Kralewski J, Gifford G, Porter J
Hosp Health Serv Adm. 1988 Fall;33(3):311-29.
A study of goal formation in a matched sample of investor-owned and not-for-profit hospitals was conducted to determine differences in the perceptions of employees regarding their hospitals' commitments to patient/community welfare goals versus profit maximization. These perceptions were compared to available operating data for the same hospitals. While the investor-owned hospitals as a group generally were found to emphasize patient/community welfare values less than their not-for-profit counterparts, this did not hold true when matched pairs were analyzed. In some of the matched subsets, the not-for-profit hospitals were much more profit-oriented than the investor-owned hospitals. This research reveals that strong patient/community service values do not universally characterize not-for-profit hospitals, and conversely investor-owned hospitals cannot always be characterized as profit maximizers.
对投资者所有医院和非营利性医院的匹配样本进行了目标形成研究,以确定员工对其医院在患者/社区福利目标与利润最大化方面的承诺的看法差异。将这些看法与相同医院的现有运营数据进行了比较。虽然总体上发现投资者所有医院比非营利性医院更不强调患者/社区福利价值观,但在分析匹配对时并非如此。在一些匹配子集中,非营利性医院比投资者所有医院更注重利润。这项研究表明,强大的患者/社区服务价值观并非非营利性医院的普遍特征,相反,投资者所有医院也不能总是被视为利润最大化者。