The perceived impact of physician shortages on human resource strategies in German hospitals – a resource dependency perspective

Author:

Schnack HelgeORCID,Uthoff Sarah Anna KatharinaORCID,Ansmann LenaORCID

Abstract

PurposeLike other European countries, Germany is facing regional physician shortages, which have several consequences on patient care. This study analyzes how hospitals perceive physician shortages and which strategies they adopt to address them. As a theoretical framework, the resource dependency theory is chosen.Design/methodology/approachThe authors conducted 20 semi-structured expert interviews with human resource officers, human resource directors, and executive directors from hospitals in the northwest of Germany. Hospitals of different ownership types, of varying sizes and from rural and urban locations were included in the sample. The interviews were analyzed by using qualitative content analysis.FindingsThe interviewees reported that human resource departments in hospitals expand their recruiting activities and no longer rely on one single recruiting instrument. In addition, they try to adapt their retaining measures to physicians' needs and offer a broad range of employment benefits (e.g. childcare) to increase attractiveness. The study also reveals that interviewees from small and rural hospitals report more difficulties with attracting new staff and therefore focus on recruiting physicians from abroad.Practical implicationsSince the staffing situation in German hospitals will not change in the short term, the study provides suggestions for hospital managers and health policy decision-makers in dealing with physician shortages.Originality/valueThis study uses the resource dependency theory to explain hospitals' strategies for dealing with healthcare staff shortages for the first time.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Health Policy,Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)

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