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Assessment of safety climate perception of maintenance workers during major overhauls, outages, shutdowns or turnarounds (MoOSTs)

Yunusa-Kaltungo, Akilu; Ray, Srija; AlSanad, Shaikha; Sokunbi, Idowu; Manu, Patrick; Cheung, Clara Man; Mohandes, Saeed Reza

Assessment of safety climate perception of maintenance workers during major overhauls, outages, shutdowns or turnarounds (MoOSTs) Thumbnail


Authors

Akilu Yunusa-Kaltungo

Srija Ray

Shaikha AlSanad

Idowu Sokunbi

Patrick Manu Patrick.Manu@uwe.ac.uk
Professor of Innovative Construction and Project Management

Clara Man Cheung

Saeed Reza Mohandes



Abstract

Maintenance activities are used to sustain the reliability of physical industrial assets. However, studies indicate that some of the most devastating industrial accidents are attributable to poor safety perceptions of maintenance workers, especially during major overhauls, outages, shutdowns or turnarounds (MoOSTs). Typical MoOSTs involve the harmonisation of regular maintenance endeavours on a large scale, which in turn heighten risks of accidents and costs. Furthermore, MoOSTs are performed over short durations thereby necessitating parallel high-risk activities by different organisations that have different perceptions of safety and possess different safety cultures. Understanding safety climate can immensely benefit MoOSTs organisations by improving the understanding of attitudes and perceptions that alleviate workplace incidents. This study aimed to establish safety climate that would boost safety culture and positively impact perceived safety performance during MoOSTs. Safety climate questionnaire survey was deployed to MoOSTs workers of leading cement plants in Nigeria. Through exploratory factor analysis, three underlying safety climate factors were identified, which helped to determine that factors such as ‛training and learning from incidents’, ‛commitment of senior management towards ensuring safety and its protocol development process’ and ‛effectiveness of incident reporting systems during MoOSTs’ were significant predictors of workers’ perceptions of safety performance. The findings also pointed out that the inter-relationship between perceived safety performance, MoOSTs safety training and organisational commitment were positively correlated.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Mar 8, 2024
Online Publication Date Mar 18, 2024
Deposit Date Mar 19, 2024
Publicly Available Date Mar 20, 2024
Journal Quality and Reliability Engineering International
Print ISSN 0748-8017
Electronic ISSN 1099-1638
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/qre.3532
Keywords Nigeria, cement plants, case studies, safety climate, maintenance
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/11832015

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