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[Qualitative evaluation of employer requirements associated with occupational health and safety as good practice in small-scale enterprises]
- Source :
- Sangyo eiseigaku zasshi = Journal of occupational health. 51(5)
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- The purpose of this study was to identify what motivates employers to promote good occupational health and safety practices in small-scale enterprises. Previous studies have shown that small-scale enterprises generally pay insufficient attention to issues of occupational health and safety. These findings were mainly derived from questionnaire based surveys. Nevertheless, some small-scale enterprises in which employers exercise good leadership do take a progressive approach to occupational health and safety. Although good practices can be identified in small-scale enterprises, it remains unclear what motivates employers in small-scale enterprises to actively implement occupational health and safety practices. We speculated that identifying employer motivations in promoting occupational health would help to spread good practices among small-scale enterprises. Using a qualitative approach based on the KJ methods, we interviewed ten employers who actively promote occupational health and safety in the workplace. The employers were asked to discuss their views of occupational health and safety in their own words. A semi-structured interview format was used, and transcripts were made of the interviews. Each transcript was independently coded by two or more researchers. These transcripts and codes were integrated and then the research group members discussed the heading titles and structural relationships between them according to the KJ method. Qualitative analysis revealed that all the employers expressed a strong interest in a "good company" and "good management". They emphasized four elements of "good management", namely "securing human resources", "trust of business partners", "social responsibility" and "employer's health condition itself", and considered that addressing occupational health and safety was essential to the achievement of these four elements. Consistent with previous findings, the results showed that implementation of occupational health and safety activities depended on "cost", "human resources", "time to perform", and "advisory organization". These results suggest that employer awareness of the relationship between good management and occupational health is essential to the implementation of occupational health and safety practices in small-scale enterprises.
- Subjects :
- Motivation
business.industry
Health condition
Effective safety training
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
General Medicine
Public relations
Toxicology
Occupational safety and health
Personnel Management
Interviews as Topic
Nursing
Japan
Occupational health nursing
Scale (social sciences)
Surveys and Questionnaires
Business
Human resources
Good practice
Social responsibility
Occupational Health
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1349533X
- Volume :
- 51
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Sangyo eiseigaku zasshi = Journal of occupational health
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....55c16802f52181b004395dd1e6b76859