Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
589349 | Safety Science | 2012 | 8 Pages |
Reporting accidents and near misses is an important aspect of safety management. This study explores reporting in contract work, exemplified by offshore service vessels, and the associations with external and internal organisational factors. The empirical foundation for the study is a questionnaire survey (N = 1108). Reporting was negatively related to high efficiency demands from external actors and low quality of feedback to the reporting community. These factors were more strongly related to reporting than internal factors within the safety climate construct. Short-term contract engagement was also negatively associated with reporting. The results could reflect the organisational complexity that characterises much contract work. The study implies that attempts to increase the level of reporting in contract work should not be limited to focusing on internal organisational factors. Framework conditions and signals from external actors regarding the actual priority accorded to safety should also be considered.
► Reporting accidents and near-misses is important in safety management. ► The reporting level on offshore service vessels was associated with organizational factors. ► External organizational factors were more strongly related to reporting than internal. ► Framework conditions should be considered for increasing the level of reporting.