Reprint

Occupational Health in the Construction Industry

Edited by
May 2024
222 pages
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1055-0 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1056-7 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Occupational Health in the Construction Industry that was published in

Chemistry & Materials Science
Computer Science & Mathematics
Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Physical Sciences
Summary

The construction industry is a high-hazard industry that comprises a wide range of activities involving construction, alteration, and/or repair and has a significant impact on the health and safety of the workers. Construction workers engage in many activities that may expose them to serious hazards, such as falling from rooftops, unguarded machinery, being struck by heavy construction equipment, electrocution, etc. To promote and maintain safety in the workplace, knowledge about the primary causes of accidents helps to assess the level of safety. Health and safety is a multi-step process that includes the workers at the site, nearby people, supervisors, managers, etc. Effective management of activities and competent site supervision are essential in maintaining healthy and safe conditions. In construction activities, especially, the greater the risk, the greater the degree of hazard control and supervision required. This Special Issue intends to provide an overview of the most recent advances in multidisciplinary research connected to occupational safety in the construction sector and the enhancement of safety.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2024 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
industrial building; mercury mining; mercury airborne; working conditions; remediation; working protocol; workers; health and safety; contamination; work–life balance; work–family interface; construction sector; engineers; quality of life; job stress; psychosocial safety behavior; psychological resilience; construction industry; small-scale construction sites; safety management; accident causes; accident types; accident trends; construction safety; overlapping activities; BIM-based model; hazardous conflicts; risk assessment; unsafe behaviour; falls from height; inertial measurement unit; quaternions; motion trajectory reconstruction; policy formalism; equipment insufficiency; COVID-19 fear; job burnout; insomnia; autonomous motivation; self-determination theory; safety management; safety performance; structural equation modelling; mental health; construction workers; construction industry; sex; work conditions; anxiety; stress; fear; COVID-19; public health; near-miss; sensing technology; proactive safety management; accident prevention; early warnings