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Erschienen in: International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health 3/2019

Open Access 13.02.2019 | Original Article

Consideration of psychosocial factors in workplace risk assessments: findings from a company survey in Germany

verfasst von: David Beck, Uwe Lenhardt

Erschienen in: International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health | Ausgabe 3/2019

Abstract

Purpose

Work-related psychosocial risks are an increasingly important issue in occupational safety and health (OSH) policy. In Germany, as in many other European countries, employers are legally required to carry out workplace risk assessments (WRAs) and to account for psychosocial factors when doing this. The aim of this study was to expand the still scarce and sketchy empirical evidence on the extent to which employers comply with these obligations, as well as on possible determinants of compliance behaviour.

Methods

Survey data from 6500 German companies were used to calculate the prevalence of workplace risk assessments that include psychosocial factors. Furthermore, multinomial logistic regressions were performed to explore which company characteristics influence the chance of psychosocial risk assessment occurrence.

Results

The prevalence of psychosocial risk assessments was 21%. Next to company size (OR = 5.7, 95% CI 3.0–11.0), availability of safety specialist assistance (OR = 3.5, 95% CI 2.6–4.6), availability of occupational health specialist assistance (OR = 3.4; 95% CI 2.6–4.4) and inspection by OSH authority (OR = 3.4, 95% CI 2.4–4.7) were the strongest predictors of psychosocial risk assessment occurrence. Smaller (but still significant) effect sizes were found for the level of knowledge about legal OSH requirements, training of managers in OSH, economic situation of the company, presence of a works council, positive view on the benefit of OSH, affiliation with the production sector and magnitude of psychosocial risks within the company.

Conclusions

The study results indicate large deficiencies in the implementation of psychosocial risk assessments, especially for small companies. Findings suggest that enhancing companies’ utilisation of professional OSH experts and strengthening the advisory and control capacities of the OSH inspection authorities in the area of psychosocial risks would be beneficial for improving the current situation.
Hinweise

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Abkürzungen
CATI
Computer-assisted telephone interview
ESENER
European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks
EU
European Union
GDA
Gemeinsame Deutsche Arbeitsschutzstrategie (“Joint German Occupational Safety and Health Strategy”)
OR
Odds ratio
OSH
Occupational safety and health
SPSS
Statistical Package for the Social Sciences
WRA
Workplace risk assessment

Background

Stress at work is an important public health issue, as it contributes to the development of several widespread forms of physical and mental illness, such as coronary heart disease (Kivimäki et al. 2012) and depression (Madsen et al. 2017), burdening companies and society with high costs (European Agency for Safety and Health at Work 2014a). Work stress arises from an unfavourable psychosocial work environment, which includes aspects related to task layout, performance standards, work organisation, working time arrangements and social relations at work (Cox and Griffiths 2015). Over recent decades, profound economic, societal and political changes have led to a considerable (and still ongoing) transformation of the psychosocial work environment, making it increasingly relevant to the health of employees. An especially notable development is the expansion of the tertiary sector, which is paralleled by a steady growth in knowledge and interaction work. The proliferation of interconnected information and communication technology entails a tendency towards accelerating business and work processes as well as making jobs more mentally demanding. Driven by the ever-tightening global competition, many companies resort to frequent restructurings, ‘lean’ organisational practices, goal-oriented performance management methods or various forms of contingent work. As a result, many employees have to deal with an increase in flexibility and mobility requirements, job-related uncertainty and work intensity (Kompier 2006; Korunka and Kubicek 2017).
For these reasons, psychosocial factors at work have attracted more and more attention in the field of occupational safety and health (OSH). At the international, European and national levels, a wide range of policies, including both legislative and non-legislative approaches, have been developed by various stakeholders with the aim of improving psychosocial risk management within companies (European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions and European Agency for Safety and Health at Work 2014a, b; Leka et al. 2015). However, some concerns have been raised over the capability of these initiatives to achieve the intended improvements (Langenhan et al. 2013).
The degree to which psychosocial risks is included in the workplace risk assessment (WRA) procedure is an appropriate indicator for the effectiveness of the aforementioned policies, as the WRA is widely considered to be the core element of OSH management. The obligation to perform WRAs was introduced into OSH legislation in 1989 through the European Framework Directive on Safety and Health at Work (Council of the European Communities 1989). Since then, the related provisions have been transposed into national regulatory frameworks by all EU member states, making it mandatory for employers to determine the necessary occupational health and safety measures by carrying out an assessment of the risks the workers are exposed to at work. In doing so, all sources of risks, including psychosocial factors, should be considered. If psychosocial risks (e.g., excessive time pressure, conflicting demands, low job control, monotonous work, long/irregular working hours, lack of support from supervisors or colleagues, or violent threats from customers) were identified, measures must be taken to eliminate or minimise these risks as far as reasonably possible, and the measures taken should be reviewed for their effectiveness. Moreover, the results of the assessment, the measures derived and the evaluation of these measures must be documented (Beck et al. 2014; European Agency for Safety and Health at Work 2014b; Health and Safety Executive 2007).
Empirical information on how many companies account for psychosocial factors when performing WRAs is rather scarce, as very few countries collect or report such data. According to Denmark’s National Research Centre for the Working Environment, 65% of Danish companies surveyed psychological work environment factors in the 3 years prior to 2014 (Det Nationale Forskningcenter for Arbejdsmiljø 2017). In a Finnish study carried out in 2009, 82% of the surveyed managers and 63% of the surveyed workers’ representatives indicated that mental stress factors are considered in their companies’ WRAs (Niskanen et al. 2009). Figures available from two other countries are markedly lower: in the Netherlands, consideration of ‘work pressure’ (‘werkdruk’) in the context of WRAs occurred in 35% of the establishments concerned (Inspectie 2014), while 29% of French companies that had drawn up the mandatory risk assessment document had included psychosocial risks therein (Amira 2016). Apart from their highly limited geographical coverage, these data are also not very detailed; variations of psychosocial risk assessment prevalence according to company size and economic sector are the only empirical information provided. Other survey studies that touch on this issue are restricted to very specific study populations, such as workers’ representatives (Ahlers 2017), and are therefore of limited generalisability. The European Survey of Enterprises on New and Emerging Risks (ESENER) (European Agency for Safety and Health at Work 2016) cannot compensate for the shortcomings of the available national data, as it does not specifically refer to the inclusion of psychosocial factors in the WRA procedure legally prescribed by the EU Framework Directive on Safety and Health at Work.
The aim of the study reported in this article was to reduce the aforementioned knowledge gaps by (a) determining, on a representative basis, the prevalence of psychosocial risk assessments among companies in a large and highly developed economy (Germany), (b) estimating the quality of psychosocial risk assessments as reflected by their adherence to legally defined procedural requirements, and (c) exploring organisational factors that may impact the likelihood of a psychosocial risk assessment.
For this study, the case of Germany was chosen. In view of its economic significance and political clout, Germany is an interesting example both within the EU and globally. This makes figures from Germany a valuable contribution, since they provide an important point of reference for comparative research despite any national variations relating to legislation or institutional arrangements.

Methods

Data source

This study draws on survey data collected from a disproportionate stratified random sample of 6500 companies with at least one employee in mid-2015 as part of the evaluation of the German Joint Occupational Safety and Health Strategy (Gemeinsame Deutsche Arbeitsschutzstrategie—GDA). The target persons (i.e., the highest-ranking company members with responsibilities in OSH coordination) responded to a questionnaire, administered by computer-assisted telephone interview (CATI), on a wide range of safety and health topics, including several aspects of the WRA. Of the persons interviewed, 46% were company owners or managing directors, 23% were safety engineers and 31% were other company members (mostly managers) with responsibilities in OSH coordination. Even though field work was carried out according to generally accepted procedural standards, the net response rate did not exceed 15% (which will be discussed in the “Strengths and limitations” section of this article). The data were weighted to obtain a sample that is representative with respect to company size, sector and region. A more detailed description of the survey methodology (including the questionnaire) can be found in Sleik et al. (2015).

Variables

Psychosocial risk assessment

The basic questionnaire item concerning the WRA was “Are risk assessments being carried out at the workplaces in your company (yes; no; do not know; no answer (n/a))?” If WRAs were confirmed, respondents were to indicate whether the results of WRAs are being documented (yes; no; partly; do not know; n/a), whether needs for improvements had been identified in the most recent WRA (yes; no; do not know; n/a) and, if so, whether measures had been taken to realise the necessary improvements (yes; no; not yet but projected; do not know; n/a). If measures were reported, the respondents were asked whether the effectiveness of these measures was checked at a later date (yes; no; not yet but projected; partly; do not know; n/a). The scope of the WRAs (if any) was measured by two questions. First, the respondents were asked which of the following aspects of work were being routinely examined in this context (yes; no; do not know; n/a): “(A) Layout of the workplace”; “(B) Physical work environment”; “(C) Work equipment”; “(D) Working time arrangements”; “(E) Work organisation”; “(F) Social relations (between colleagues, between workers and superiors, between workers and customers)”. The second question referred to the kind of hazards that were considered in the company’s WRA (yes; no; not applicable, do not know; n/a): “(A) Hazards related to physical inactivity at the job”; “(B) Hazards related to the physical work environment, e.g., noise, heat, cold, dust”; “(C) Hazards related to hard physical work, e.g., carrying heavy loads, unfavourable postures”; “(D) Hazardous working equipment or machinery”; “(E) Hazards related to handling chemical or biological substances”; “(F) Hazards related to psychosocial workload”.
Based on the answers to these questions, different patterns of WRA implementation were determined as composite dependent variables for further analysis. According to the focus of the study, which was on psychosocial factors in the context of WRAs, a distinction was made between the following three categories:
  • Pattern A—Inactive with regard to WRA Carrying out WRAs was not confirmed (response categories ‘no’, ‘do not know’ or ‘n/a’).
  • Pattern B—WRA without consideration of psychosocial factors Carrying out WRAs was confirmed (response category ‘yes’), but consideration of hazards related to psychosocial factors was not (response categories ‘no’, ‘not applicable’, ‘do not know’ or ‘n/a’).
  • Pattern C—WRA considering psychosocial factors Both implementation of WRAs and consideration of psychosocial factors were confirmed (response category ‘yes’).
Taking psychosocial risks into account is certainly an indispensable element of a WRA but does not necessarily mean that a WRA is fully consistent with legal demands. Therefore, the study further sought to capture those cases of psychosocial risk assessment that also met the other essential requirements of a WRA in a fairly comprehensive manner (the “cream of the crop”). Such cases could be defined using companies’ answers to several survey items on WRA, since these items closely correspond to the relevant legal provisions. Accordingly, pattern C from above was further divided into two subcategories:
  • Pattern C1—Incomplete WRA considering psychosocial factors Both implementation of WRAs and consideration of psychosocial factors were confirmed, but fulfilment of one or more of the following requirements was not (response categories ‘no’‚ ‘do not know’ or ‘n/a’): (1) WRA documented; (2) measures taken if needs for improvements were identified; (3) measures checked for effectiveness if measures were taken; (4) all of the work aspects mentioned above were taken into account.
  • Pattern C2—Complete WRA considering psychosocial factors All of the aforementioned questions were affirmatively answered.
For additional analyses, two more items from the questionnaire were included. One was about the issue of employee involvement in the WRA (“Are the employees being interviewed in the context of WRAs about hazards and health problems attributable to their jobs (yes; no; partly; do not know; n/a)?”). The other item was concerning the estimated benefit of the WRA (“How do you rate the benefit of WRAs in terms of OSH improvements in your company (very high; rather high; rather low; very low; do not know; n/a)?”).

Characteristics of companies

Several factors that have previously been discussed as affecting company OSH practices were covered in the GDA survey questionnaire and could therefore be included in the present study as independent variables. These were company size (Hasle and Limborg 2006), sector (van Stolk et al. 2012), economic situation (Filer and Golbe 2003), magnitude of OSH risks (European Agency for Safety and Health at Work 2012), employee representation (Walters and Nichols 2007), specialist OSH assistance (Hämäläinen et al. 2001), workplace inspections by OSH authorities (Ko et al. 2010), knowledge about legal requirements (Sczesny et al. 2014), OSH training of managers and supervisors (Colligan and Cohen 2004) and perceived economic benefit of OSH (Zwetsloot et al. 2010).
Company size was determined by the question “How many employees, approximately, are working in your company?” The information obtained was categorised as follows: 1–9 employees; 10–49 employees; 50–249 employees; ≥ 250 employees. Sector was measured in two ways: First by the question “Does your establishment belong to the public service sector (yes; no, private business; do not know; n/a)?” and, second, using a dichotomous categorisation of the companies’ branch affiliations (production/agriculture; services). The economic situation of the surveyed organisation was measured by one question: “How do you rate the current economic situation (public service: ‘budgetary situation’) of your company (public service: ‘of your establishment’) (good; satisfactory; bad; do not know; n/a)?” The magnitude of psychosocial risks in the company was determined using the first two response categories of the following item: “How many employees in your company are exposed to the hazards listed below (almost all; rather many; rather few; almost none; do not know; n/a)? (…) (F) Psychosocial risks related to dealing directly with difficult clients, e.g., dissatisfied customers or patients; (G) Psychosocial risks concerning time/performance pressure; (H) Hazards resulting from social relations at the workplace, e.g., conflicts among colleagues or with the leadership style?” Respondents were further asked about the presence of an employee representative body (“works council”) in their company (yes; no; do not know; n/a). When data analyses related to this variable were carried out, ‘5–9 employees’ was used as the lowest size category, as legal regulations on works councils in Germany do not apply to companies smaller than that. Interviewees were also asked to indicate if their company has contracted a safety specialist (yes; no; do not know; n/a). If this was the case or if the respondent himself was a safety engineer, the company was classified as employing safety specialist assistance (as required by law). Specialist assistance in occupational health was measured by the question “Do you have a contracted occupational physician (yes; no; do not know; n/a)?” Regarding inspections, the respondents were asked whether their company had been visited by a competent OSH authority or accident insurance organisation since January 2013 and whether psychosocial risk assessment had been a subject of that visit (yes; no; do not know; n/a). Respondents further rated their level of knowledge about legal OSH requirements (very high; rather high; rather low; very low; do not know; n/a), indicated whether the company’s managers and supervisors receive training in OSH (yes; no; do not know; n/a) and characterised the general view of the company’s management on the benefit of OSH for company success (response categories: OSH helps to reduce costs; OSH increases costs without having an equivalent benefit; OSH neither contributes to nor interferes with company success; do not know; n/a).

Statistical analysis

Descriptive analyses of weighted data were carried out using the CSTABULATE procedure from the SPSS statistical software package 18.0 for Windows. In these analyses, only companies with valid responses (i.e., answer categories “do not know” and “n/a” not considered) were included. As item non-response rates are rather low (to the most part ranging from 0 to 4%, with only 4 out of 32 items showing rates between 4 and 11%), no major problems occurred from this.
Multinomial logistic regressions based on unweighted data were performed to determine odds ratios (ORs) for WRAs with and without consideration of psychosocial factors according to relevant company characteristics (see above). In this context, an OR indicates the chance that a subgroup of companies exhibits a certain type of WRA implementation rather than having no WRA at all, in relation to the chance found in the reference group. While the univariate analyses included the total sample (i.e., companies with at least one employee, to which the legal obligation to carry out WRAs apply), the regression analyses were restricted to companies with ≥ 5 employees, as for one variable included in the multivariate model (i.e., presence of a works council), no data had been collected from companies smaller than that. The function of the interviewee within the company (owner/managing director, safety engineer, other) was additionally included as an independent variable in the multivariate model to account for possible responder bias. For multivariate analyses, the NOMREG procedure from SPSS 18.0 was used.

Results

Table 1 displays the frequencies (absolute unweighted numbers and weighted percentages) of company characteristics which have been treated as independent variables in this study. The weighted sample largely consists of small companies, establishments from the service sector, and private businesses. The predominant economic situations among the companies were good and satisfactory. Just over one-third of the companies reported one or more psychosocial hazards that affect a large part of their workforce. Approximately one out of six companies has an employee representative body, and specialist assistance in safety and in occupational health is available in 48% and 36% of the responding organisations, respectively. 12% of the respondents confirmed that during the two and a half years prior to the survey, there had been an inspection that involved the topic of psychosocial risk assessment. The level of personal knowledge about legal OSH requirements was mostly (70%) rated as very or rather high. Clearly less than half of the companies arrange for manager or supervisor training in OSH. The vast majority of the respondents characterised the management’s view on the contribution of OSH to company success as either positive or neutral, and only one out of ten respondents indicated decidedly critical management views emphasising high costs and low benefits.
Table 1
Statistical overview of sample characteristics
Variable
n (unw)
% (w) (95% CI)
Number of employees (n = 6500)a
  
 1–9
1690
69 (67–71)
 10–49
1891
25 (24–27)
 50–249
1838
5 (4–5)
 ≥ 250
1081
1 (1–1)
Sector (I) (n = 6500)a
  
 Production/agriculture
2001
23 (21–25)
 Services
4499
77 (75–79)
Sector (II) (n = 6465)a
  
 Private
5198
92 (90–93)
 Public
1267
8 (7–10)
Economic situation of the company (n = 6205)a
  
 Bad
499
6 (5–7)
 Satisfactory or good
5706
94 (93–95)
Magnitude of psychosocial risks in the company (n = 6198)a
  
 No psychosocial risks
3305
63 (60–65)
 One psychosocial risk (out of three)
1656
23 (21–25)
 Two or three psychosocial risks
1237
14 (13–16)
Works council (n = 5552)b
  
 No
3002
84 (82–85)
 Yes
2550
16 (15–18)
Safety specialist assistance (n = 6462)a
  
 No
1583
52 (49–54)
 Yes
4879
48 (46–51)
Occupational health specialist assistance (n = 6467)a
  
 No
2197
64 (62–67)
 Yes
4270
36 (33–38)
Inspection by OSH authority concerning psychosocial risk assessment (n = 5803)a
  
 No
4348
88 (87–90)
 Yes
1455
12 (10–13)
Level of knowledge about legal requirements in OSH (n = 6440)a
  
 Very/rather low
1395
30 (28–33)
 Very/rather high
5045
70 (67–72)
Training of managers concerning OSH (n = 6280)a
  
 No
2775
59 (57–62)
 Yes
3505
41 (39–44)
General view on the benefit of OSH (n = 6161)a
  
 OSH neither contributes to nor interferes with company success
2049
44 (41–47)
 OSH increases costs without having an equivalent benefit
530
11 (10–13)
 OSH helps reducing costs
3582
45 (42–48)
Total sample (N)
6500
100
n number of valid responses, unw unweighted, w weighted, CI confidence interval
aNumber of valid responses; number of invalid ʻdo not knowʼ and ʻn/aʼ responses = difference to 6500
bNumber of valid responses (basis: companies with ≥ 5 employees (N = 5571); number of invalid ʻdo not knowʼ and ʻn/aʼ responses = difference to 5571

Prevalence and quality of psychosocial risk assessments

As shown in Table 2, just over half of the companies (54%) were confirmed to carry out WRAs, the vast majority of which (82%) were being documented. If needs for improvements were identified in the context of the WRA, which was true for approximately half of the cases (48%), measures to realise these improvements were almost always taken (95%) but were checked for effectiveness considerably less often (57%). Therefore, about two out of five WRAs that had resulted in the identification of OSH problems had also run through all the subsequent procedural stages described in OSH law.
Table 2
Implementation of workplace risk assessments (WRA)
Variable
n (unw)
% (w) (95% CI)
WRA carried out (n = 6355)a
  
 No
1439
46 (44–49)
 Yes
4916
54 (51–57)
Results of WRA documented (n = 4878)b
  
 No
256
14 (12–17)
 Partly
96
4 (3–6)
 Yes
4526
82 (79–84)
Needs for improvements identified (n = 4729)b
  
 No
1730
52 (49–56)
 Yes
2999
48 (44–51)
Measures taken (n = 2991)c
  
 No
43
1 (1–2)
 Not yet but scheduled
133
4 (2–5)
 Yes
2815
95 (93–97)
Measures checked for effectiveness (n = 2783)d
  
 No
391
23 (19–27)
 Not yet but scheduled
526
20 (17–24)
 Partly
32
0 (0–1)
 Yes
1834
57 (52–61)
Work aspects considered in WRA
  
 Layout of the workplace (n = 4839)b
  
  No
309
10 (8–12)
  Yes
4530
90 (88–92)
 Physical work environment (n = 4848)b
  
  No
279
7 (6–9)
  Yes
4569
93 (91–94)
 Work equipment (n = 4864)b
  
  No
226
7 (6–10)
  Yes
4638
93 (90–94)
 Working time arrangements (n = 4787)b
  
  No
2424
51 (48–55)
  Yes
2363
49 (45–52)
 Work organisation (n = 4830)b
  
  No
1015
23 (20–26)
  Yes
3815
77 (74–80)
 Social relations (n = 4777)b
  
  No
3018
64 (61–67)
  Yes
1759
36 (33–39)
Risk factors considered in WRA
  
 Hazards related to physical inactivity at the job (n = 4811)b
  
  No
1721
49 (45–52)
  Yes
3090
51 (48–55)
 Hazards related to the physical work environment (n = 4867)b
  
  No
787
27 (24–30)
  Yes
4080
73 (70–76)
 Hazards related to hard physical work (n = 4865)b
  
  No
1049
32 (29–36)
  Yes
3816
68 (64–71)
 Hazardous working equipment and machinery (n = 4874)b
  
  No
997
29 (26–33)
  Yes
3877
71 (67–74)
 Hazardous substances (n = 4879)b
  
  No
1604
45 (42–49)
  Yes
3275
55 (52–58)
 Hazards related to psychosocial workload (n = 4829)b
  
  No
2106
58 (55–61)
  Yes
2723
42 (39–45)
Employees interviewed in the context of WRA (n = 4830)b
  
 No
1099
27 (24–30)
 Yes/partly
3731
73 (70–76)
Estimated benefit of WRA (n = 4868)b
  
 Very/rather low
1292
37 (34–40)
 Very/rather high
3576
63 (60–66)
Total sample (N)
6500
100
aNumber of valid responses; number of invalid ʻdo not knowʼ and ʻn/aʼ responses = difference to 6500
bNumber of valid responses, if WRAs have been carried out (N = 4916); number of invalid ʻdo not knowʼ and ʻn/aʼ responses = difference to 4916
cNumber of valid responses, if needs for improvements have been identified (N = 2999); number of invalid responses ʻdo not knowʼ and ʻn/aʼ = difference to 2999
dNumber of valid responses, if measures have been taken (N = 2815); number of invalid ʻdo not knowʼ and ʻn/aʼ responses = difference to 2815
While examining the layout of workplaces, the physical work environment and the work equipment is virtually standard practice (and looking at aspects of work organisation is still very common) when WRAs are being carried out (90%, 93%, 93% and 77% of the WRAs, respectively), working time arrangements (49%) and social relations at work (36%) are under scrutiny in only a minority of the cases. Accordingly, about seven out of ten WRAs consider hazards related to hard physical work (68%), working equipment and machinery (71%), or the working environment (73%), but only 42% of the companies with a WRA reported that psychosocial hazards are considered as part of the WRA.
Thus, the survey indicates that most German companies either show no WRA activities at all (pattern A) or have implemented the WRA without considering psychosocial hazards (pattern B). Only one out of five companies (21%) accounts for psychosocial hazards when carrying out a WRA (pattern C). Most of these WRAs may be categorised as incomplete with regard to process and scope (C1). The proportion of companies with a WRA that not only includes psychosocial risks but also meets the other requirements for complete implementation (C2) is 5% (Table 3).
Table 3
WRA implementation patterns, by company characteristics
Variable
Pattern A
Pattern B
Pattern C
Pattern C1
Pattern C2
n (unw)
% (w)
95% CI
n (unw)
% (w)
95% CI
n (unw)
% (w)
95% CI
n (unw)
% (w)
95% CI
n (unw)
% (w)
95% CI
Number of employees (n = 6500)a
               
 1–9
922
57
(54–61)
470
28
(25–31)
298
15
(13–17)
214
11
(9–13)
84
4
(3–5)
 10–49
491
29
(26–33)
729
38
(34–42)
671
33
(29–36)
500
26
(23–29)
171
7
(6–9)
 50–249
145
9
(7–12)
693
38
(35–42)
1000
53
(49–56)
766
40
(37–43)
234
12
(10–15)
 ≥ 250
26
2
(1–3)
301
28
(24–31)
754
70
(67–74)
513
47
(43–51)
241
23
(20–27)
Sector (I) (n = 6500)a
               
 Production/agriculture
280
37
(32–42)
857
44
(40–49)
864
19
(16–23)
618
15
(13–18)
246
4
(3–5)
 Services
1304
51
(48–54)
1336
27
(24–29)
1859
22
(20–25)
1375
16
(15–19)
484
6
(5–7)
Sector (II) (n = 6465)a
               
 Private
1407
49
(46–52)
1769
31
(28–33)
2022
20
(18–22)
1460
15
(14–17)
562
5
(4–6)
 Public
168
32
(24–41)
413
32
(25–40)
686
36
(29–44)
522
28
(22–35)
164
8
(5–13)
Economic situation of the company (n = 6205)a
               
 Bad
119
59
(47–70)
168
26
(17–38)
212
15
(10–22)
163
11
(7–17)
49
4
(2–9)
 Satisfactory or good
1409
47
(45–50)
1930
31
(29–34)
2367
22
(20–24)
1719
16
(15–18)
648
5
(4–6)
Magnitude of psychosocial risks in the company (n = 6198)a
               
 No psychosocial risks
956
50
(47–53)
1228
34
(31–37)
1121
16
(14–19)
784
12
(11–15)
337
4
(3–5)
 One psychosocial risk (out of three)
347
43
(38–48)
520
30
(25–35)
789
27
(23–32)
596
19
(16–24)
193
8
(6–11)
 Two or three psychosocial risks (out of three)
226
45
(38–52)
323
20
(15–25)
688
35
(30–41)
516
27
(22–33)
172
8
(5–11)
Works council (n = 5552)b
               
 No
819
40
(37–44)
1145
36
(33–39)
1038
24
(21–27)
755
18
(15–20)
283
6
(5–8)
 Yes
170
15
(12–20)
829
37
(32–42)
1551
48
(43–53)
1136
37
(33–41)
415
11
(9–14)
Safety specialist assistance (n = 6462)a
               
 No
972
66
(63–70)
395
24
(21–27)
216
10
(8–13)
177
8
(6–10)
39
2
(1–3)
 Yes
584
27
(24–31)
1791
39
(36–42)
2504
34
(31–37)
1816
25
(23–28)
688
9
(7–11)
Occupational health specialist assistance (n = 6467)a
               
 No
1182
62
(59–66)
645
25
(22–28)
370
13
(11–15)
280
10
(8–12)
90
3
(2–4)
 Yes
386
21
(18–25)
1536
41
(38–45)
2348
38
(34–41)
1708
28
(25–31)
640
10
(8–12)
Inspection by OSH authority concerning psychosocial risk assessment (n = 5803)a
               
 No
1304
52
(49–55)
1609
30
(28–33)
1435
18
(16–20)
1094
14
(12–16)
341
4
(3–5)
 Yes
78
20
(14–28)
328
30
(24–37)
1049
50
(43–56)
716
33
(28–39)
333
17
(12–22)
Level of knowledge about legal requirements in OSH (n = 6440)a
               
 Very/rather low
641
67
(63–72)
440
23
(19–27)
314
10
(7–12)
261
9
(7–11)
53
1
(1–2)
 Very/rather high
917
39
(36–42)
1732
34
(31–37)
2396
27
(25–30)
1722
20
(18–22)
674
7
(6–9)
Training of managers concerning OSH (n = 6280)a
               
 No
1087
61
(57–64)
915
25
(22–28)
773
14
(12–17)
641
11
(9–14)
132
3
(2–4)
 Yes
422
28
(25–32)
1210
39
(36–43)
1873
33
(30–36)
1289
24
(21–27)
584
9
(8–11)
General view on the benefit of OSH (n = 6161)a
               
 OSH neither contributes to nor interferes with company success
724
53
(50–58)
712
32
(28–36)
613
15
(12–17)
506
12
(10–14)
107
3
(2–4)
 OSH increases costs without having an equivalent benefit
141
45
(37–54)
203
37
(29–46)
186
18
(13–24)
141
14
(10–19)
45
4
(2–8)
 OSH helps to reduce costs
612
41
(37–45)
1160
29
(26–33)
1810
30
(27–33)
1261
22
(19–25)
549
8
(6–10)
Total
1584
48
(45–50)
2193
31
(29–33)
2723
21
(20–24)
1993
16
(15–18)
730
5
(5–6)
a,bSee Table 1
As seen in Table 3, there are several differences in WRA implementation between subgroups of the sample. Whereas total avoidance of a WRA (pattern A) is the predominant practice (57%) among micro-companies (1–9 employees) and is still fairly common (29%) among establishments with 10–49 employees, it is rarely observed in mid-sized and large companies. WRAs considering psychosocial factors (pattern C) are much more prevalent in large companies (70%) than in micro-enterprises (15%). The prevalence of psychosocial risk assessments (pattern C) is also distinctly higher in companies with the following characteristics: the presence of a works council (48%; no works council: 24%), an affiliation with the public sector (36%; private: 20%), availability of safety and occupational health specialist assistance (34% vs. 10%, and 38% vs. 13%), having large parts of the workforce affected by one or more psychosocial risks (27% and 35% vs. 16%), training managers/superiors in OSH (33% vs. 14%), having a high level of knowledge about legal OSH requirements (27% vs. 10%), having had a recent inspection by OSH authorities that involved discussion of psychosocial risk assessment (50% vs. 18%), and having a positive view on the economic benefits of OSH (30%; neutral: 15%; negative: 18%). For WRA pattern B, group differences are generally less pronounced, with the production (44%) vs. services (27%) difference being the most notable exception.
The observation that most of the WRAs that consider psychosocial hazards lack one or more other elements of complete implementation (C2 < C1) was made across all subgroups of the sample. Completely implemented psychosocial risk assessments (C2) were reported most frequently (> 10%) by large and medium-sized companies, by companies with a works council and by companies that have been inspected by OSH authorities.
The results further show that interviewing employees about work-related hazards and health problems is more common in companies that consider psychosocial factors in the WRA (C1/C2 > B), especially in companies where all work aspects are being examined and all process requirements fulfilled as well (C2 > C1). Furthermore, the percentage of companies rating the benefit of the WRA as very or rather high increases from 57% among pattern B to 82% among pattern C2 (Table 4).
Table 4
Employee involvement in WRA and management view on the benefit of WRA, by WRA implementation patterns
 
Pattern B
Pattern C1
Pattern C2
n (unw)
% (w)
95% CI
n (unw)
% (w)
95% CI
n (unw)
% (w)
95% CI
Employees have been interviewed in the context of WRA (n = 4830)a
         
 Yes/partly
1463
68
(63–72)
1603
78
(73–82)
665
88
(79–94)
 No
678
32
(29–37)
364
22
(18–27)
57
12
(6–21)
Evaluation of benefit of WRA (n = 4868)a
         
 Very/rather high
1444
57
(53–62)
1497
67
(61–72)
635
82
(75–88)
 Very/rather low
720
43
(38–47)
479
33
(28–39)
93
18
(12–25)
aNumber of valid responses (basis: companies which have carried out WRAs (N = 4916)); number of invalid ʻdo not knowʼ and ʻn/aʼ responses = difference to 4916

Predictors of implementation

According to the results of the multivariate analysis presented in Table 5, the implementation of the WRA, especially a WRA that incorporates psychosocial factors, is strongly associated with company size. The chance of a WRA being carried out is five (OR = 4.8, 95% CI 2.5–9.1 for pattern B) and six (OR = 5.7, 95% CI 3.0–11.0 for pattern C) times higher in large companies (≥ 249 employees) than in small ones (5–9 employees).
Table 5
Results of the multinomial logistic regression analysis
Variablea
WRA Pattern B
WRA Pattern C
OR
95% CI
p
OR
95% CI
p
Number of employees
      
 5–9 (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 10–49
1.4
1.1–1.8
0.009
1.5
1.1–2.1
0.006
 50–249
2.7
1.9–3.9
0.000
3.1
2.1–4.6
0.000
 > 249
4.8
2.5–9.1
0.000
5.7
3.0–11.0
0.000
Sector (I)
      
 Services (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 Production/agriculture
2.6
2.0–3.3
0.000
1.5
1.2–2.0
0.002
Economic situation of the company
      
 Bad (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 Satisfactory or good
1.4
0.9–2.1
0.094
1.9
1.2–2.8
0.004
Magnitude of psychosocial risks in the company
      
 No psychosocial risks (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 One psychosocial risk (out of three)
1.0
0.8–1.3
0.919
1.4
1.1–1.9
0.010
 Two or three psychosocial risks
0.8
0.6–1.0
0.076
1.4
1.0–1.8
0.045
Works council
      
 No (Ref.)
   
1.0
  
 Yes
1.5
1.1–2.0
0.023
1.8
1.3–2.5
0.000
Safety specialist assistance
      
 No (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 Yes
2.7
2.1–3.5
0.000
3.5
2.6–4.6
0.000
Occupational health specialist assistance
      
 No (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 Yes
2.5
2.0–3.2
0.000
3.4
2.6–4.4
0.000
Inspection by OSH authority concerning psychosocial risk assessment
      
 No
1.0
  
1.0
  
 Yes
1.2
0.8–1.6
0.351
3.4
2.4–4.7
0.000
Level of knowledge about legal requirements in OSH
      
 Very/rather low (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 Very/rather high
1.9
1.5–2.4
0.000
2.9
2.2–3.7
0.000
Training of managers concerning OSH
      
 No (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 Yes
2.0
1.6–2.5
0.000
2.7
2.2–3.4
0.000
General view on the benefit of OSH
      
 Neither contributes to nor interferes with company success (Ref.)
1.0
  
1.0
  
 Increases costs without having an equivalent benefit
1.1
0.8–1.5
0.713
1.0
0.7–1.4
0.903
 Helps to reduce costs
1.2
1.0–1.5
0.059
1.7
1.4–2.2
0.000
OR odds ratio. N = 4271 companies with ≥ 5 employees; only valid responses; Nagelkerke’s Pseudo-R2 = 0.411
aThe variables ‘Sector II’ and ‘Function of responder’ were ommitted from this table as they showed no significant effect in the multivariate model (see chapter ‘Predictors of implementation’)
After company size, the availability of safety specialist assistance (OR = 3.5, 95% CI 2.6–4.6), the availability of occupational health specialist assistance (OR = 3.4, 95% CI 2.6–4.4) and having had an inspection visit by OSH authorities (OR = 3.4, 95% CI 2.4–4.7) show the strongest effects on psychosocial risk assessment occurrence (= WRA pattern C), with ORs larger than 3. ORs between 2 and 3 (pattern C) were found for having a very/rather high level of knowledge about legal OSH requirements and for training managers/supervisors in OSH. Of the remaining predictor variables, the presence of a works council, being in a good or satisfactory economic situation, recognising OSH as helping to reduce costs, an affiliation of the company with the production sector, and a self-reported presence of psychosocial risks in the company show small to moderate associations (1 < OR < 2) with pattern C. However, being categorised as either a public or a private establishment (OR = 0.9, 95% CI 0.6–1.2) and the function of the responder within his company (safety engineer: OR = 1.2, 95% CI 0.8–1.6, and owner/managing director: OR = 0.9, 95% CI 0.7–1.2) have no significant effects in this regard (not presented in Table 5).
As far as WRA pattern B (i.e., psychosocial factors not included in the WRA) is concerned, the effect sizes of the predictor variables are generally smaller, with sector variable I (production vs. services) being the only exception (ORpattern B: 2.6, ORpattern C: 1.5). Furthermore, two variables that proved to be associated with WRA pattern C (i.e., presence of psychosocial risks in the company and having had an inspection visit concerning psychosocial risk assessments) show, for obvious reasons, no significant association with pattern B.

Discussion

The results of this study indicate that in Germany, as in other European countries (Amira 2016; Inspectie 2014), the obligation to consider psychosocial factors when carrying out WRAs is still not put into practice by most companies. Even among large establishments with 250 or more employees, three out of ten report negatively in this regard. This study therefore confirms recent qualitative findings based on observations reported by German OSH consultants (Lenhardt 2017).
Several reasons for psychosocial risks being a particularly “wicked problem” that is more difficult to deal with than “traditional” OSH problems (such as accidents or noise) have been noted by Helbo Jespersen et al. (2016): among other things, psychosocial risks are characterised by unclear cause–effect relationships and rather uncertain solutions; they are largely determined by variable subjective perceptions of work situations; they closely relate to the core area of employer prerogatives, particularly the organisation of work; and attempts to tackle them easily engage opposing interests and entail challenges to the managers’ exercise of power. Altogether, these characteristics may explain, in large part, the generally low level of company activity regarding psychosocial risk assessments.
However, our data show that certain companies are less likely than others to account for psychosocial factors when assessing workplace risks. This is especially evident among small establishments, which have repeatedly been shown to have greater deficiencies in OSH performance for a variety of reasons (Walters and Wadsworth 2016a). In this context, previous research has emphasised that small companies operate under particularly volatile conditions, and management responsibilities are often concentrated on one person. As a result, these organisations not only have comparatively limited resources (in terms of personnel, time, money, skills and knowledge) to devote to seemingly “unproductive” activities such as OSH but are also more disinclined to use formalised systematic management approaches in this area (Champoux and Brun 2003; Hasle and Limborg 2006; Masi and Cagno 2015). Moreover, small companies were found to exhibit a stronger tendency towards trivialising, or even denying, work-related safety and health risks, which may be partly attributed to accidents being very rare events in individual small establishments (Hasle et al. 2009). It is important to consider, however, that many small businesses are used to handling problems in a very personal and highly pragmatic manner without deploying predefined and clearly structured procedures and protocols. This most likely applies to safety and health issues as well. Although very little research has been done on this subject (Pinder et al. 2016), it may therefore be assumed that especially small companies would rather resort to informal and implicit (but not necessarily ineffective) ad hoc practices of “assessing” and “managing” occupational risks (Beck et al. 2017). Such practices may remain, at least partly, undetected if survey respondents are asked about adhering to legally prescribed WRA procedures.
With so many companies being highly reluctant to address psychosocial risks because of their particularly “wicked character” mentioned above, it seems obvious that an external “push”, for instance that provided by inspection visits, is often needed to get things going. In fact, our study results suggest that being inspected by an OSH authority clearly makes a difference with regard to a company’s willingness to carry out psychosocial risk assessments. A recently published review presented some evidence in agreement with this finding but also concluded that the overall impact of inspections on psychosocial risk management is still rather limited for various reasons, such as unfavourable regulatory and labour market contexts, underdeveloped inspection strategies, lack of resources, insufficient training, or a low frequency of inspection visits (Weissbrodt and Giauque 2017). Some of these circumstances apply to Germany as well, although a number of efforts have been made in recent years to improve the situation (Beck et al. 2011; Ertel 2014). In Germany, as in most other developed countries, arranging for adequate staffing and providing OSH inspectors with the skills needed for effectively intervening in the area of psychosocial risk management still remain considerable challenges (Johnstone 2016).
Similar conclusions can be drawn with respect to OSH specialist assistance. To our knowledge, the present study was the first one to examine associations between the implementation of psychosocial risk assessments and the utilisation of safety engineers and occupational physicians, proving that both are strong predictors of a company’s capability to incorporate psychosocial risks into a WRA. However, it must be considered that according to our survey data, a great number of companies do not make any use of professional OSH consultants, or, if they do, are still quite often dealing with OSH specialists who have little expertise in psychosocial risk prevention and show rather low attention to that issue in their daily practice. The latter is certainly true for safety engineers (Hamacher et al. 2013; Leitão and Greiner 2017), whereas findings for occupational physicians are more mixed (Harber et al. 2010; Persechino et al. 2016). Overall, the potential benefits of OSH specialist assistance for promoting psychosocial risk assessments still seem far from being fully exploited.
Since psychosocial risks are closely connected to issues of management decisions and power relations at work, it may be assumed that worker representation is rather important for whether or not these risks are being systematically addressed within companies. Previous research from the Netherlands (Popma 2009) and Germany (Ahlers and Brussig 2005) found some evidence that corroborates this assumption. Our own study also revealed that psychosocial risk assessments are more likely to occur when works councils are in place, but the association, although statistically significant, was not as strong as might be expected considering the extensive co-determination rights of employee representative bodies in Germany. Apparently, the mere presence of works councils (which is a rare enough thing in most countries) does not make much of a difference after all in regard to psychosocial risk assessments. The decisive point here seems to be the workers’ representatives’ actual scope and ability to mobilise sufficient power resources and make full use of their statutory rights (Popma 2009), but such favourable circumstances are by no means the rule, as evidenced by a recent empirical study on determinants and patterns of workers’ representation in OSH (Walters and Wadsworth 2016b).
As mentioned above, the consideration of work-related psychosocial risks in the management of OSH—especially in WRAs—is mandatory for employers according to EU and national regulations (European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions and European Agency for Safety and Health at Work 2014a, b; Zoni and Lucchini 2012). Given that psychosocial risk assessment activity is associated with the company’s level of knowledge about the legal obligations in OSH, its low prevalence might be attributed to a general lack of information on what is required from companies by OSH law. At first glance, this interpretation seems to be at odds with GDA survey results showing that as many as 70% of company representatives describe their knowledge about legal OSH requirements as very or rather good. However, a more thorough examination of what managers know about OSH regulations presented a much less optimistic picture, especially for small and medium-sized enterprises (Sczesny et al. 2014). Judging from this, plain ignorance of OSH provisions among duty holders, in addition to methodological problems and issues of power, may still be a major obstacle to the implementation of psychosocial risk assessments. As our findings suggest, intensifying manager training in OSH, which is implemented in only two out of five companies, would be highly beneficial in this regard.
Over the years, there has been a recurrent debate on the relevance of the “business case” for promoting OSH management, and psychosocial risk management in particular, emphasising the need to complement regulatory approaches with strategies to increase companies’ understanding of the favourable effects preventive action may have on their economic performance (Leka et al. 2015). In principle, this idea is supported by our study, which found that the consideration of psychosocial factors in WRAs is associated with the management’s belief that OSH helps to reduce costs. However, the effect size is rather small, indicating that a generally positive management view on the economic benefits of OSH may not be a particularly important driver for psychosocial risk assessments. Quite astonishingly, this is also true for the magnitude of psychosocial risks within the company (as estimated by the surveyed company representatives). Even though the chance of psychosocial risk assessments being implemented is slightly elevated in workplaces where many or almost all employees are considered to be affected by at least one psychosocial risk factor, it is quite obvious that the presence of the problem, per se, has no strong implications for company actions. Therefore, additional facilitating circumstances must be present to induce substantial efforts in the development of psychosocial risk management at the company level.
Finally, two other study findings that may challenge, or at least qualify, some conventional wisdom about the conditions for managing psychosocial risks should be highlighted. One assumption is that dealing with these kind of risks is more relevant to the service economy than to the production sector, where the main emphasis is on material risk factors instead. However, our data suggest that both studied categories of WRAs—those confined to physical or chemical hazards as well as those including psychosocial factors—are more likely to be found in establishments from the production sector. Even though the effect was fairly small for the second WRA pattern, this indicates that considering psychosocial risk management to be primarily a service sector issue would be rather misleading.
Given that appropriately addressing the psychosocial work environment is a challenging task for most companies that could absorb a considerable amount of their organisational capacities, it might also seem natural to suppose that prosperous companies are clearly more inclined to take action in this field than those performing poorly in economic terms. Indeed, the present study revealed that the chance of psychosocial risk assessments occurring is higher when the company’s economic situation is rated as good or satisfactory. However, the established effect was not very large, indicating that the incorporation of psychosocial risks into OSH practice, although benefiting from a thriving business, is not a sheer “fair weather phenomenon”.

Strengths and limitations

This study has several strengths. First, it is based on data from a comparatively large sample that is not only representative of German companies with regard to size, branch and region but also allows for differentiated subgroup analyses. Second, data were obtained from company managers or functionaries who are, due to their decision-making and coordinating responsibilities, likely to be better informed about the organisation’s preventive activities than ordinary employees are. Furthermore, this study, in contrast to previous survey-based research on psychosocial risk assessments, does not restrict itself to merely examining bivariate distributions, but analyses the independent influence of various organisational characteristics on psychosocial risk assessment occurrence in a multivariate model.
There are also some noteworthy limitations of this study. As mentioned in the “Methods” section, companies with less than five employees, which account for 929 cases, or 14% of the unweighted sample, had to be excluded from the multivariate analyses because of missing data for one of the explanatory variables (i.e., “works councils”). This raises the question as to whether the findings can be generalised to the entire sample. For testing purposes, we included very small companies (1–4 employees) in a repeated multinomial regression, assuming a zero prevalence of works councils in this group (which is, in view of the German regulations on works councils and high-quality data on workers’ representation in Germany (Ellguth and Kohaut 2018), quite realistic). In this rerun, all associations remained virtually unchanged (results not shown), indicating that the validity of the multivariate findings is not restricted to companies with ≥ 5 employees.
The response rate in the survey our study is based on was rather low, even lower than the typically low rate for most non-enforced business surveys (Rasmussen and Thimm 2009). One possible reason for this is that the particular subject of this survey (i.e., “safety and health”) normally might not attract as much of a company’s attention as other subjects that are more closely business related. Moreover, companies in Germany seem to be generally less willing to participate in such surveys than companies in most other European countries are, as comparative data from ESENER-2 (European Agency for Safety and Health at Work 2016) or the European Company Survey (European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions 2015) show.
The low response rate of the GDA survey may have resulted in substantial non-response bias. Unfortunately, we could not perform a detailed non-responder analysis, because the necessary data were unavailable to us. According to the technical report of the GDA survey, empirical information on non-responding companies based on sampling frame data is restricted to three characteristics (i.e., size, economic sector and region) that might be related to our outcome variable. Although small companies and establishments from the private services sector turned out to be clearly overrepresented among the non-participants, this should be of no consequence in terms of bias as it was compensated for by non-response adjustment of sample weights.
However, significant residual bias resulting from other factors cannot be ruled out. Theoretical considerations and empirical studies on the determinants of survey response have pointed out that the potential responders’ attitudes and behaviour with respect to the topic of a survey strongly influence their willingness to actually participate in it. The more they are interested in and committed to the topic and the better they perform (or think to perform) in the area covered by the topic, the higher their propensity to respond will be (Groves et al. 1992, 2004; van Goor and Verhage 1999). Based on this, it may be assumed that companies lacking awareness and activity in the field of OSH (including WRAs) were generally more likely to refuse participation in the GDA survey, which explicitly focussed on OSH matters. Therefore, a tendency towards overestimating the prevalence of psychosocial risk assessments resulting from non-response bias must be accounted for.
As our study is not only about prevalences but also about predictors of WRA activity, considering possible relational non-response bias is equally important as reflecting on distributional bias. Again, it must be noted that performing statistical analyses to test for non-response bias (relational or other) would have required data that are not available in the case of the GDA survey. Consequently, we are not able to verify in a methodologically sound manner, whether (or, if so, to which extent) our results are biased by non-response. However, there is a considerable body of evidence suggesting that survey non-response, while often inducing significant bias in univariate estimates, mostly does not affect the relationships between the variables under study, even if it is at high levels (Amaya and Presser 2017; Blair and Zinkhan 2006; Groves and Peytcheva 2008; Heggestad et al. 2015; Rindfuss et al. 2015). We therefore see some justification to assume that while the reported WRA prevalence should be treated with caution, our findings concerning the associations between WRA activity and the predictor variables are not very likely to be substantially biased by the low response rate of the survey.
As with all other available survey studies relevant to the subject of this article, the design of our study is cross-sectional in nature. The cross-sectional data allow to determine frequencies of observations as well as to establish associations between variables. The associations we found cannot be interpreted as proof that causality is actually present, since they may also result from unknown common causal variables. Even if assumed that there is a causal relationship between two variables, it cannot be said with certainty which is cause and which is effect. This would require an analysis of longitudinal data, which are, however, not available in this subject area.
It must also be noted that several aspects of WRA implementation were not—or were only roughly—covered by the GDA survey questionnaire. The work characteristics and occupational hazards accounted for when performing WRAs were defined in rather broad terms that do not allow for drawing particularly firm conclusions on the actual content of the WRAs reported. Furthermore, the questionnaire did not include any items concerning the methods used for assessing workplace risks, how the risk assessment process is organised, or the specific types of preventive measures taken. Finally, no judgement on the correctness of the risk assessments can be made from the data provided, although some doubts about the accuracy of many WRAs may arise in view of the remarkably high proportion of companies (52%) reporting that no needs for improvement measures were identified in the process. Accordingly, this study, while making a clear improvement over previous survey-based research on the subject, still provides only a rough approximation of psychosocial risk assessment practices and their comprehensiveness.

Implications for policy and practice

In view of the fact that psychosocial risks are a highly prioritised issue in European and national OSH policies, their current status in companies’ OSH practices, especially in the conduct of WRAs, seems rather disappointing. For Germany, it must be taken into consideration, however, that psychosocial risks were put on the national OSH policy agenda several years later than in Scandinavian countries (Hansen et al. 2015; Rasmussen et al. 2011) or Great Britain (Mackay et al. 2004; Mellor et al. 2011). For example, Germany’s National Action Programme for Mental Health at Work was not launched before 2013 (Ertel 2014), whereas similar initiatives in other countries partly date back from the beginning of the previous decade or even earlier (European Commission 2011). Therefore, it may be hoped that the present results only reflect the point of departure for a broader implementation of psychosocial risk assessments in future company practices. Evidence for such a development, if actually occurring, might be provided by the third wave of the GDA survey planned for 2020.
Establishing systematic psychosocial risk management at the company level is a complex process that depends on a wide range of internal and external factors and the way those factors interact (Janetzke and Ertel 2017). Our study highlights the important role of OSH specialist advisors and OSH inspection authorities in this process, indicating that enhancing the utilisation of professional OSH experts and strengthening the advisory and control capacities of competent authorities would be beneficial for improving the current situation if these measures are accompanied by continuous efforts to further develop the conceptual approaches and skills in the area of psychosocial risk management. First steps in this direction have been taken within the framework of the Joint German Occupational Safety and Health Strategy (GDA) and its Action Programme for Mental Health at Work, which includes, among other things, a provision for additional training of all OSH inspectors, the development of standard curricula for OSH expert training in psychosocial issues and the creation of special consulting units within OSH inspectorates (Geschäftsstelle der Nationalen Arbeitsschutzkonferenz 2017). It should be considered, however, that the chances for achieving progress in psychosocial risk assessment are not simply a matter of effectively organising the OSH system but must be analysed in the wider context of socioeconomic change, competition-driven management strategies and transforming labour relations (Walters et al. 2011).

Conclusion

As mentioned before, this study could only provide a rough picture of the current practices, drivers and barriers related to psychosocial risk assessment. To extend our knowledge about how and why companies—especially small ones—succeed (or fail) in managing these risks, improved research, either by means of in-depth case studies or survey studies using more sophisticated items, is needed. Empirical information acquired from such studies may be highly useful for providing companies with adequate and carefully targeted support in the field of psychosocial risk assessment.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Diana Eichhorn for support in preparing the manuscript.

Compliance with ethical standards

Conflict of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
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Metadaten
Titel
Consideration of psychosocial factors in workplace risk assessments: findings from a company survey in Germany
verfasst von
David Beck
Uwe Lenhardt
Publikationsdatum
13.02.2019
Verlag
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Erschienen in
International Archives of Occupational and Environmental Health / Ausgabe 3/2019
Print ISSN: 0340-0131
Elektronische ISSN: 1432-1246
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00420-019-01416-5

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