Does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing (small and medium enterprises) workers? Empirical evidence from Magaba, Mbare, Zimbabwe

Background: The significance of how occupational noise can influence attitudes towards occupational noise exposure, susceptibility to hearing loss and job performance has generally been neglected in the past studies. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of occupational nois...

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Main Authors: Miston Mapuranga, Eugine T. Maziriri, Ralebitso K. Letshaba, Anos Chitamba
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2020-03-01
Series:South African Journal of Communication Disorders
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajcd.org.za/index.php/sajcd/article/view/680
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author Miston Mapuranga
Eugine T. Maziriri
Ralebitso K. Letshaba
Anos Chitamba
author_facet Miston Mapuranga
Eugine T. Maziriri
Ralebitso K. Letshaba
Anos Chitamba
author_sort Miston Mapuranga
collection DOAJ
description Background: The significance of how occupational noise can influence attitudes towards occupational noise exposure, susceptibility to hearing loss and job performance has generally been neglected in the past studies. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of occupational noise on attitudes towards occupational noise exposure, susceptibility to hearing loss and job performance of manufacturing small and medium enterprises (SMEs) workers in Zimbabwe. Method: A survey was conducted involving 250 respondents, including manufacturing SME workers, and the hypotheses were analysed by applying structural equation modelling. Results: Occupational noise had a positive and significant effect on attitudes towards occupational noise exposure and perceived susceptibility to hearing loss amongst manufacturing SME workers. In addition, attitudes towards exposure to occupational noise and the perceived susceptibility of hearing loss have had a positive and significant impact on manufacturing SME workers’ job performance. Conclusion: The novelty of the research is its analysis of occupational noise as an indicator of attitudes towards occupational noise exposure and susceptibility to hearing loss as well as job performance. This study provides practitioners with beneficial implications. Collective knowledge on occupational noise could help manufacturing SME managers in recognising the perceptions of employees on occupational noise and how it ultimately affects job performance. Moreover, this study is intended to add new knowledge to the current body of African occupational noise literature – a context that has not received much research attention in developing countries.
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spelling doaj.art-6c8ac343b736435ebaff0af649a0259a2022-12-21T18:53:33ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Communication Disorders0379-80462225-47652020-03-01672e1e1110.4102/sajcd.v67i2.680533Does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing (small and medium enterprises) workers? Empirical evidence from Magaba, Mbare, ZimbabweMiston Mapuranga0Eugine T. Maziriri1Ralebitso K. Letshaba2Anos Chitamba3School of Managerial Leadership, The Da Vinci Institute for Technology Management, JohannesburgDepartment of Business Management, Faculty of Economic and Management Sciences, University of the Free State, BloemfonteinDepartment of Human Resource Management, Faculty of Management Sciences, Vaal University of Technology, VanderbijlparkGraduate School of Business and Leadership, College of Law and Management Studies, University of KwaZulu-Natal, DurbanBackground: The significance of how occupational noise can influence attitudes towards occupational noise exposure, susceptibility to hearing loss and job performance has generally been neglected in the past studies. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the impact of occupational noise on attitudes towards occupational noise exposure, susceptibility to hearing loss and job performance of manufacturing small and medium enterprises (SMEs) workers in Zimbabwe. Method: A survey was conducted involving 250 respondents, including manufacturing SME workers, and the hypotheses were analysed by applying structural equation modelling. Results: Occupational noise had a positive and significant effect on attitudes towards occupational noise exposure and perceived susceptibility to hearing loss amongst manufacturing SME workers. In addition, attitudes towards exposure to occupational noise and the perceived susceptibility of hearing loss have had a positive and significant impact on manufacturing SME workers’ job performance. Conclusion: The novelty of the research is its analysis of occupational noise as an indicator of attitudes towards occupational noise exposure and susceptibility to hearing loss as well as job performance. This study provides practitioners with beneficial implications. Collective knowledge on occupational noise could help manufacturing SME managers in recognising the perceptions of employees on occupational noise and how it ultimately affects job performance. Moreover, this study is intended to add new knowledge to the current body of African occupational noise literature – a context that has not received much research attention in developing countries.https://sajcd.org.za/index.php/sajcd/article/view/680attitudes towards occupational noise exposurejob performanceoccupational noiseperceived susceptibility to hearing losssme workers
spellingShingle Miston Mapuranga
Eugine T. Maziriri
Ralebitso K. Letshaba
Anos Chitamba
Does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing (small and medium enterprises) workers? Empirical evidence from Magaba, Mbare, Zimbabwe
South African Journal of Communication Disorders
attitudes towards occupational noise exposure
job performance
occupational noise
perceived susceptibility to hearing loss
sme workers
title Does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing (small and medium enterprises) workers? Empirical evidence from Magaba, Mbare, Zimbabwe
title_full Does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing (small and medium enterprises) workers? Empirical evidence from Magaba, Mbare, Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing (small and medium enterprises) workers? Empirical evidence from Magaba, Mbare, Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing (small and medium enterprises) workers? Empirical evidence from Magaba, Mbare, Zimbabwe
title_short Does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing (small and medium enterprises) workers? Empirical evidence from Magaba, Mbare, Zimbabwe
title_sort does occupational noise matter amongst manufacturing small and medium enterprises workers empirical evidence from magaba mbare zimbabwe
topic attitudes towards occupational noise exposure
job performance
occupational noise
perceived susceptibility to hearing loss
sme workers
url https://sajcd.org.za/index.php/sajcd/article/view/680
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