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references.bib
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references.bib
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@article{ajslev2017,
title = {Safety climate and accidents at work: Cross-sectional study among 15,000 workers of the general working population},
author = {Ajslev, Jeppe and Dastjerdi, Efat Lali and Dyreborg, Johnny and Kines, Pete and Jeschke, Katharina Christiane and Sundstrup, Emil and Jakobsen, Markus Due and Fallentin, Nils and Andersen, Lars Louis},
year = {2017},
month = {01},
date = {2017-01},
journal = {Safety Science},
pages = {320--325},
volume = {91},
doi = {10.1016/j.ssci.2016.08.029},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ssci.2016.08.029},
langid = {en}
}
@article{kines_nordic_2011,
title = {Nordic Safety Climate Questionnaire ({NOSACQ}-50): A new tool for diagnosing occupational safety climate},
volume = {41},
issn = {01698141},
url = {http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0169814111001028},
doi = {10.1016/j.ergon.2011.08.004},
shorttitle = {Nordic Safety Climate Questionnaire ({NOSACQ}-50)},
abstract = {Although there is a plethora of questionnaire instruments for measuring safety climate or culture, very few have proven able to present a factor structure that is consistent in different contexts, and many have a vague theoretical grounding. The Nordic Safety Climate Questionnaire ({NOSACQ}-50) was developed by a team of Nordic occupational safety researchers based on organizational and safety climate theory, psychological theory, previous empirical research, empirical results acquired through international studies, and a continuous development process. Safety climate is defined as workgroup members’ shared perceptions of management and workgroup safety related policies, procedures and practices. {NOSACQ}50 consists of 50 items across seven dimensions, i.e. shared perceptions of: 1) management safety priority, commitment and competence; 2) management safety empowerment; and 3) management safety justice; as well as shared perceptions of 4) workers’ safety commitment; 5) workers’ safety priority and risk non-acceptance; 6) safety communication, learning, and trust in co-workers’ safety competence; and 7) workers’ trust in the efficacy of safety systems. Initial versions of the instrument were tested for validity and reliability in four separate Nordic studies using native language versions in each respective Nordic country. {NOSACQ}-50 was found to be a reliable instrument for measuring safety climate, and valid for predicting safety motivation, perceived safety level, and self-rated safety behavior. The validity of {NOSACQ}-50 was further confirmed by its ability to distinguish between organizational units through detecting significant differences in safety climate.},
pages = {634--646},
number = {6},
journaltitle = {International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics},
author = {Kines, Pete and Lappalainen, Jorma and Mikkelsen, Kim Lyngby and Olsen, Espen and Pousette, Anders and Tharaldsen, Jorunn and Tómasson, Kristinn and Törner, Marianne},
urldate = {2018-11-16},
date = {2011-11},
langid = {english},
}
@book{preuter2022,
title = {Strukturer och indikatorer för uppföljning av föräldraskapsstöd},
author = {Preuter, Marit and Johansson, Magnus and {Bokström}, Tomas},
year = {2022},
date = {2022},
publisher = {RISE Research Institutes of Sweden},
series = {RISE rapport},
number = {2022:70},
url = {http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:ri:diva-59978},
langid = {swe}
}
@article{johansson,
title = {Valid and Reliable? Basic and Expanded Recommendations for Psychometric Reporting and Quality Assessment.},
author = {Johansson, Magnus and Preuter, Marit and Karlsson, Simon and {Möllerberg}, Marie-Louise and Svensson, Hanna and Melin, Jeanette},
doi = {10.31219/osf.io/3htzc},
date = {2023},
publisher = {OSF Preprints},
langid = {en-us}
}