The relationship between workplace justice and self-evaluated nonfatal occupational accidents among healthcare employees in Taiwan: An observational study

The relationship between workplace justice and nonfatal occupational accidents in a single-payer healthcare system has rarely been explored. As countries strive to achieve and sustain universal health coverage, healthcare workers' occupational safety and health require greater concerns. We used...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medicine (Baltimore) 2024-08, Vol.103 (32), p.e39215
Hauptverfasser: Hsieh, Ching-Mei, Chen, Sheryl, Peng, Tsu-Te, Chen, Po-Han, Chen, Albert, Chen, Chieh-Jan
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container_end_page
container_issue 32
container_start_page e39215
container_title Medicine (Baltimore)
container_volume 103
creator Hsieh, Ching-Mei
Chen, Sheryl
Peng, Tsu-Te
Chen, Po-Han
Chen, Albert
Chen, Chieh-Jan
description The relationship between workplace justice and nonfatal occupational accidents in a single-payer healthcare system has rarely been explored. As countries strive to achieve and sustain universal health coverage, healthcare workers' occupational safety and health require greater concerns. We used the data from a national survey conducted on randomly sampled Taiwanese workers. One hundred forty eight males and 567 females, with a total of 715 healthcare workers aged 20 to 65, were analyzed. The workplace scale consisted of 4 subcomponents, including distributive justice, interpersonal justice, information justice, and procedural justice, and was dichotomized into low and high groups in each dimension. Logistic regression models examined the relationship between workplace justice and self-evaluated occupational accidents among healthcare employees. The prevalence of self-evaluated occupational accidents in healthcare employees was 15.54% and 11.64% for men and women, respectively. After adjusting variables such as sociodemographic variables, physical job demands, shift work status, work contract, and psychological job demands, regression analyses indicated that health employees with lower distributive justice, interpersonal justice, information justice, and procedural justice were significantly associated with self-evaluated occupational accidents both in males and females. Expanding the study to include healthcare systems in different countries could enhance the generalizability of the findings. Offering specific recommendations for policymakers and healthcare administrators to improve workplace justice and reduce occupational accidents.
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source Wolters Kluwer Open Health; MEDLINE; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; IngentaConnect Free/Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Accidents, Occupational - statistics & numerical data
Adult
Aged
Female
Health Personnel - psychology
Health Personnel - statistics & numerical data
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Occupational Health - statistics & numerical data
Prevalence
Social Justice
Taiwan - epidemiology
Workplace - psychology
Workplace - statistics & numerical data
Young Adult
title The relationship between workplace justice and self-evaluated nonfatal occupational accidents among healthcare employees in Taiwan: An observational study
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