编辑概述

Q2 Business, Management and Accounting
S. Thomas Foster
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Hierarchical regression analyses reveal insights into service flow (patient length of stay) and efficiency (operating cost per bed) using independent primary and secondary data from 250U.S. hospitals.” The second article, “Determinants of customer satisfaction and behavioral intentions in fast-food restaurants among undergraduate students during the COVID-19 pandemic,” is written by Khaldoun I. Ababneh (Department of Management, American University of Dubai), Subramaniam Ponnaiyan (Department of Decision Sciences, American University of Dubai), Ahmed R. ElMelegy (College of Business Administration, Gulf University for Science and Technology), and Victor Pybutok (G. Brint Ryan College of Business, University of North Texas). Their study shows that “compliance with COVID-19 safety measures is a key determinant of customer satisfaction and behavioral intentions in the fastfood industry during the COVID-19 pandemic. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

来自《质量管理杂志》编辑部的问候。在本期中,我们有四篇文章关注服务。这些文章涵盖医疗保健、教育和微型企业。第一篇文章是John Wallace Gardner(杨百翰大学万豪商学院营销与全球供应链系)和Sarah Childs(犹他大学医学院)撰写的《通过利用审查和信息技术,利用问责制管理医疗保健中的过度加工废物》。“本文研究了解决医疗保健过度处理问题的两种常用机制:通过利用率审查(对以适当成本提供适当服务的服务决策进行关键评估)进行问责(个人和跨职能),以及它们与医疗保健信息技术基础设施的交互。分层回归分析使用来自美国250家医院的独立一级和二级数据揭示了对服务流(患者住院时间)和效率(每张床位的运营成本)的见解。”第二篇文章《新冠肺炎大流行期间大学生快餐店顾客满意度和行为意图的决定因素》由Khaldoun I.Ababneh(迪拜美国大学管理系)、Subramaniam Ponnaiyan(迪拜美国本科决策科学系)、Ahmed R。ElMelegy(海湾科技大学工商管理学院)和Victor Pybutok(北德克萨斯大学G.Brint Ryan商学院)。他们的研究表明“在新冠肺炎大流行期间,遵守新冠肺炎安全措施是快餐业顾客满意度和行为意图的关键决定因素。更重要的是,研究结果表明,当同时包括服务质量、感知价值、新冠肺炎安全和食品质量作为顾客满意度和行动意图的预测因素时,只有新冠肺炎安全nd食品质量是重要的预测因素。”Kashika Arora(印度外贸研究所,新德里)和Areej Aftab Siddiqui(印度对外贸易研究所,印度新德里)的第三篇文章“资源能力和可持续出口绩效:m-TISM在印度制造业中小微企业中的应用”侧重于微型、小型和中型企业。根据作者的说法,“中小微企业是印度当前和未来经济进步的支柱。这些机构旨在支持和鼓励印度新一代企业家的发展,他们有潜力创建具有全球竞争力的企业。他们的研究结果证实了这14个重要组成部分对资源观的影响对中小微企业出口成功的采用建模。战略方向、上层定位、资金能力和外部环境都对中小微企业的出口业绩产生重大影响。”第四篇文章是Henry H.Bi(威拉米特大学阿特金森管理研究生院)的《将统计过程控制应用于高等教育机构的教学质量保证》。在这篇文章中,他开发了一种新的方法,使用平均值和标准差图表(X-bar-S图表)来评估每门课程的教学评估评级。感谢您返回《质量管理杂志》,并记得在您自己的研究中引用该杂志的文章,以帮助提高我们杂志的影响力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editor’s overview
Greetings from the editorial office of the Quality Management Journal. In this issue, we have four articles that focus on services. These articles cover healthcare, education, and micro enterprises. The first article is “Managing the waste of over processing in healthcare using accountability through utilization reviews and information technologies” by John Wallace Gardner (Department of Marketing and Global Supply Chain, Marriott School of Business, Brigham Young University) and Sarah Childs (School of Medicine, University of Utah). “This paper examines two commonly used mechanisms for addressing over processing in healthcare: accountability (individual and cross-functional) through utilization reviews (critical evaluations of service decisions regarding the appropriate service at the right cost), and their interactions with healthcare information technology infrastructure. Hierarchical regression analyses reveal insights into service flow (patient length of stay) and efficiency (operating cost per bed) using independent primary and secondary data from 250U.S. hospitals.” The second article, “Determinants of customer satisfaction and behavioral intentions in fast-food restaurants among undergraduate students during the COVID-19 pandemic,” is written by Khaldoun I. Ababneh (Department of Management, American University of Dubai), Subramaniam Ponnaiyan (Department of Decision Sciences, American University of Dubai), Ahmed R. ElMelegy (College of Business Administration, Gulf University for Science and Technology), and Victor Pybutok (G. Brint Ryan College of Business, University of North Texas). Their study shows that “compliance with COVID-19 safety measures is a key determinant of customer satisfaction and behavioral intentions in the fastfood industry during the COVID-19 pandemic. More importantly, the results reveal that when simultaneously including service quality, perceived value, COVID-19 safety, and food quality as predictors of customer satisfaction and behavioral intentions, only COVID-19 safety and food quality are significant predictors.” The third article, “Resource capabilities and sustainable export performance: An application of m-TISM for Indian manufacturing MSMEs” by Kashika Arora (Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, New Delhi, India) and Areej Aftab Siddiqui (Indian Institute of Foreign Trade, New Delhi, India) focuses on micro, small, and medium enterprises (MSMEs). According to the authors, “MSMEs are the backbone of India’s current and future economic progress. These institutions are geared to support and encourage the development of new-generation entrepreneurs in India who have the potential to create global competitive businesses. Their findings confirm the impact of these 14 essential components on resourcebased view (RBV) modeling adoption on MSMEs’ export success. Strategic direction, upper echelon orientation, financial capacity, and the external environment all have a significant impact on MSMEs’ export performance.” The fourth article is “Applying statistical process control to teaching quality assurance at higher education institutions” by Henry H. Bi (Atkinson Graduate School of Management, Willamette University). In this article, he develops a novel method of using average and standard deviation charts (X-bar S charts) to assess every course’s teaching evaluation rating. Thank you for returning to the Quality Management Journal and remember to cite articles from the journal in your own research to help boost the impact of our journal.
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来源期刊
Quality Management Journal
Quality Management Journal Business, Management and Accounting-Business, Management and Accounting (all)
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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