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人力资源管理实践与绩效关系的系统综述。

Systematic review of the links between human resource management practices and performance.

机构信息

Institute of Work Psychology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK.

出版信息

Health Technol Assess. 2010 Oct;14(51):1-334, iv. doi: 10.3310/hta14510.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

In recent years human resource management (HRM) has been seen as an important factor in the successful realisation of organisational change programmes. The UK NHS is undergoing substantial organisational change and there is a need to establish which human resource (HR) initiatives may be most effective.

OBJECTIVES

To assess the results from a wide-ranging series of systematic reviews of the evidence on HRM and performance. The first part assesses evidence on use of HRM in the UK and fidelity of practice implemented. The second part considers evidence for the impact of HRM practices on intermediate outcomes, which can impact on final outcomes, such as organisational performance or patient care.

DATA SOURCES

The following databases were searched: Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts (ASSIA), British Nursing Index (BNI), Business Source Premier, Campbell Collaboration, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR), Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effectiveness (DARE), DH-Data, EMBASE, Health Management Information Consortium (HMIC), International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS), King's Fund database, MEDLINE, NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHS EED), National Research Register (NRR), PREMEDLINE, PsycINFO, ReFeR, Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) and Science Citation Index (SCI). The searches were conducted in May/June 2006.

REVIEW METHODS

Broad categories of HRM interventions and intermediate outcomes were generated: 10 HRM categories and 12 intermediate outcome categories. Seven patient final outcomes were derived from the NHS Performance Indicators and the NHS Improvement Plan. The quality criteria used to select papers incorporated a longitudinal study design filter to provide evidence of the causal direction of relationships between HRM and relevant outcomes. Single HRM practices were considered. Within the health-specific literature, focus was on the impact of HRM on patient outcomes. Information is presented on the reliability of measures in each of the intermediate outcome areas.

RESULTS

Work design practices that enhance employee autonomy and control influenced a number of outcomes and there was consistent evidence for the positive impact of increased job control on employee outcomes, such as job satisfaction, absence and health. For employee participation, the small number of studies reviewed supported the involvement of employees in design/implementation of changes that affect their work. In health literature in particular, employee involvement through quality improvement teams resulted in improved patient outcomes. Findings were positive for the impact of training on the intended outcomes of the initiatives. Support for the impact of performance management practices was apparent, in particular feedback on performance outcomes and the use of participative goal setting. Strong associations were found among all intermediate outcomes, and the relationship between most intermediate behaviours and outcomes were significant.

LIMITATIONS

Limited evidence was available on the use of HRM and on the implementation of policy. Also, the specific practices studied within each HRM category differ so there was little evidence to show whether similar practices have the same effects in health and non-health settings.

CONCLUSIONS

Some potentially effective practices for both health and non-health areas were identified, and HRM methods could be used to support change processes within the NHS; the findings relating to work organisation are particularly promising with regard to changes in methods of service delivery. Using training to support the implementation of change is highlighted. However, future multilevel studies that embrace the individual, team and organisational level are needed. Studies should look into interventions aimed at improving HR outcomes and performance, and allow for pre- and post-intervention measurement of practices and outcomes.

摘要

背景

近年来,人力资源管理(HRM)被视为成功实现组织变革计划的重要因素。英国国民保健制度(NHS)正在进行重大的组织变革,因此需要确定哪些人力资源(HR)举措可能最有效。

目的

评估广泛的人力资源管理与绩效证据的系统评价结果。第一部分评估了英国人力资源管理的使用情况和实施的实践一致性。第二部分考虑了人力资源管理实践对中间结果的影响,这些结果会对最终结果(如组织绩效或患者护理)产生影响。

数据来源

以下数据库进行了搜索:应用社会科学索引和摘要(ASSIA)、英国护理索引(BNI)、商业资源全文数据库、坎贝尔协作、考科兰对照试验中心注册(CENTRAL)、考科兰系统评价数据库(CDSR)、护理与联合健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)、疗效评价文摘数据库(DARE)、DH-Data、EMBASE、健康管理信息联合会(HMIC)、国际社会科学文献索引(IBSS)、金基金会数据库、医学文献在线数据库(MEDLINE)、英国国民保健制度经济评估数据库(NHS EED)、国家研究注册处(NRR)、预MEDLINE、PsycINFO、ReFeR、社会科学引文索引(SSCI)和科学引文索引(SCI)。搜索于 2006 年 5 月/6 月进行。

方法

生成了广泛的人力资源管理干预和中间结果类别:10 个人力资源管理类别和 12 个中间结果类别。从 NHS 绩效指标和 NHS 改进计划中得出了 7 个患者最终结果。用于选择论文的质量标准纳入了纵向研究设计筛选器,以提供人力资源管理与相关结果之间关系的因果方向的证据。考虑了单一的人力资源管理实践。在卫生专业文献中,重点是人力资源管理对患者结果的影响。介绍了每个中间结果领域中测量的可靠性信息。

结果

增强员工自主性和控制的工作设计实践影响了许多结果,并且有充分的证据表明增加工作控制对员工结果(如工作满意度、缺勤和健康)有积极影响。对于员工参与,审查的少数研究支持员工参与影响其工作的设计/实施的变革。在卫生文献中,特别是通过质量改进团队参与,可以改善患者的结果。培训对计划的举措的预期结果产生积极影响的发现是明显的。绩效管理实践的影响得到了支持,特别是绩效结果的反馈和参与式目标设定。所有中间结果之间都发现了强烈的关联,大多数中间行为和结果之间的关系是显著的。

局限性

关于人力资源管理的使用情况和政策的实施情况,证据有限。此外,在每个人力资源管理类别中研究的具体实践有所不同,因此几乎没有证据表明在卫生和非卫生环境中类似的实践具有相同的效果。

结论

确定了一些对健康和非健康领域都有效的实践方法,人力资源管理方法可用于支持 NHS 内的变革过程;与工作组织有关的发现特别有希望,因为服务提供方式发生了变化。突出强调使用培训来支持变革的实施。但是,未来需要进行多层面研究,以涵盖个人、团队和组织层面。研究应着眼于旨在改善人力资源结果和绩效的干预措施,并允许对干预措施和结果进行干预前后的测量。

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