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      Relative effectiveness of worker safety and health training methods.

      American Journal of Public Health
      Humans, Inservice Training, methods, Occupational Health, Program Evaluation, Safety Management

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          Abstract

          We sought to determine the relative effectiveness of different methods of worker safety and health training aimed at improving safety knowledge and performance and reducing negative outcomes (accidents, illnesses, and injuries). Ninety-five quasi-experimental studies (n=20991) were included in the analysis. Three types of intervention methods were distinguished on the basis of learners' participation in the training process: least engaging (lecture, pamphlets, videos), moderately engaging (programmed instruction, feedback interventions), and most engaging (training in behavioral modeling, hands-on training). As training methods became more engaging (i.e., requiring trainees' active participation), workers demonstrated greater knowledge acquisition, and reductions were seen in accidents, illnesses, and injuries. All methods of training produced meaningful behavioral performance improvements. Training involving behavioral modeling, a substantial amount of practice, and dialogue is generally more effective than other methods of safety and health training. The present findings challenge the current emphasis on more passive computer-based and distance training methods within the public health workforce.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          16380566
          1470479
          10.2105/AJPH.2004.059840

          Chemistry
          Humans,Inservice Training,methods,Occupational Health,Program Evaluation,Safety Management
          Chemistry
          Humans, Inservice Training, methods, Occupational Health, Program Evaluation, Safety Management

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