期刊论文详细信息
BMC Public Health
Associations between employee and manager gender: impacts on gender-specific risk of acute occupational injury in metal manufacturing
Sepideh Modrek2  Manisha Desai1  Mark R Cullen2  Jessica T Kubo1 
[1] Quantitative Sciences Unit, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA;Division of General Medical Disciplines, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA
关键词: Occupational health;    Gender concordance;    Sex;    Management;    Injury;   
Others  :  1161574
DOI  :  10.1186/1471-2458-13-1053
 received in 2012-12-07, accepted in 2013-10-31,  发布年份 2013
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background

Prior research has shown increased risk of injury for female employees compared to male employees after controlling for job and tasks, but have not explored whether this increased risk might be moderated by manager gender. The gender of one’s manager could in theory affect injury rates among male and female employees through their managers’ response to an employee’s psychosocial stress or through how employees differentially report injuries. Other explanations for the gender disparity in injury experience, such as ergonomic factors or differential training, are unlikely to be impacted by supervisor gender. This study seeks to explore whether an employee’s manager’s gender modifies the effect of employee gender with regards to risk of acute injury.

Methods

A cohort of employees and managers were identified using human resources and injury management data between January 1, 2002 and December 31, 2007 for six facilities of a large US aluminum manufacturing company. Cox proportional hazards models were employed to examine the interaction between employee gender and whether the employee had female only manager(s), male only manager(s), or both male and female managers on injury risk. Manager gender category was included as a time varying covariate and reassessed for each employee at the midpoint of each year.

Results

The percentage of departments with both female and male managers increased dramatically during the study period due to corporate efforts to increase female representation in management. After adjustment for fixed effects at the facility level and shared frailty by department, manager gender category does not appear to moderate the effect of employee gender (p = 0.717). Manager category was not a significant predictor (p = 0.093) of time to first acute injury. Similarly, having at least one female manager did not modify the hazard of injury for female employees compared to males (p = 0.899) and was not a significant predictor of time to first acute injury (p = 0.601).

Conclusions

Prior findings suggest that female manufacturing employees are at higher risk for acute injury compared to males; this analysis suggests that this relationship is not affected by the gender of the employee’s manager(s).

【 授权许可】

   
2013 Kubo et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20150413032911318.pdf 403KB PDF download
Figure 3. 43KB Image download
Figure 2. 29KB Image download
Figure 1. 48KB Image download
【 图 表 】

Figure 1.

Figure 2.

Figure 3.

【 参考文献 】
  • [1]Dalton M, Chrobot-Mason D: A theoretical exploration of manager and employee social identity, cultural values and identity conflict management. Int J Cross Cult Manag 2007, 7(2):169-183.
  • [2]Spotlight on Statistics. http://www.bls.gov/spotlight/2011/women/ webcite
  • [3]Job Patterns for Minorities And Women In Private Industry (EEO-1). http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/statistics/employment/jobpat-eeo1/ webcite
  • [4]Women in the Labor Force: A Databook. http://www.bls.gov/cps/wlf-databook-2012.pdf webcite
  • [5]Flin R: “Danger–men at work”: Management influence on safety. Hum Factor Ergon Man 2003, 13(4):261-268.
  • [6]Taiwo OA, Cantley LF, Slade MD, Pollack KM, Vegso S, Fiellin MG, Cullen MR: Sex differences in injury patterns among workers in heavy manufacturing. Am J Epidemiol 2009, 169(2):161-166.
  • [7]Zwerling C, Sprince NL, Ryan J, Jones MP: Occupational injuries: comparing the rates of male and female postal workers. Am J Epidemiol 1993, 138(1):46-55.
  • [8]McCurdy SA, Schenker MB, Lassiter DV: Occupational injury and illness in the semiconductor manufacturing industry. Am J Ind Med 1989, 15:499-510.
  • [9]Kelsh MA, Sahl JD: Sex differences in work-related injury rates among electric utility workers. Am J Epidemiol 1996, 143(10):1050-1058.
  • [10]Pollack KM, Agnew J, Slade MD, Cantley L, Taiwo O, Vegso S, Sircar K, Cullen MR: Use of employer administrative databases to identify systematic causes of injury in aluminum manufacturing. Am J Ind Med 2007, 50:676-686.
  • [11]Kennedy SM, Koehoorn M: Exposure assessment in epidemiology: does gender matter? Am J Ind Med 2003, 44:576-583.
  • [12]Twombly SE, Schussman LC: Gender differences in injury and illness rates on wilderness backpacking trips. Wild Environ Med 1995, 4:363-376.
  • [13]Messing K, Punnett L, Bond M, Alexanderson K, Pyle J, Zahm S, Wegman D, Stock SR, de Grosbois s: Be the fairest of them All : challenges and recommendations for the treatment of gender in occupational health research. Am J Ind Med 2003, 43:618-629.
  • [14]Pollack KM, Sorock GS, Slade MD, Cantley L, Sircar K, Taiwo O, Cullen MR: Association between body mass index and acute traumatic workplace injury in hourly manufacturing employees. Am J Epidemiol 2007, 166(2):204-211.
  • [15]Vegso S, Cantley L, Slade M, Taiwo O, Sircar K, Rabinowitz P, Fiellin M, Russi MB, Cullen MR: Extended work hours and risk of acute occupational injury: a case-crossover study of workers in manufacturing. Am J Ind Med 2007, 50:597-603.
  • [16]Kubo J, Cullen MR, Cantley L, Slade M, Tessier-Sherman B, Taiwo O, Desai M: Piecewise exponential models to assess the influence of job-specific experience on the hazard of acute injury for hourly factory workers. BMC Med Res Methodol 2013, 13:89. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [17]Aalen OO: Effects of frailty in survival analysis. Stat Methods Med Res 1994, 3:227.
  • [18]Multivariate Survival Models. http://data.princeton.edu/pop509/MultivariateSurvival.pdf webcite
  • [19]McGilchrist CA, Aisbett CW: Regression with frailty in survival analysis. Biometrics 1991, 47(2):461-466.
  • [20]Buchanan S, Vossenas P, Krause N, Moriarty J, Frumin E, Shimek JAM, Mirer F, Orris P, Punnett L: Occupational injury disparities in the US hotel industry. Am J Ind Med 2010, 53:116-125.
  • [21]Beus JM, Bergman ME, Payne SC: The influence of organizational tenure on safety climate strength: a first look. Accident Anal Prev 2010, 42:1431-1437.
  • [22]Schneider B, Goldstein HW, Smith DB: The ASA framework: an update. Pers Psychol 1995, 48:747-773.
  • [23]Breslin FC, Polzer J, MacEachen E, Morrongiello B, Shannon H: Workplace injury or “part of the job”?: towards a gendered understanding of injuries and complaints among young workers. Soc Sci Med 2007, 64:782-793.
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:12次 浏览次数:6次