Rohit Pradhan, Bradley Beauvais, Zo Ramamonjiarivelo, Diane Dolezel, Dan Wood, Ramalingam Shanmugam
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Staffing is critical to hospital performance. However, in recent years, hospitals have struggled with severe staffing shortages, forcing them to rely on expensive agency staff to meet urgent patient care needs. This substitution of agency staff for permanent employees has raised concerns over its potential impact on financial stability. This study investigated the association of agency labor with hospital financial performance.
Methods: Utilizing tenets from agency theory and transaction cost theory, data for the calendar year 2022 for active short-term acute care hospitals (n=2771) in the United States were analyzed using multivariable linear regression analysis. Hospital financial performance was assessed using three variables: net patient revenue, operating revenue per bed, and operating expense per bed. The independent variable was agency labor cost, representing the total expenditure on agency labor. Additionally, organizational and market-level control variables that may independently affect hospital financial performance were included.
Results: Our regression findings indicated that agency labor cost was significantly associated with all three dependent variables: net patient revenue (β = 0.224, p < 0.001), operating revenue per bed (β = 0.042, p < 0.001), and operating expense per bed (β = 0.032, p < 0.001).
Discussion: The results indicated that increased agency labor was associated with higher revenues, but it also corresponded with increased expenses. Therefore, hospitals should strategically use agency staffing to meet immediate operational needs while remaining cognizant of its financial implications. The judicious use of agency labor can help hospitals balance the benefits of increased revenue against higher costs, while ensuring that they still meet immediate patient needs.
期刊介绍:
Efficient and successful modern healthcare depends on a growing group of professionals working together as an interdisciplinary team. However, many forces shape the delivery of healthcare; changes are being driven by the markets, transformations in concepts of health and wellbeing, technology and research and discovery. Dynamic leadership will guide these necessary transformations. The Journal of Healthcare Leadership is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal focusing on leadership for the healthcare professions. The publication strives to amalgamate current and future healthcare professionals and managers by providing key insights into leadership progress and challenges to improve patient care. The journal aspires to inform key decision makers and those professionals with ambitions of leadership and management; it seeks to connect professionals who are engaged in similar endeavours and to provide wisdom from those working in other industries. Senior and trainee doctors, nurses and allied healthcare professionals, medical students, healthcare managers and allied leaders are invited to contribute to this publication