Keyword search (4,164 papers available)

"Safety" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Impact of COVID-19 on incidence and trends of adverse events among hospitalised patients in Calgary, Canada: a retrospective chart review study Wu G; Eastwood CA; Cheligeer C; Southern DA; Zeng Y; Ghali WA; Bakal JA; Boussat B; Flemons W; Forster A; Xu Y; Quan H; 41592994
CONCORDIA
2 Leading the way to a safer workplace: What enables supervisors to be servant leaders and enhance subordinates workplace safety behaviors? Chen YP; Hsu YS; Panaccio A; Wang H; 40483067
JMSB
3 The false promise of return to work for migrant workers injured on the job in Canada: When public policies intersect to create exclusion Hanley J; Ventura Sanchez G; Goswami P; Mayell S; McLaughlin J; Hennebry J; 40223307
SOCANTH
4 Effect of age on hypnotics' efficacy and safety in insomnia: A systematic review and meta-analysis Patrick Viet-Quoc N; Thien Thanh DV; Philippe L; Sebastien C; Lidia S; Philippe D; 39603114
CONCORDIA
5 Feeling safe: a critical look at the effect of neighborhood safety features and perceptions on childhood symptoms of depression Infantino E; Barnett TA; Côté-Lussier C; Van Hulst A; Henderson M; Mathieu ME; Sabiston C; Kakinami L; 39604905
SOH
6 Supporting pregnant and parenting women who use alcohol during pregnancy: A scoping review of trauma-informed approaches Morton Ninomiya ME; Almomani Y; Dunbar Winsor K; Burns N; Harding KD; Ropson M; Chaves D; Wolfson L; 36744547
CONCORDIA
7 Microfluidics in smart packaging of foods Pou KRJ; Raghavan V; Packirisamy M; 36192908
ENCS
8 Survey of Cooperative Advanced Driver Assistance Systems: From a Holistic and Systemic Vision González-Saavedra JF; Figueroa M; Céspedes S; Montejo-Sánchez S; 35459025
ENCS
9 Measuring workplace psychosocial factors in the federal government Blais AR; Michaud I; Simard JF; Mach L; Houle S; 35044739
CONCORDIA

 

Title:Leading the way to a safer workplace: What enables supervisors to be servant leaders and enhance subordinates workplace safety behaviors?
Authors:Chen YPHsu YSPanaccio AWang H
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40483067/
DOI:10.1016/j.jsr.2025.02.005
Publication:Journal of safety research
Keywords:Mobility-Ability-Opportunity (MAO) frameworkPerceived collaborative-based HR configurationPerspective takingProsocial motivationServant leadershipSocial information processing (SIP) theoryWorkplace safety behaviors
PMID:40483067 Category: Date Added:2025-06-08
Dept Affiliation: JMSB
1 John Molson School of Business, Concordia University, Montréal, Canada.
2 South China University of Technology, Guanzhou, People's Republic of China. Electronic address: bmhlwang@scut.edu.cn.

Description:

Introduction: Drawing on the Motivation-Ability-Opportunity (MAO) framework and social information processing (SIP) theory, we hypothesized that supervisors demonstrate the highest level of servant leadership when their prosocial motivation (motivation), perspective taking (ability), and perceived collaborative-based HR configuration (opportunity) are all high. Moreover, we also hypothesized that servant leadership plays an important channeling role that links the three-way interaction and subordinates' workplace safety behaviors.

Method: We recruited 167 supervisor-subordinate dyads across high-risk and non-high-risk industries via LinkedIn and authors' professional networks. We then conducted hierarchical moderated regressions and SPSS Macro to test the proposed hypotheses.

Results: The three-way interaction of prosocial motivation, perspective taking, and collaborative-based HR configuration significantly predicted perceived servant leadership behaviors, which in turn enhanced subordinates' safety compliance and participation.

Conclusions: In accordance with the MAO framework and SIP theory, a leadership system that simultaneously comprises these three key elements is most conducive to the emergence of servant leadership, which in turn enhances subordinates' workplace safety behaviors.

Practical applications: First, we recommend that organizations consider perspective taking and prosocial motivation as potential selection criteria for leadership or supervisory roles, to ensure that supervisors have the required capabilities to serve. Second, organizations could benefit from designing interventions to improve supervisors' perspective taking and prosocial motivation. Third, organizations could use team-based pay design (e.g., team-based incentives) to further enhance the influence of a collaborative-based HR configuration. Fourth, given that the more subordinates emulate supervisors' behaviors of putting others' first and self-transcendence, the more they demonstrate safety behaviors, organizational interventions that can increase the salience of supervisors' behaviors in the eyes of subordinates could be useful.





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