SAFETY PROFESSIONALS' ROLE IN CONTRACTOR QUALITY PROGRAMS

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Pubblicato in:Professional Safety vol. 70, no. 4 (Apr 2025), p. 15
Autore principale: Clarke, Brian
Altri autori: Gamble, Kimberly
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American Society of Safety Engineers
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100 1 |a Clarke, Brian 
245 1 |a SAFETY PROFESSIONALS' ROLE IN CONTRACTOR QUALITY PROGRAMS 
260 |b American Society of Safety Engineers  |c Apr 2025 
513 |a Journal Article 
520 3 |a Contractor Selection The construction industry historically has measured contractor safety excellence through the benchmarking of contractors' experience modification rate (EMR) and OSHA total recordable incident rate (TRIR). Today, most trade partners safety prequalification processes have advanced to include an evaluation of safety programs, sitespecific safety plans, safety orientations, job hazard analysis and weekly safety meetings. While effective quality control programs structurally mirror effective safety and health programs, an often-missing quality program component is the construction industry's key two-way communication with trade workers during these crew meetings. Conclusion The construction industry has reduced trade injury rates partly through engaging trade workers during weekly safety meetings to increase communication with trade workers and across multiemployer projects, express safety expectations and increase safety knowledge among teams. 
653 |a Safety programs 
653 |a Construction accidents & safety 
653 |a Quality control 
653 |a Communication 
653 |a Meetings 
653 |a Injuries 
653 |a Contractors 
653 |a Construction contracts 
653 |a Knowledge management 
653 |a Leadership 
653 |a Hazard assessment 
653 |a Construction industry 
653 |a Workers 
653 |a Costs 
653 |a Prevention 
653 |a Occupational safety 
653 |a Occupational health 
653 |a Safety 
653 |a Control programs 
653 |a Architects 
653 |a Education 
653 |a Social 
653 |a Economic 
700 1 |a Gamble, Kimberly 
773 0 |t Professional Safety  |g vol. 70, no. 4 (Apr 2025), p. 15 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t ABI/INFORM Global 
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