Turner Nick, Chmiel Nik, Walls Melanie
School of Business, Queen's University, Kingston, ON, Canada.
J Occup Health Psychol. 2005 Oct;10(4):504-12. doi: 10.1037/1076-8998.10.4.504.
This study investigated job demands and job control as predictors of safety citizenship role definition, that is, employees' role orientation toward improving workplace safety. Data from a survey of 334 trackside workers were framed in the context of R. A. Karasek's (1979) job demands-control model. High job demands were negatively related to safety citizenship role definition, whereas high job control was positively related to this construct. Safety citizenship role definition of employees with high job control was buffered from the influence of high job demands, unlike that of employees with low job control, for whom high job demands were related to lower levels of the construct. Employees facing both high job demands and low job control were less likely than other employees to view improving safety as part of their role orientation.
本研究调查了工作要求和工作控制这两个因素,将其作为安全公民角色定义(即员工对改善工作场所安全的角色定位)的预测指标。对334名铁路沿线工人的调查数据是在R.A.卡拉塞克(1979年)的工作要求-控制模型背景下进行分析的。高工作要求与安全公民角色定义呈负相关,而高工作控制与这一概念呈正相关。与低工作控制的员工不同,高工作控制的员工的安全公民角色定义不受高工作要求的影响,对于低工作控制的员工来说,高工作要求与较低水平的这一概念相关。与其他员工相比,面临高工作要求和低工作控制的员工将改善安全视为其角色定位一部分的可能性较小。