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Annotated Bibliography - Vision Zero

1.Högskola, Mälardalens, Akademin För Hälsa and Vård Och Välfärd. 2012. “Vision Zero: A Road Safety Policy Innovation.” International Journal of Injury Control and Safety Promotion, No 19: 171-179.

http://uu.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A535691&dswid=-8665 This examine Sweden's Vision Zero road safety policy and focuses on how safety issues were framed, which decisions were made, and what are the distinctive features of Vision Zero. The policy is different in kind from traditional traffic safety policy with regard to problem formulation, its view on responsibility, its requirements for the safety of road users, and the ultimate objective of road safety work. It briefly examines the implications of these findings for national and global road safety efforts that aspire to achieving innovative road safety policies. This shows the history on how vision zero was implemented in Sweden and can use it for the section of the past.

2. Walljasper, Jay. 2015. "The safest streets: Vision Zero aims to eliminate all traffic fatalities." Planning 81, no. 5: 14-21. Avery Index to Architectural Periodicals. Vision Zero, a Swedish traffic control strategy that has reduced traffic deaths in Sweden, is being implemented in U.S. cities. The analysis reveals that the decision by the Swedish Parliament to adopt Vision Zero as Sweden's road safety policy was a radical innovation. It demonstrate how it was implemented and how it impacted not just in Sweden but also in the United States.

http://eds.b.ebscohost.com/eds/Citations/FullTextLinkClick?sid=a265fe87-dbc4-4cfc-a291-7a291ac2babf@sessionmgr198&vid=2&id=pdfFullText

3. Belin, Matts-Ake, Roger Johansson, Jhan Lindberg and Claes Tingvall. 1997. “The Vision Zero and It’s Consequences.” Safety and The Environment in the 21st century, No. 23-27. It's often implemented to protect the most vulnerable road-users but entails all road-users making a sacrifice in the form of longer travelling times for the common good.Vision Zero means that eventually no one will be killed or seriously injured within the road transport system. It highlights the future plan for vision zero on how they are expanding and it will be useful for the sections for future movements.

http://scholar.google.com/scholar_url?url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.trafikverket.se%2Fcontentassets%2F5e3d8c0eb4e94efd9738cca74b912bf5%2Fvz_and_its_consequenses.pdf&hl=en&sa=T&oi=ggp&ct=res&cd=8&ei=RQ0hVrW-L8KEjAHn5JjoDA&scisig=AAGBfm1P-b4iXfxhfzbOfLBTJZz0GB7s4A&nossl=1&ws=1920x985

4.Belin, Matts-Ake. 1945. “Vision Zero: How A Policy Innovation Is Dashed By Interest Conflicts, But May Prevail In The End.” Offentling Forualtning: Scandiknavian Journa of Public Administration, No. 83. In October 1997 the Swedish Parliament adopted a new road safety policy – Vision Zero. Vision Zero entails a fundamentally new division of responsibility for traffic safety between road users and the system designers such as road administrations, municipalities, and professional transport companies among others. The implementation of a formal responsibility for system designers to prevent serious injuries in road traffic between 1997 and 2009 is evaluated. It entails on how has the legislative process of formalizing the responsibility of system designers progressed, and what important factors might explain the implementation outcome. It will be useful on how vision zero adopted safety roads policy and on the history.

http://mdh.diva-portal.org/smash/record.jsf?pid=diva2%3A478048&dswid=7040

5. Zwetsloot, Gerard I.J.M., Markku Aaltonen, Jean-Luc Wybo, and Jorma Saari. 2012. “The case for research Into The Zero Accident Vision.” Safety Science Vol 58, Pg 41-48. It displays the various companies with a good safety reputation have adopted a zero accident vision. The zero accident vision addresses the accidents causing deaths and severe injuries among company staff. This has supported the member companies to realize significant safety improvements over time. This shows the developments of Vision Zero on how it was practice in the policy and it will b e useful for the history of vision zero.

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0925753513000428Mel29g (talk) 16:46, 16 October 2015 (UTC)

Sanbox Edit work
Employee assistance program From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2008) The neutrality of this article is disputed. (March 2011) The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (March 2011)

An employee assistance programs (EAP) is an employee benefit program offered by many employers. EAPs are intended to help employees deal with personal problems that might adversely impact their job performance, health, and well-being. EAPs generally include short-term counseling and referral services for employees and their household members. Supervisors may also refer employees (supervisor referral) based upon unacceptable performance or conduct issues.

In 2007, two researchers from the Robert Gordon University in Aberdeen, Scotland conducted research on EAPs in Europe.[1] Tony Buon & John Taylor reported a much higher awareness of EAPs in the United Kingdom and Ireland than in Denmark, Germany and Switzerland. They also found that the HR and other managers involved with EAPs were working at a relatively senior level but had a relatively low level of participation in the buying decision; there is a possible mismatch of services included in EAPs compared to what respondents actually want. The researchers also reported that purchasers generally believe that EAPs provide value for money. They also found little difference between organizations and participating countries in the reasons for establishing and maintaining EAPs or in fact in the anticipated benefits.

Contents

1 Services 2 Benefits for employers 3 Criticism 4 History 5 Global Issues 6 See also 7 References 8 External links

Services

Employees and their household members may use EAPs to help manage issues in their personal lives. EAP counselors typically provide assessment, support, and referrals to additional resources such as counselors for a limited number of program-paid counseling sessions. The issues for which EAPs provide support vary, but examples include:

substance abuse occupational stress emotional distress major life events, including births, accidents and deaths health care concerns financial or non-work-related legal concerns family/personal relationship issues work relationship issues concerns about aging parents

An EAP's services are usually free to the employee and their household members, having been prepaid by the employer. In most cases, an employer contracts with a third-party company to manage its EAP. Some of these companies rely upon other vendors or contracted employees for specialized services to supplement their own services, such as: financial advisors, attorneys, travel agents, elder/child care specialists, and the like.

Confidentiality is maintained in accordance with privacy laws and ethical standards.[citation needed]

In the United States, California requires EAP providers who deliver actual counseling services on a pre-paid basis for more than 3 sessions within any six-month period to have a Knox-Keene license. This is a specialty license for psychological services and is mandated by the Knox-Keene Health Care Service Plan Act of 1975. The state's Department of Managed Health Care regulates these licensed plans and assists consumers with regard to grievances, access to quality care, and ensuring that the EAP has an appropriate level of tangible net equity to deliver services to plan members. Title 28, Rule 1300.43.14 of the California Code of Regulations allows EAPs without a Knox-Keene license to request an exemption if they solely refer callers to external services and do not provide the actual services themselves. Benefits for employers

Some studies indicate that offering EAPs may result in various benefits for employers, including lower medical costs, reduced turnover and absenteeism, and higher employee productivity.[2][3] Critics of these studies question the scientific validity of their findings, noting small sample sizes, lack of experimental control groups, and lack of standardized measures as primary concerns. Proponents, however, argue that the consistency of positive findings across studies in different service sectors denote at least some positive effect of programs, even if the most effective components of such programs have not been determined.[3] EAPs may also provide other services to employers, such as supervisory consultations, support to troubled work teams, training and education programs, and critical incident services.

The provision of employee assistance services has established business benefits, including increased productivity of employees (termed "presenteeism") and decreased absenteeism.[2] Criticism

Employee assistance programs have been criticized for lacking impartiality when an employee seeks assistance due to work-related issues, or when an employer recommends that an employee seek help through the program. Programs where EAP providers are employed by the same company as the program participants are particularly criticized as being another arm of company management.[4][5] EAPs lose their ability to identify troubled employees when they are managed by external insurance companies or managed care affiliates (800# hotlines), whose primary aim is to save health cost at the expense of identifying troubled employees who pose risk to the work organization. History

Most employee assistance programs date back to the 1960s and 1970s as in-house alcoholism programs that formally recognized a recovering alcoholic executive's Alcoholics Anonymous 12th Step work. San Francisco Bay Area companies with such programs include Standard Oil and Bechtel Corporation. In the early to mid-1970s such programs expanded their focus to include emotional, family and drug-addiction problems, and hired more broadly-trained counselors to provide short-term counseling and referral to outside resources. San Francisco Bay Area companies who started broad based programs during this period include Pacific Gas & Electric Company and Wells Fargo Bank. The shift from in-house to external programs began in the late 1970s - early 1980s time frame as acceptance of the value of EAPs grew and concerns developed over confidentiality and privacy.

In July of 2015 an in-depth study was started by Lamar University in Beaumont, TX. The results from this study will be used for further development of the EAP for municipalities and local government employees. Global Issues

In 1997, Tony Buon and Xiaoping Zhu developed the first EAP in the People's Republic of China (PRC) in Shanghai and began promoting the EAP concept throughout China [6] The Hong Kong Christian Service also provided EAPs in the then UK-administered Hong Kong from 1993 and reported “good usage” by Chinese people of their EAP.[7] Today there are more than 20 providers of EAPs in China [6] See also

Industrial and organizational psychology Occupational health psychology Work-life balance Workplace interventions Workplace stress Workplace wellness

References

Buon, T & Taylor, J (2008) A Review of the EAP Market in the United Kingdom and Europe. Journal of Workplace Behavioral Health, Vol. 23(4) 425-443 http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/15555240802540079?queryID=%24%7BresultBean.queryID%7D&#.VS-4FPnF98E EAP Treatment Impact on Presenteeism and Absenteeism: Implications for Return on Investment, Hargrave et Al. EAP Effectiveness and ROI, Attridge et Al. The Bully at Work, Namie, 2000, 2003, 2009 What Every Target of Workplace Bullying Needs to Know by Anton Hout, 2010 Zhu, X, Wang, Z, and Buon, T (2012). Trauma Counselling in the PRC. International Handbook of Workplace Trauma Support, 1st Ed. Edited by R. Hughes, et. al. John Wiley. http://www.buon.net/Zhu%20Buon%20China%20Trauma%20Chapter.pdf

Fong, D., & Lam, K. (1998, 5–7 March). Workplace counselling: A study of its users and effectiveness. Paper presented at the Asia Pacific Conference of Employee Assistance Programme, Hong Kong

EAPA UK buyers guide, 2011 EAPA UK Guidelines 2012 EAP Students Help Guide

External links

Professional associations in the employee assistance program industry:

Employee Assistance Professionals Association – worldwide association Employee Assistance European Forum – 23 European nations Employee Assistance Society of North America – United States and Canada Asia Pacific Employee Assistance Roundtable - Asia Pacific Employee Assistance Programme - India Associated Counsellors & Psychologists - Australia Associated EAP - Employee Assistance Association Employee Assistance Professionals Association - United Kingdom Employee Assistance Programme Association - Ireland