Increasing Machine-Related Safety on Farms: Development of an Intervention Using the Behaviour Change Wheel Approach

Author:

Surendran Aswathi1ORCID,McSharry Jennifer1,Meade Oonagh1,Bligh Francis2,McNamara John2ORCID,Meredith David2ORCID,O’Hora Denis1

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, University of Galway, H91 TK33 Galway, Ireland

2. Irish Agriculture and Food Development Authority, R93 XE12 Carlow, Ireland

Abstract

Farming is essential work, but it suffers from very high injury and fatality rates. Machinery, including tractors, are a leading cause of serious injuries and fatalities to farmers and farm workers in many countries. Herein, we document the systematic development of an evidence-based, theory-informed behaviour change intervention to increase machine-related safety on farms. Intervention development progressed through four phases. Phase 1 defined the problem in behavioural terms based a review of the literature, Phase 2 identified candidate intervention targets through a series of focus groups guided by the Capability–Opportunity–Motivation–Behaviour (COM-B) model and Phase 3 employed expert and stakeholder consultation guided by the Behaviour Change Wheel (BCW) to consider potential target behaviours and intervention components and finalise the intervention content. Phase 4 finalised the evaluation strategies with a team of agricultural advisors who supported the rollout and identified outcome measures for the first trial. The target intervention was the identification of blind spots of farm tractors, and three priority target behaviours (farm safety practices) were identified. Following Phase 3, the intervention comprised four components that are delivered in a group-based, face-to-face session with farmers. In Phase 4, the acceptability, feasibility, and fidelity of these components were identified as the outcome measures for the first trial of the intervention. The four-phase systematic method detailed here constitutes an initial template for developing theory-based, stakeholder-driven, behaviour-change-based interventions targeting farmers and reporting such developments.

Funder

Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine Research Stimulus programme

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference68 articles.

1. Why Do Farm Accidents Persist? Normalising Danger on the Farm within the Farm Family;Shortall;Sociol. Health Illn.,2019

2. Suicide and Accidental Death in Australia’s Rural Farming Communities: A Review of the Literature;Kennedy;Rural. Remote Health,2014

3. Occupational Injuries in Workers from Different Ethnicities;Mekkodathil;Int. J. Crit. Illn. Inj. Sci.,2016

4. A Systematic Review of Farm Safety Interventions;DeRoo;Am. J. Prev. Med.,2000

5. (2022, July 26). Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine Farm Safety, Available online: https://www.gov.ie/en/publication/4133b-farm-safety/?referrer=http://www.gov.ie/farmsafety/.

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