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Journal Article

Citation

Borjan M, Patel T, Lefkowitz D, Campbell C, Lumia M. New Solut. 2015; 26(1): 40-54.

Affiliation

New Jersey Department of Health, Occupational Health Surveillance Program, NJ, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Baywood Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/1048291115609706

PMID

26463255

Abstract

Three focus groups were conducted with residential construction workers from local New Jersey labor organizations to characterize barriers to fall protection use among residential construction contractors who work for companies with fewer than ten employees. Thirty-six residential construction workers volunteered to participate, the average age was thirty-nine years, and twenty-four (67%) were of Hispanic origin. Twelve (33%) of the participants reported having fallen from greater than 6 ft at work and twenty (56%) of the participants had known someone who has fallen from greater than 6 ft. Sixteen (44%) had not been provided with fall protection equipment by their employer and eighteen (50%) reported their current employer had not provided workplace safety training. Factors that created barriers to use of fall protection equipment such as equipment availability, employee/employer relationships, cultural differences, and company size were identified.

RESULTS from this study confirm that falls remain a concern among residential construction workers in small companies.


Language: en

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