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Journal Article

Citation

Autenrieth DA, Brazile WJ, Douphrate DI, Román-Muñiz IN, Reynolds SJ. J. Agromed. 2016; 21(4): 364-372.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/1059924X.2016.1211575

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Effective methods to reduce work-related injuries and illnesses in animal production agriculture are sorely needed. One approach that may be helpful for agriculture producers is the adoption of occupational health and safety management systems.

METHODS: In this replication study, we compared the injury rates on 32 poultry growing operations to the level of occupational health and safety management system programming at each farm. Overall correlations between injury rates and programming level were determined, as were correlations between individual management system subcomponents to ascertain which parts might be the most useful for poultry producers.

RESULTS: We found that, in general, higher levels of occupational health and safety management system programming were associated with lower rates of workplace injuries and illnesses, and that management leadership was the system subcomponent with the strongest correlation. The strength and significance of the observed associations were greater on poultry farms with more complete management system assessments.

CONCLUSION: These findings are similar to those from a previous study of the dairy production industry, suggesting that occupational health and safety management systems may hold promise as a comprehensive way for producers to improve occupational health and safety performance. Further research is needed to determine the effectiveness of such systems to reduce farm work injuries and illnesses. Our results are timely given the increasing focus on occupational safety and health management systems.


Language: en

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