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BASIC PRINCIPLES IN OCCUPATIONAL HYGIENE. Day 5. 19 – BEHAVIOUR AND CULTURE. Impacts of Behaviour in Occupational Hygiene. Worker behaviour has an important influence on exposure to hazardous agents in the workplace Using contaminated tools
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Impacts of Behaviour in Occupational Hygiene Worker behaviour has an important influence on exposure to hazardous agents in the workplace • Using contaminated tools • Using soiled personal protective equipment (PPE) • Poor housekeeping, working untidily or not cleaning up after work
Impacts of Behaviour • Failing to use PPE properly when needed • Unhygienic behaviour such as failing to remove protective clothing and wash hands before a meal break • Failing to switch on a ventilation system • Handling a material vigorously instead of carefully • Standing downwind of an exposure source
Minimise Individuals Impact • Good engineering controls • Good operating procedures • Training workers • Supervision • Education regarding contaminants
Motivation and BehaviourModification Antecedents - Behaviour - Consequences (A - B - C) model • Antecedents create the initial motivation to act • Instructions from the manager, publicity campaigns and how these are received which depends on workers background • Behaviour is the observable act • It can be quantified and is objective • Consequences are what happens after the behaviour • Did the instruction help or hinder them, e.g. were they able to work more easily or was the job made harder. Will they do it this way again?
Behavioural Intervention A behavioural intervention can be planned in three distinct stages as follows: • Motivation: Firstly it is necessary to motivate individuals in order to get them to want to change their behaviour. • Instigation: Once people are motivated they need to be supported to enable them to change behaviour. • Maintenance: When a behaviour has been changed efforts need to be made to ensure that it doesn’t revert back.
Health and Safety Culture • When a pattern of behaviour becomes widespread in an organisation it can be described as the organisational culture • Culture can be a nebulous concept – a simple definition is “how we do things around here” • Culture defines the unwritten rules of an organisation • Once a behaviour becomes embedded in the organisation's culture it can be hard to change • An organisation's culture can be said to be positive for health and safety if it encourages behaviours that minimise incidents and exposure to risk • Negative cultures are often characterised by fear and blame, which inhibit reporting of dangerous conditions and inhibit improvement. Employees flout the rules and managers turn a blind eye
An Example of a Culture Maturity Ladder Source: GlaxoSmithKline