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  5. Editorial Essay: Introduction to a Special Issue on Work and Employment Relations in Health Care

Editorial Essay: Introduction to a Special Issue on Work and Employment Relations in Health Care

File(s)
Litwin18_Editorial_Essay.pdf (207.72 KB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/75504
Collections
Faculty Publications - Labor Relations, Law, and History
ILR Articles and Chapters
Author
Avgar, Ariel C.
Eaton, Adrienne E.
Givan, Rebecca K.
Litwin, Adam Seth
Abstract

[Excerpt] This special issue of the ILR Review is designed to showcase the central role that work organization and employment relations play in shaping important outcomes such as the quality of care and organizational performance. Each of the articles included in this special issue makes an important contribution to our understanding of the large and rapidly changing health care sector. Specifically, these articles provide novel empirical evidence about the relationship between organizations, institutions, and work practices and a wide array of central outcomes across different levels of analysis. This breadth is especially important because the health care literature has largely neglected employment-related factors in explaining organizational and worker outcomes in this industry. Individually, these articles shed new light on the role that health information technologies play in affecting patient care and productivity (see Hitt and Tambe; Meyerhoefer et al.); the relationship between work practices and organizational reliability (Vogus and Iacobucci); staffing practices, processes, and outcomes (Kramer and son; Hockenberry and Becker; Kossek et al.); health care unions’ effects on the quality of patient care (Arindrajit, Kaplan, and Thompson); and the relationship between the quality of jobs and the quality of care (Burns, Hyde, and Killet). Below, we position the articles in this special issue against the backdrop of the pressures and challenges facing the industry and the organizations operating within it. We highlight the implications that organizational responses to industry pressures have had for organizations, the patients they care for, and the employees who deliver this care.

Date Issued
2016-08-01
Keywords
health care
•
work organization
•
employment relations
•
quality of care
•
organizational performance
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: © Cornell University. Reprinted with permission. All rights reserved.
Type
article

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