Abstract

The present study aims to assess the safety-climate level in Taiwan’s metal industries, as well as to identify the influence of workers’ backgrounds on the safety climate. An earlier report showed that a poor safety culture was related to the cause of accidents in Taiwan’s traditional manufacturing industries. This study surveyed a total of 839 workers who voluntarily participated and completed the safety-culture questionnaires. These workers were from a Taiwanese metal company and its five satellite companies. Three safety-climate factors, namely safety perception, safety communication and safety-management systems, were assessed. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was conducted by developing structural equation modeling to ensure the questionnaire’s validity. The influence of workers’ backgrounds on the safety climate was identified by using one-way ANOVA. The reliability result of the questionnaire was above the acceptable level. The overall safety-climate score was 4.22 out of a five-point scale for safety perception, 4.23 for safety-management systems and 3.97 for safety communication. The scores indicate a good level of safety climate, with room for improvement in safety communication. Additionally, the influence of workers’ backgrounds on the safety climate was confirmed. Based on the validity test, it was also found that the questionnaire could be improved by reconstructing its questions in its development process in order to increase the safety-climate model’s reliability and validity, as well as its model fit.

Highlights

  • Occupational accidents are serious issues in Taiwan’s traditional manufacturing industries

  • This study revealed that the job position influenced the safety climate significantly in three safety-climate factors: safety perception, safety communication and the safety management system

  • The zero-accident goal announced by the Taiwanese government underlines the importance of safety climate as the current safety concern

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Summary

Introduction

Occupational accidents are serious issues in Taiwan’s traditional manufacturing industries. It is mentioned in the Industrial Safety and Health Association of the R.O.C Taiwan (ISHA), where the most-recent annual report in 2017 reported that the rate of occupational accidents in 2015 was 3.191 among 1000 full-time equivalent workers in Taiwan [1]. This rate has slowly reduced from five years ago, where the accident rate was 4.176 among 1000 full-time equivalent workers. Vinodkumar and Bhasi’s study [5]

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