Religiosity and safety performance: mediating role of safety behaviour
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International Journal of Workplace Health Management
Abstract
Purpose: Safety science research has largely focused on areas such as oil and gas, mining and construction.
with a paucity of research in the agricultural sector, which constitutes over 60% of the workforce in Ghana. This
paper investigated the extent to which religiosity of rice farm workers predicts their safety performance
through safety behaviour.
Design/methodology/approach – The authors collected data from 469 respondents, comprising 347 males
and 122 females from three large rice irrigation schemes in southern Ghana in a cross-sectional survey, and
analysed the data with partial least squares structural equation modelling (PLS-SEM).
Findings: Religiosity had a moderately positive direct relationship with safety behaviour, while safety
Behavior had a very weak relationship with safety performance. Also, safety behaviour played a competitive
partial mediating role in the relationship between religiosity and safety performance.
Practical implications: The findings led to the conclusion that religiosity is an essential direct antecedent
of safety behaviour at work and an indirect antecedent of safety performance. Accordingly, the authors
recommend that safety practitioners, managers and supervisors put mechanisms in place to cautiously
encourage optional religious programmes that would enable organisational members to get a deeper
understanding and knowledge of their religion and promote religious freedom and diversity at the workplace.
Originality/value: This paper has contributed to the debate on the relevance of religiosity at work and
occupational safety and health promotion in the African context. This seems to be the only study in Ghana that
has investigated how religiosity relates to safety behaviour in production agriculture, specifically rice farming.
Another contribution of this study is the evidence supporting the mediating role of safety behaviour in the
relationship between religiosity and safety performance.
Description
Research Article