人力资源管理、制度互补性与绩效:约旦医疗保健行业案例

IF 7.3 2区 管理学 Q1 BUSINESS
Tamara Mohammad , Tamer K. Darwish , Osama Khassawneh , Geoffrey Wood
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在比较资本主义文献的基础上,我们的目标是了解人力资源管理实践对约旦医疗保健部门内医院绩效的影响,以及人力资源管理在减轻和克服系统性不足方面的作用。针对所有医院的医院和人力资源经理进行了两项不同的调查。我们的研究结果表明,尽管非正式网络和文化限制等背景挑战可能会降低效率,但某些人力资源实践与绩效呈正相关。我们进一步测试了人力资源互补性对绩效的潜在影响;然而,结果并没有显著地超越个人人力资源实践的解释力。人们可能已经预料到,相互支持的实践可能会弥补系统的弱点。然而,可能的情况是,参与者已经在管理实践的其他领域设计了解决方案,这些解决方案可能比人力资源管理在补偿系统限制方面更有效。我们的研究还强调,在寡头垄断结构的市场中,在私人医疗保健系统中很常见,人力资源实践的有效性可能对盈利能力不那么重要,尽管这并不会削弱它们与社会和社区结果的广泛相关性,这超出了本研究的范围。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
HRM, institutional complementarities, and performance: The case of the healthcare sector in Jordan
Building on the comparative capitalism literature, we aim to understand the impact of HRM practice on hospitals performance within the healthcare sector in Jordan, and the role of HRM in mitigating and overcoming systemic shortfalls. Two different surveys were distributed for both hospital and HR managers across all hospitals. Our findings indicate that certain HR practices are positively associated with performance, despite contextual challenges such as informal networks and cultural limitations that could undermine efficiency. We further tested the potential impact of HR complementarities on performance; nevertheless, the results did not significantly surpass the explanatory power of the individual HR practices. It might have been anticipated that mutually supportive bundles of practices might compensate for systemic weaknesses. However, it may be the case that players have devised solutions in other areas of managerial practice that may be more effective than HRM in compensating for systemic limitations. Our study also highlights that in oligopolistically structured markets, common in private healthcare systems, the effectiveness of HR practices may be less crucial for profitability, though this does not diminish their broader relevance for societal and community outcomes which are beyond the scope of this work.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
12.90
自引率
5.30%
发文量
113
审稿时长
74 days
期刊介绍: The European Management Journal (EMJ) stands as a premier scholarly publication, disseminating cutting-edge research spanning all realms of management. EMJ articles challenge conventional wisdom through rigorously informed empirical and theoretical inquiries, offering fresh insights and innovative perspectives on key management themes while remaining accessible and engaging for a wide readership. EMJ articles embody intellectual curiosity and embrace diverse methodological approaches, yielding contributions that significantly influence both management theory and practice. We actively seek interdisciplinary research that integrates distinct research traditions to illuminate contemporary challenges within the expansive domain of European business and management. We strongly encourage cross-cultural investigations addressing the unique challenges faced by European management scholarship and practice in navigating global issues and contexts.
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