The impact of professional and organizational identification on the relationship between hospital-physician exchange and customer-oriented behaviour of physicians

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Abstract

Background: Hospitals face increasingly competitive market conditions. In this challenging environment, hospitals have been struggling to build high-quality hospital-physician relationships. In the literature, two types of managerial strategies for optimizing relationships have been identified. The first focuses on optimizing the economic relationship; the second focuses on the noneconomic dimension and emphasizes the cooperative structure and collaborative nature of the hospital-physician relationship. We investigate potential spillover effects between the perceptions of physicians of organizational exchange and their customer-oriented behaviors. Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted on 130 self-employed physicians practicing at six Belgian hospitals. Economic exchange was measured using the concept of distributive justice (DJ); noneconomic exchange was measured by the concept of perceived organizational support (POS). Our outcomes consist of three types of customer-oriented behaviours: internal influence (II), external representation (ER), and service delivery (SD). Results: Our results show a positive relationship between DJ and II (adjusted R 2 = 0.038, t = 2.35; p = 0.028) and ER (adjusted R 2 = 0.15, t = 4.59; p < 0.001) and a positive relationship between POS and II (adjusted R 2 = 0.032, t = 2.26; p = 0.026) and ER (adjusted R 2 = 0.22, t = 5.81; p < 0.001). No relationship was present between DJ (p = 0.54) or POS (p = 0.57) and SD. Organizational identification positively moderates the relationship between POS and ER (p = 0.045) and between DJ and ER (p = 0.056). The relationships between POS and II (p = 0.54) and between DJ and II (p = 0.99) were not moderated by OI. Professional identification did not moderate the studied relationships. Conclusion: Our results demonstrate that both perceptions of economic and noneconomic exchange are important to self-employed physicians' customer-oriented behaviours. Fostering organizational identification could enhance this reciprocity dynamic.

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Trybou, J., De Caluwé, G., Verleye, K., Gemmel, P., & Annemans, L. (2015). The impact of professional and organizational identification on the relationship between hospital-physician exchange and customer-oriented behaviour of physicians. Human Resources for Health, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1478-4491-13-8

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