HRM and Its Effect on Employee, Organizational and Financial Outcomes in Health Care Organizations

10 Pages Posted: 2 Jul 2014 Last revised: 19 Nov 2014

See all articles by Brenda Vermeeren

Brenda Vermeeren

Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) - Department of Public Administration

Bram Steijn

Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) - Faculty of Social Sciences

Lars Tummers

Utrecht University

Marcel Lankhaar

PwC

Robbert-Jan Poerstamper

PwC Germany

Sandra Van Beek

ActiZ

Date Written: June 17, 2014

Abstract

Background: One of the main goals of Human Resource Management (HRM) is to increase the performance of organizations. However, few studies have explicitly addressed the multidimensional character of performance and linked HR practices to various outcome dimensions. This study therefore adds to the literature by relating HR practices to three outcome dimensions: financial, organizational and employee (HR) outcomes. Furthermore, we will analyze how HR practices influence these outcome dimensions, focusing on the mediating role of job satisfaction.

Methods: This study uses a unique dataset, based on the ‘ActiZ Benchmark in Healthcare’, a benchmark study conducted in Dutch home care, nursing care and care homes. Data from autumn 2010 to autumn 2011 were analyzed. In total, 162 organizations participated during this period (approximately 35% of all Dutch care organizations). Employee data were collected using a questionnaire (61,061 individuals, response rate 42%). Clients were surveyed using the Client Quality Index for long-term care, via stratified sampling. Financial outcomes were collected using annual reports. SEM analyses were conducted to test the hypotheses.

Results: It was found that HR practices are - directly or indirectly - linked to all three outcomes. The use of HR practices is related to improved financial outcomes (measure: net margin), organizational outcomes (measure: client satisfaction) and HR outcomes (measure: sickness absence). The impact of HR practices on HR outcomes and organizational outcomes proved substantially larger than their impact on financial outcomes. Furthermore, with respect to HR and organizational outcomes, the hypotheses concerning the full mediating effect of job satisfaction are confirmed. This is in line with the view that employee attitudes are an important element in the ‘black box’ between HRM and performance.

Conclusion: The results underscore the importance of HRM in the health care sector, especially for HR and organizational outcomes. Further analyses of HRM in the health care sector will prove to be a productive endeavor for both scholars and HR managers.

Keywords: HRM, Health care, Job satisfaction, Financial outcome, Organizational outcome, Employee outcome, Net margin, Client satisfaction, Sick absenteeism

JEL Classification: M1, M10, L2, M12

Suggested Citation

Vermeeren, Brenda and Steijn, Bram and Tummers, Lars and Lankhaar, Marcel and Poerstamper, Robbert-Jan and Van Beek, Sandra, HRM and Its Effect on Employee, Organizational and Financial Outcomes in Health Care Organizations (June 17, 2014). Human Resources for Health, 12:35, 2014, Humanistic Management Network, Research Paper Series No. 2461085, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2461085

Brenda Vermeeren

Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) - Department of Public Administration ( email )

Burgemeester Oudlaan 50
PO Box 1738
Rotterdam, 3000
Netherlands

Bram Steijn

Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) - Faculty of Social Sciences ( email )

3000 DR Rotterdam
Netherlands
+31 10 4082634 (Phone)
+31 10 4089099 (Fax)

Lars Tummers (Contact Author)

Utrecht University ( email )

Vredenburg 138
Utrecht, 3511 BG
Netherlands

Marcel Lankhaar

PwC ( email )

Germany

Robbert-Jan Poerstamper

PwC Germany ( email )

Germany

Sandra Van Beek

ActiZ ( email )

Oudlaan 4 (3515 GA)
PO Box 8258
Utrecht, 3503 RG
Netherlands

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