小企业领导者对雇用不同类型残疾人的看法和偏见。

IF 2.1 3区 医学 Q1 REHABILITATION
Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-13 DOI:10.1007/s10926-024-10201-2
Nanette Goodman, Samantha Deane, Fitore Hyseni, Michal Soffer, Gary Shaheen, Peter Blanck
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:尽管已有与就业相关的立法和政府计划,但残疾人在竞争性就业方面仍然面临着巨大的障碍。造成这些障碍的部分原因是雇主对残障人士贡献的偏见,以及对提供便利所需的成本的看法,这些都会影响他们的雇佣决定。现有关于就业障碍和促进因素的研究往往将残疾人同质化对待,并且主要关注大公司。本研究通过探讨小雇主在雇用残障人士时所面临的动机和挑战,以及他们的态度和雇用意愿如何因残障类型而异,帮助填补这些空白:我们对员工人数少于 100 人的公司的企业主和决策者进行了调查,得到了 393 个公司受访者样本。通过描述性分析,我们研究了受访者雇佣意愿的变化以及受访公司领导的普遍态度。我们探讨了雇主的态度是如何阻碍或支持雇用残障人士的。我们进行了多变量分析,以探讨态度障碍、促进因素和雇用各种残疾人士的意愿之间的联系,从而反映出残疾的异质性:我们的研究结果表明,在雇用残疾人方面,雇主们最关心的问题是:无法约束残疾人、不熟悉如何雇用和照顾残疾人以及不确定照顾残疾人的成本。受《美国残疾人法案》(ADA)保护的雇主和未受保护的雇主在这些问题上并无不同。然而,《美国残疾人法案》的覆盖范围可能会产生影响,因为《美国残疾人法案》覆盖范围内的雇主更有可能表示他们会雇用残疾求职者。我们发现,对于小公司(员工人数少于 15 人)而言,促进因素(对残疾员工的积极看法)的积极影响几乎完全抵消了障碍的消极影响。然而,对于规模较大的公司而言,额外障碍的边际效应要明显高于额外促进因素的预测效应。在我们研究的残疾类别中,雇主最不可能雇用盲人,其次是精神残疾、智力残疾、耳聋和肢体残疾,这表明雇主并不认为所有类型的残疾在工作中都同样受欢迎:了解小雇主的潜在顾虑并有效解决这些因素,对于制定有效的干预策略以鼓励小雇主雇用和留住不同残疾的人至关重要。我们的研究结果表明,《美国残疾人法案》涵盖范围内的雇主对雇用残疾人持更加开放的态度,但他们所感受到的障碍表明,我们需要不断了解有效的干预策略,以增加所有小雇主对残疾人的雇用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Perceptions and Bias of Small Business Leaders in Employing People with Different Types of Disabilities.

Perceptions and Bias of Small Business Leaders in Employing People with Different Types of Disabilities.

Purpose: Despite existing employment-related legislation and governmental programs, people with disabilities continue to face significant barriers to competitive employment. These obstacles are partially due to biases among employers regarding the contributions of people with disabilities and perceptions about accommodation costs, which can affect their hiring decisions. Existing research on employment barriers and facilitators often treats people with disabilities homogenously and focuses mainly on large companies. This study helps to fill these gaps by exploring the motivations and challenges small employers face when hiring people with disabilities and how their attitudes and willingness to hire vary based on disability type.

Methods: We surveyed business owners and decision-makers at companies with fewer than 100 employees resulting in a sample of 393 company respondents. Through descriptive analyses, we examined variations in respondents' willingness to hire and the prevailing attitudes among the company leaders sampled. We explored how employer attitudes can either hinder or support the hiring of people with disabilities. We conducted multivariate analysis to explore the connections among attitudinal barriers, facilitators, and willingness to hire individuals with various disabilities, reflecting disability's heterogeneous nature.

Results: Our findings reveal that, in terms of hiring people with disabilities, the most important concerns among employers are: inability to discipline, being unfamiliar with how to hire and accommodate, and uncertainty over accommodation costs. These concerns do not differ between employers covered by the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and non-covered employers. However, ADA-coverage may make a difference as ADA-covered employers are more likely to say they would hire an applicant with a disability. We find that for small companies (less than 15 employees), the positive effect of the facilitators (positive perceptions about workers with disabilities) almost completely offsets the negative effect of the barriers. However, for the larger companies, the marginal effect for an additional barrier is significantly more predictive than for an additional facilitator. Among the disabilities we examined, employers are least likely to hire someone with blindness, followed by mental health disabilities, intellectual disabilities, deafness, and physical disabilities, underscoring that employers do not view all types of disabilities as equally desirable at work.

Conclusions: Understanding small employers' underlying concerns and effectively addressing those factors is crucial for developing effective intervention strategies to encourage small employers to hire and retain people with different disabilities. Our results suggest greater openness among ADA-covered employers to hiring people with disabilities, but the perceived barriers indicate a need for ongoing information on effective intervention strategies to increase disability hiring among all small employers.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
12.10%
发文量
64
期刊介绍: The Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation is an international forum for the publication of peer-reviewed original papers on the rehabilitation, reintegration, and prevention of disability in workers. The journal offers investigations involving original data collection and research synthesis (i.e., scoping reviews, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses). Papers derive from a broad array of fields including rehabilitation medicine, physical and occupational therapy, health psychology and psychiatry, orthopedics, oncology, occupational and insurance medicine, neurology, social work, ergonomics, biomedical engineering, health economics, rehabilitation engineering, business administration and management, and law.  A single interdisciplinary source for information on work disability rehabilitation, the Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation helps to advance the scientific understanding, management, and prevention of work disability.
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