Research Article

Effects of a Workplace Intervention Targeting Psychosocial Risk Factors on Safety and Health Outcomes

Table 1

Estimated means, standard deviations, and correlations among study variables by intervention condition.

Variable(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)(7)(8)(9)(10)
MM47.5148.1095.7894.413.633.754.124.1144.870.25
SD6.677.0711.9710.180.820.810.670.569.110.44

(1) Health (baseline)46.526.68(.76).61−.16−.21.08.08.08−.05−.23−.31
(2) Health (12 m)48.146.73.53(.81)−.31−.30−.03.08−.06.11−.23−.35
(3) Blood pressure (baseline)95.459.86−.05.181.00.83−.03.07.01−.09.14.09
(4) Blood pressure (12 m)95.819.89−.06−.15.581.00−.15−.07−.06−.08.09.10
(5) Safety participation (baseline)3.650.81.02.05.02.13(.86).60.53.40.15.05
(6) Safety participation (12 m)3.670.84−.18−.03.07.11.82(.89).37.64−.04−.13
(7) Safety compliance (baseline)4.190.62.09−.10.05.25.51.42(.92).49−.05.15
(8) Safety compliance (12 m)4.170.70.14.11.00.07.52.62.62(.91)−.05−.02
(9) Age in Years45.5010.13−.14−.27.10.03.13.13.14.061.00.38
(10) Blood pressure medication0.270.45−.29−.42−.06−.10−.08.07.01.21.311.00

Notes: . Intervention = 148; Control = 116. Intervention condition information above main diagonal; Control condition information below main diagonal; Blood Pressure Medication (Yes = 1, No = 0). Estimates are based on full-information maximum likelihood estimation to account for missing data values. Diagonal entries in parentheses are Cronbach’s alpha reliability coefficients.