¶ … Raines, M. (2011). Engaging employees: another step in improving safety. Professional Safety, 56(4): pp. 36-34. Retrieved from: ProQuest Database.
Major Thesis
The article asserts that successful organizations involve employees at all levels in various aspects of the business and additionally value their input. To create a fully-encompassing corporate culture, employees must be involved and engaged and have the opportunity to provide input and changes to their workplace, providing a positive link between employee engagement, employee involvement and safety performance (Raines, 2011, p. 37). While it is often difficult to continuously improve safety performance within an organization over time, the inclusion of employee engagement has been directly correlated with the changes being made in a more timely and effective manner.
Raines notes that employee engagement is directly related to the amount of involvement that employees have in their work processes and activities (Lockwood, 1997, p.8). Therefore, employee involvement in safety is critical to ensuring that they become engaged in the safety aspects of their work and additionally in the organization's safety program. Further, research has noted that companies who engage their employees experienced 62% fewer safety incidents than units with lower employee engagement (Harter, et al., 2006, p. 1). How, then is an employee considered to be "engaged" within...
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