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Journal Article

Citation

Salminen S, Saari J, Saarela KL, Rasanen T. Scand. J. Work Environ. Health 1993; 19(5): 352-357.

Affiliation

Institute of Occupational Health, Department of Occupational Safety, Vantaa, Finland.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1993, Finland Institute of Occupational Health)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

8296185

Abstract

The aim of this article is to examine organizational factors influencing serious occupational accidents. The study was part of a larger project investigating 99 serious occupational accidents in southern Finland. A workplace analysis and an accident analysis were done at accident sites. In connection with this investigation, 73 victims, 91 foremen, and 83 co-workers were interviewed with a structured questionnaire. The results showed that the need to save time, tight schedules, and a lack of caution had a greater influence on accidents than did the foremen, co-workers, customers, professional pride, curiosity, or the wage system. Big companies had the lowest risk of serious occupational accidents. Accident risk was significantly greater for subcontractors than for main contractors.


Language: en

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