Safety Culture Onboard Ships

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Abstract

A project focusing on identifying and describing maritime risks is being conducted in the heavily trafficked water area of the Sound, situated in northern Europe between Sweden and Denmark. This paper reports of a test of a first version of a questionnaire constructed for measuring safety culture onboard vessels.48 crew members on a Swedish registered passenger/cargo ship completed and returned the questionnaire. The crew members were able to complete the questionnaire with few unanswered questions. Acceptable homogeneity was obtained for all but one of the nine dimensions of safety culture. Significant differences on several of the safety culture dimensions were found between deck/engine vs catering personnel, men vs women and different age groups, while little differences were found for supervisors vs non-supervisors or people with varying number of years onboard. Such safety culture dimensions need to be studied in relation to reports of accidents and near-misses, to further study the true relevance of safety culture.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationProceedings of the IEA 2000/HFES 2000 Congress
Pages4-320-4-322
Number of pages3
Volume4
Publication statusPublished - 2000
EventThe 14th World Congress on Ergonomics - San Diego, United States
Duration: 2000 Jul 302000 Aug 4

Publication series

Name
Volume4

Conference

ConferenceThe 14th World Congress on Ergonomics
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CitySan Diego
Period2000/07/302000/08/04

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Production Engineering, Human Work Science and Ergonomics
  • Transport Systems and Logistics

Free keywords

  • safety culture
  • maritime safety
  • questionnaire

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