Cogin Julie Ann, Ng Ju Li, Lee Ilro
Australian Graduate School of Management, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Business School, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Hum Resour Health. 2016 Sep 20;14(1):55. doi: 10.1186/s12960-016-0149-0.
We assess how human resource management (HRM) is implemented in Australian hospitals. Drawing on role theory, we consider the influence HRM has on job attitudes of healthcare staff and hospital operational efficiency.
We adopt a qualitative research design across professional groups (physicians, nurses, and allied health staff) at multiple levels (executive, healthcare managers, and employee). A total of 34 interviews were carried out and analyzed using NVivo.
Findings revealed a predominance of a control-based approach to people management. Using Snell's control framework (AMJ 35:292-327, 1992), we found that behavioral control was the principal form of control used to manage nurses, allied health workers, and junior doctors. We found a mix between behavior, output, and input controls as well as elements of commitment-based HRM to manage senior physicians. We observed low levels of investment in people and a concentration on transactional human resource (HR) activities which led to negative job attitudes such as low morale and frustration among healthcare professionals. While hospitals used rules to promote conformity with established procedures, the overuse and at times inappropriate use of behavior controls restricted healthcare managers' ability to motivate and engage their staff.
Excessive use of behavior control helped to realize short-term cost-cutting goals; however, this often led to operational inefficiencies. We suggest that hospitals reduce the profusion of behavior control and increase levels of input and output controls in the management of people. Poor perceptions of HR specialists and HR activities have resulted in HR being overlooked as a vehicle to address the strategic challenges required of health reform and to build an engaged workforce.
我们评估澳大利亚医院中人力资源管理(HRM)是如何实施的。借鉴角色理论,我们考虑人力资源管理对医护人员工作态度和医院运营效率的影响。
我们采用定性研究设计,涉及多个层面(行政人员、医疗管理人员和员工)的多个专业群体(医生、护士和专职医护人员)。共进行了34次访谈,并使用NVivo进行分析。
研究结果显示,在人员管理方面,基于控制的方法占主导地位。使用斯内尔的控制框架(《美国管理学会杂志》35:292 - 327,1992年),我们发现行为控制是用于管理护士、专职医护人员和初级医生的主要控制形式。我们发现,在管理资深医生时,行为、产出和投入控制以及基于承诺的人力资源管理要素相互结合。我们观察到在人员方面投入水平较低,且专注于事务性人力资源(HR)活动,这导致医护人员出现负面工作态度,如士气低落和沮丧。虽然医院使用规则来促进对既定程序的遵守,但行为控制的过度使用以及有时不恰当的使用限制了医疗管理人员激励和调动员工的能力。
行为控制的过度使用有助于实现短期成本削减目标;然而,这往往导致运营效率低下。我们建议医院在人员管理中减少行为控制的繁杂程度,增加投入和产出控制的水平。对人力资源专家和人力资源活动的负面看法导致人力资源被忽视,未能成为应对卫生改革所需战略挑战以及建立敬业员工队伍的工具。