Saf Health Work.  2023 Jun;14(2):201-206. 10.1016/j.shaw.2023.03.002.

Beliefs of University Employees Leaving During a Fire Alarm: A Theory-based Belief Elicitation

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Health Behavior, School of Public Health, Texas A&M University, College Station, TX, USA
  • 2Department of Environmental Health Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
  • 3Department of Applied Health Science, School of Public Health, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, USA

Abstract

Background
Despite workplaces having policies on fire evacuation, many employees still fail to evacuate when there is a fire alarm. The Reasoned Action Approach is designed to reveal the beliefs underlying people's behavioral decisions and thus suggests causal determinants to be addressed with interventions designed to facilitate behavior. This study is a uses a Reasoned Action Approach salient belief elicitation to identify university employees' perceived advantages/disadvantages, approvers/disapprovers, and facilitators/barriers toward them leaving the office building immediately the next time they hear a fire alarm at work.
Methods
Employees at a large public United States Midwestern university completed an online cross-sectional survey. A descriptive analysis of the demographic and background variables was completed, and a six-step inductive content analysis of the open-ended responses was conducted to identify beliefs about leaving during a fire alarm.
Results
Regarding consequence, participants perceived that immediately leaving during a fire alarm at work had more disadvantages than advantages, such as low risk perception. Regarding referents, supervisors and coworkers were significant approvers with intention to leave immediately. None of the perceived advantages were significant with intention. Participants listed access and risk perception as significant circumstances with the intention to evacuate immediately.
Conclusion
Norms and risk perceptions are key determinants that may influence employees to evacuate immediately during a fire alarm at work. Normative-based and attitude-based interventions may prove effective in increasing the fire safety practices of employees.

Keyword

Beliefs; Employees; Evacuation; Fire alarms; Reasoned Action Approach
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