The role of health and safety culture in construction

Smallwood, J and Deacon, C (2001) The role of health and safety culture in construction. In: Akintoye, A. (ed.) Proceedings of 17th Annual ARCOM Conference, 5-7 September 2001, Salford, UK.

Abstract

People are frequently cited as the most important resource in construction. Despite people being the most important resource, many construction practitioners believe that: construction is inherently dangerous; accidents are part of the job, and the goal of zero accidents and/or fatalities is impossible to achieve. Other beliefs include that H&S costs money and that the majority of accidents are attributable to unsafe acts and consequently the fault of workers. H&S culture is at the upstream end of the upstream-downstream sequence: culture - management system -?exposure -?incidents, and consequently influences and plays a major role in H&S. H&S culture is comprised of values, purpose, mission, vision, goals and assumptions, which individually and collectively are pre-requisites for the optimum H&S culture. However, relative to inadequate or the lack of H&S, management and workers knowingly take risks, management 'turns a blind eye', workers work in an environment created by management, people often blame others and/or provide excuses for their actions or omissions, and incompetence is frequently the cause thereof. Conversely, management commitment is both a pre-requisite and the catalyst for H&S. Given the aforementioned, an exploratory descriptive survey was conducted in a selected South African 'H&S best practice' general contractor (GC), cited in, inter alia, the 'Egan' Report, the objective being to assess the H&S culture. The salient findings include: generally, a healthy H&S culture exists in the GC concerned; management and supervision appreciate their influence on H&S performance, the findings reinforcing the role and importance of management commitment; generally, management and supervision believe that accidents and fatalities can be prevented, however, the mistaken belief that construction is inherently dangerous, exists, and various macro issues impact on H&S performance in a contracting organization and the industry.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Uncontrolled Keywords: culture; health and safety; pilot study
Date Deposited: 11 Apr 2025 12:25
Last Modified: 11 Apr 2025 12:25