1 / 22

Guidance Note on the Prevention of Bullying and Violence at Work

Guidance Note on the Prevention of Bullying and Violence at Work. Evaluation results – first year of implementation. Background.

dezso
Download Presentation

Guidance Note on the Prevention of Bullying and Violence at Work

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Guidance Note on the Prevention of Bullying and Violence at Work Evaluation results – first year of implementation

  2. Background • At the launch of the Guidance Note, the Minister for WorkCover announced that its implementation would be reviewed 12 months after the launch “to ensure it is being used effectively and appropriately” • The evaluation focused on part one of the Guidance Note – Preventing Workplace Bullying

  3. Background Evaluation questions • How effective is the Guidance Note as a tool to: raise awareness; increase knowledge and information; implement prevention measures; and implement resolution procedures? • If the Guidance Note is not effective, what are the options? Note: question two conditional on negative answer to question one

  4. Evaluation components The evaluation involved 6 pieces of research: • Survey of employees (repeat of 2003 benchmark survey) to measure incidence and changes in perception on bullying in Victorian workplaces • Survey of employers – to examine their level of awareness on bullying and how to prevent it • In-depth interviews with various stakeholders examining their perceptions on how WorkSafe Victoria deals with bullying

  5. Evaluation components 4. Survey of Bullying Designated Inspectors – examining the adequacy of support and the tools provided to them 5. Detailed case studies – examining how matters are actioned once they are referred to WorkSafe 6. Internal data review – examining calls to OHS advisory service, workplace visits and notices issued

  6. Employee survey What did it involve? • A survey of 1000 Victorians aged over 18 who were employed full time, part time or on a casual basis • Purpose – to measure employee perceptions on a range of issues about their workplaces and bullying • Conducted in March 2004 (follow up from 2003 benchmark survey)

  7. Some results: employee survey • Verbal abuse was the most common form of bullying reported • Large organisations were more likely to have a bullying policy • Only a third of small organisations had bullying policies

  8. Some results: employee survey • Slight increase in employees reporting their company had a workplace bullying policy • Employees reporting they have personally experienced bullying remains steady • Most common reason for bullying stopping was victim leaving the job

  9. Employer survey What did it involve? • A survey of 250 employers, conducted in august 2004 • Purpose – to measure employer perceptions of the WorkSafe Victoria’s Guidance Note on the Prevention of Bullying and Violence at Work

  10. Some results: employer survey • Since the release of the Guidance Note, nearly a quarter of employers surveyed stated bullying had been reported to them • According to employers surveyed, the three most common actions taken to manage recent bullying complaints were: investigation; mediation; and disciplinary action • According to employers surveyed, the three most common outcomes of a bullying complaint were: issue resolved; employee left; and no repeat offence

  11. Inspector survey What did it involve? • A survey of WorkSafe Victoria inspectors who deal with allegations of bullying • Purpose – to examine WorkSafe Victoria’s approach to dealing with bullying

  12. Some results: Inspector survey • Responding to bullying allegations is time and resource intensive • The Guidance Note has been constructive in informing & assisting workplaces but case studies/ examples needed • Involvement of management in prevention and issue resolution is critical – lack of involvement generally results in poor outcomes

  13. Some results: Inspector survey • We need to clarify WorkSafe’s role and functions to workplace parties • Awareness on what can be done to prevent bullying prior to an inspector visiting a workplace was generally low

  14. Themes from evaluation Bullying awareness & incidence • Bullying was more likely to be reported by workers in community services & the health industries • Bullying least likely to be reported by workers in manufacturing & construction industries • Full time employees were most likely to be aware of company's bullying policy

  15. Themes from evaluation Bullying awareness & incidence • Casuals and apprentices were least likely to be aware of company's bullying policy • Employers who were aware of the Guidance Note were more likely to rate WorkSafe as effective in dealing with workplace bullying • Awareness of the Guidance Note was low in regional Victoria

  16. Themes from evaluation When bullying occurs • A significant proportion of workers are not aware of what actions to take to stop bullying - from employee survey • Workers experiencing bullying are more likely to inform internal parties than external parties - from employee survey • Victims often leave the organisation in response to being bullied - from employee & employer surveys

  17. Themes from evaluation Employee involvement • According to both the employee & employer surveys only a half to sixty per cent of organisations involved employees in the development of their workplace policy on bullying • Employees in small organisations were least likely to have been involved in policy development

  18. What did the evaluation tell us? • There is acceptance that workplace bullying is a legitimate OHS issue from both employers & employee representatives • There needs to be a greater focus on prevention so bullying is treated like any other OHS issue • There is sufficient evidence to confirm that the Guidance Note is being taken seriously and that a code of practice is not warranted • Employer associations believe the level of support provided to employers on ‘what compliance looks like’ should increase

  19. What did the evaluation tell us? • Not enough employers are involving employees in the development of workplace policies on bullying • Overall, the level of employee and employer awareness of bullying has increased • WorkSafe's’ enforcement activity in relation to the Guidance Note has increased

  20. WorkSafe & Prevention of Bullying The next 12 months

  21. Actions following evaluation results • Inform stakeholders on evaluation findings via WorkSafe Victoria web site • Letters promoting the Guidance Note & its prevention approach for bullying will be sent to CEOs in industries with low awareness levels • WorkSafe’s operational policy on bullying has been revised and bullying prevention training offered to all inspectors

  22. Actions following evaluation results • WorkSafe Victoria will increase prevention activity in relation to workplace bullying • PSCS to pilot a more proactive approach to prevention of bullying • WorkSafe will schedule a number of regional workshops on bullying prevention and the Guidance Note

More Related