ed. Durban: Lexis Nexis. Butterworth.
  • Gagno, E., Guido, J.L., Masi, D. & Jacinto, C. 2013. Economic evaluation of
  • OHS and its way to SMEs: A constructive review. Safety Science, Vol. 53, pp. 152. Germiniani, F. & Smallwood, J. 2008. A critical review of the effectiveness of the Department of Labour (DoL) Occupational Health and Safety (OH&S).
  • Inspectorate in Relation to the Construction Industry in South Africa, Vol. 15, No. , pp. 5-28. Govindjee, A. 2012. The role of occupational health and safety in sustaining human capital. 25th Annual Labour Law Conference. Sandton Convention Centre.
  • Gyeke, S.A., Salminen, S. & Ojajarvi, A. 2012. A theoretical model to ascertain determinants of occupational accidents among Ghanaian industrial workers.
  • Industrial Ergonomics, Vol. 42, pp. 233-240. Huess-Hedlund, F. 2013. Recorded fatal and permanent disability injuries in
  • South African manufacturing industry- overview, analysis, and reflection. Safety Science, Vol. 55, pp. 149-159. Kinoti, M.K. 2010. Association between injuries and occupational exposures in
  • South Africa: an epidemiological study at the population level. Master’s thesis. In Epidemiology and biostatistics. Johannesburg: University of Johannesburg. Kopel, S. 2009. Guide to Business Law. Cape Town: Oxford University Press.
  • Matthew, H. 2008. Contractors to be charged for Sasol blast. Available at http://www.engineeringnews.co.za/article/contractors-to-be-charged-for-2004- sasol-blast-2008-01-30. Accessed: 1/06/2015.
  • Mearns, K., Hope, L., Ford, M.T. & Tetrick, L. E. 2009. Investment in workforce health: Exploring the implications for workforce safety climate and commitment.
  • Accident Analysis & Preventions, Vol. 42, pp. 1445-1454.
  • Nel, P. Kirsten, M.S., Swanepoel, B.J., Erasmus, B.J. & Poisat. P. 2008. South
  • African employment relations theory and practice .6 Publishers. th ed. Pretoria: Van Schaik Nunez, I. & Villanueva, M. 2011. Safety capital: the management of organisational knowledge on occupational health and safety. Journal of
  • Workplace Learning, Vol. 1, No. 23, pp. 56-71. Parboteech, F.P. & Kapp, E.A. 2008. Ethical climate and workplace safety behaviour: An empirical investigation. Journal of Business Ethics, Vol. 80, No. 4, pp 515-529.
  • Pillay. K.R. 2014. The costs of construction accidents. Construction management and quantity surveying. Master’s dissertation. Bellville: Cape Peninsula
  • University of Technology. Pollitt, D. 2011. Corus forges new approaches to safety and health. Human
  • Resources Management International Digests, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 7-9. Ramotlhodi, N. 2014. 2014 Health and Safety Announcement. advocate-ngoako-ramatlhodi-announcement-2014-health-and-safety. Accessed /06/2015. Statistics http://www.gov.za/statement-minister-mineral-resources
  • Rautenbach. I.M. & Malherbe. E.F.J. 2009. Constitutional law. 5th ed. Durban: Lexis Nexis.
  • Reid, A., Lenguerrand, E., Santos, I., Read, U., Lamontagne, A.D., Fritchi, L. & Harding, S. 2014. Taking risks and survival jobs: foreign-born workers and work- related injuries in Australia. Safety Science, Vol. 70, pp. 378-386.
  • Shalini, R. T. 2009. Economic cost of occupational accidents: evidence form a small island economy. Safety Science, Vol. 47, pp. 973-979.
  • Sibanyoni, M. 2015. Town steels itself for tough times ahead. Sowetan, p.6, 10 September.
  • Sloane, P. Latreille, P. & O’Leary, N. 2013. Modern labour economics. New York: Routledge.
  • Teddie, C. & Tashakkori, A. 2009. Foundations of mixed methods research.
  • Integrating quantitative and qualitative approaches in the social and behavioural sciences. California: Sage Publishers. Venter, R., Levy, A., Holtzhausen, M., Conradie, M., Bendeman, H. & Dworzanowski-Venter, B. 2011. 4 ed. Labour Relations in South Africa. Cape
  • Town: Oxford University Press. th
There are 34 citations in total.

Details

Other ID JA27UZ97UM
Journal Section Articles
Authors

J. Mojapelo This is me

C. Mafini This is me

M. Dhurup This is me

Publication Date December 1, 2016
Published in Issue Year 2016 Volume: 8 Issue: 2

Cite

APA Mojapelo, J., Mafini, C., & Dhurup, M. (2016). EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY. International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanity Studies, 8(2), 106-121.
AMA Mojapelo J, Mafini C, Dhurup M. EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY. IJ-SSHS. December 2016;8(2):106-121.
Chicago Mojapelo, J., C. Mafini, and M. Dhurup. “EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY”. International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanity Studies 8, no. 2 (December 2016): 106-21.
EndNote Mojapelo J, Mafini C, Dhurup M (December 1, 2016) EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY. International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanity Studies 8 2 106–121.
IEEE J. Mojapelo, C. Mafini, and M. Dhurup, “EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY”, IJ-SSHS, vol. 8, no. 2, pp. 106–121, 2016.
ISNAD Mojapelo, J. et al. “EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY”. International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanity Studies 8/2 (December 2016), 106-121.
JAMA Mojapelo J, Mafini C, Dhurup M. EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY. IJ-SSHS. 2016;8:106–121.
MLA Mojapelo, J. et al. “EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY”. International Journal of Social Sciences and Humanity Studies, vol. 8, no. 2, 2016, pp. 106-21.
Vancouver Mojapelo J, Mafini C, Dhurup M. EMPLOYEE PERCEPTIONS OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY STANDARDS IN THE STEEL INDUSTRY. IJ-SSHS. 2016;8(2):106-21.