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Article
The Impact of COVID-19 on Transit Workers: Perceptions of Employer Responses and Associations with Health Factors
Annals of Work Exposures and Health
  • Sean P.M. Rice, Oregon Health & Science University
  • Leah S Greenspan, Oregon Health & Science University
  • Talya N. Bauer, Portland State University
  • Jarred Rimby, Oregon Health & Science University
  • Todd Bodner, Portland State University
  • Ryan Olson, Portland State University
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2021
Subjects
  • COVID 19 (Disease) -- United States -- Psychological Impacts
Disciplines
Abstract

COVID-19 has had a substantial impact on transit workers’ lives, especially among public-facing vehicle operators. The current project examined relationships between workers’ knowledge and perceptions of their employer’s COVID-19 safety responses, job attitudes, and health. We surveyed transit workers (N = 174) between July and August 2020 and followed up 3 months later. Fifty-seven workers responded to the follow-up survey. Surveys addressed workers’ knowledge and perceptions of their employer implementing Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)-recommended COVID-19 safety responses, COVID-19 risk perceptions, job attitudes, and health factors. Employees reported knowledge of their employer implementing ~8 of 12 CDC-recommended responses. The most reported response was informational poster placements; the least reported was designating a point-person for COVID-19 concerns. Significant associations were found between knowledge of employer safety responses and lower COVID-19 risk perceptions, better job attitudes, and greater mental and global health. Operators (i.e. public-facing workers) reported worse perceptions of employer responses, and higher COVID-19 risk perceptions, work stress, and turnover intentions, compared with non-operators. A time-lagged panel model found that COVID-19 risk perceptions significantly mediated the relationship between public-facing work status and follow-up depression, anxiety, stress, and global health. Results reveal opportunities for transit authorities to broaden and better communicate their responses to emergent occupational safety and health crises.

Rights

Copyright (c) 2021 The Authors

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

DOI
10.1093/annweh/wxab080
Persistent Identifier
https://archives.pdx.edu/ds/psu/36507
Citation Information
Rice, S. P., Greenspan, L. S., Bauer, T. N., Rimby, J., Bodner, T. E., & Olson, R. (2021). The Impact of COVID-19 on Transit Workers: Perceptions of Employer Responses and Associations with Health Factors. Annals of Work Exposures and Health.