4.5 Article

Information governance orientation, supply chain strategy type and performance outcomes

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Publisher

EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1108/IJLM-04-2023-0168

Keywords

Information governance; Supply chain strategy; Healthcare; US hospitals

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This study examines the impact of an information governance framework on performance and finds that information governance orientation is positively associated with financial performance and patient experience. Hospitals with a mature supply chain strategy and information governance orientation achieve greater financial benefits and provide better patient care experiences.
Purpose-This study aims to examine the performance implications of an information governance (IG) framework for managing, controlling access to and securing information, focusing on (1) the performance benefits of an organization's IG orientation and (2) how the configuration of IG orientation and supply chain (SC) strategy type relate to performance outcomes.Design/methodology/approach-This study leverages multiple secondary sources for US hospitals, serving as the context for the study. It also employs cluster analysis to develop an SC strategy taxonomy, namely sophisticated and delivery-focused SC strategies. The proposed research model is tested using a robust regression to mitigate the influence of outliers and produce more accurate estimates.Findings-IG orientation is positively associated with financial performance and patient experience, and IG-oriented hospitals with a sophisticated SC strategy realize more financial benefits and achieve better patient care experiences compared to other configurations. Regardless of SC strategy type, IG-oriented hospitals offer better care experiences than non-IG-oriented hospitals.Practical implications-This paper offers empirical evidence that a hospital's IG orientation and SC strategy jointly affect financial outcomes and patient experience. For hospitals, an organization-wide framework for governing information streamlines both intra- and inter-organizational information flows and improves care delivery throughout a patient's care experience.Originality/value-This is one of a few studies that empirically examine the performance implications of governance of information in the domain of supply chain management (SCM). This study also develops an SC strategy taxonomy for the healthcare context and offers a springboard for research in service SC strategy.

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