Perceptions of health personnel about work safety and its relationship with occupational injuries

Authors

  • Filiz Abacıgil Adnan Menderes University, Aydın, Turkey
  • Burak Capacı Adnan Menderes University, Aydın, Turkey
  • Erdal Beşer Adnan Menderes University, Aydın, Turkey
  • Bugrahan Gurcan Adnan Menderes University, Aydın, Turkey
  • Mucahit Avcil Adnan Menderes University, Aydın, Turkey
  • Anıl Ugurlu Adnan Menderes University, Aydın, Turkey
  • Nazlı Merve Demir Adnan Menderes University, Aydın, Turkey

Keywords:

occupational health, health personnel, occupational exposure

Abstract

Although the hospital work environment is one of the most hazardous places to work, there are relatively few studies focused on health personnel’s perceptions of workplace safety. This study investigated perceptions of health personnel about work safety at a university hospital and its relationship with occupational injuries. The questionnaire included demographics, exposure to an occupational injury, occupational safety scale for health personnel, and universal precautions compliance scale. The lowest scores for hospital safety were given for the dimensions measuring “occupational diseases and complaints” and “management support and approaches”. Gender, unsafe behaviors, and long working hours affected exposure to an occupational injury. Healthcare workers who experienced an occupational injury stated lower safety scores for the dimension “management support and approaches”. Hospital administrations should give much more attention to safety regulations in order to improve safety and health in hospitals. This study confirms the importance of management support (by arranging working hours, giving priority to training activities on safety practices, and identifying problematic dimensions for safety) to come over occupational injuries.

Downloads

Published

2016-01-20

Issue

Section

Studii originale