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Journal Article

Citation

Byrd J, Gailey NJ, Probst TM, Jiang L. Safety Sci. 2018; 106: 255-262.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.ssci.2016.11.017

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Previous research has established a link between job insecurity and a myriad of safety outcomes; yet, the explanatory mechanism for this link is unexplored. The purpose of the current study was to explore the role of safety-production conflict (SPC) as a mediator between the relationship of job insecurity and six workplace safety outcomes: behavioral safety compliance, poor accident reporting attitudes, workplace injuries, experienced safety events, unreported safety events, and accident underreporting. Our hypotheses were tested using data from a sample of 389 public transit employees in the United States. Using a bootstrap sampling technique, mediation analyses revealed significant direct and indirect effects (mediation through SPC) of job insecurity on aforementioned workplace safety outcomes. Specifically, higher levels of job insecurity were associated with higher levels of SPC, which, in turn, were associated with detrimental workplace safety outcomes. In the context of improving employee safety, these results suggest that efforts to manage employee perceptions regarding safety-production tradeoffs are of particularly importance in light of today's pervasive job insecurity during times of global financial crises.


Language: en

Keywords

Job insecurity; Safety; Safety compliance; Safety-production conflict; Workplace accidents; Workplace injuries

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