Human Resource Management - Science topic

Theodore Tarnanidis

  • Recruit researchers
  • Join for free
  • Login Email Tip: Most researchers use their institutional email address as their ResearchGate login Password Forgot password? Keep me logged in Log in or Continue with Google Welcome back! Please log in. Email · Hint Tip: Most researchers use their institutional email address as their ResearchGate login Password Forgot password? Keep me logged in Log in or Continue with Google No account? Sign up

Sustainable HRM and well-being: systematic review and future research agenda

  • Published: 14 July 2023

Cite this article

research articles human resource

  • Faisal Qamar   ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0003-4916-8229 1 ,
  • Gul Afshan   ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0003-0016-5721 1 &
  • Salman Anwar Rana 1  

1718 Accesses

9 Citations

Explore all metrics

This paper attempts to undertake a systematic literature review to identify ways and means by which sustainable human resource management (HRM) and well-being are linked for better individual and organizational outcomes. Its primary focus is to study whether sustainable HRM predicts well-being at work? If yes, how and when this prediction takes place? Systematic computerized search and review were conducted for articles published until December 2022. A total of 134 research articles were finally selected. It was found that sustainable HRM predicts well-being at work. However, our findings suggest that the area is largely underexplored and empirical work is too rare. Although few moderators and mediators are examined, research is required to propose and test more comprehensive models with more robust research designs and sophisticated theoretical links.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Subscribe and save.

  • Get 10 units per month
  • Download Article/Chapter or eBook
  • 1 Unit = 1 Article or 1 Chapter
  • Cancel anytime

Price includes VAT (Russian Federation)

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Rent this article via DeepDyve

Institutional subscriptions

research articles human resource

Similar content being viewed by others

Moving beyond the link between hrm and economic performance: a study on the individual reactions of hr managers and professionals to sustainable hrm.

research articles human resource

Creating Sustainable Human Resource Management Systems for High-Performance Work Culture

research articles human resource

Employee well-being human resource practices: a systematic literature review and directions for future research

Explore related subjects.

  • Artificial Intelligence

Data availability

Information/data of all the research papers analysed during this study are included in the body of this manuscript and its appendix. Any further information related to earlier research papers considered for this review are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Aboramadan M, Kundi YM, Becker A (2021) Green human resource management in nonprofit organizations: effects on employee green behavior and the role of perceived green organizational support. Pers Rev Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/PR-02-2021-0078

Article   Google Scholar  

Adjei-Bamfo P, Bempong B, Osei J, Kusi-Sarpong S (2020) Green candidate selection for organizational environmental management. Int J Manpow 41:1081–1096. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-10-2019-0480

Agarwal V, Mathiyazhagan K, Malhotra S, Saikouk T (2021) Analysis of challenges in sustainable human resource management due to disruptions by Industry 4.0: an emerging economy perspective. Int J Manpow. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-03-2021-0192

Ahmad I, Umrani WA (2019) The impact of ethical leadership style on job satisfaction. Leadersh Organ Dev J 40:534–547. https://doi.org/10.1108/LODJ-12-2018-0461

Al Kerdawy MMA (2019) The role of corporate support for employee volunteering in strengthening the impact of green human resource management practices on corporate social responsibility in the Egyptian Firms. Eur Manag Rev 16:1079–1095. https://doi.org/10.1111/emre.12310

Al Marzouqi AH, Khan M, Hussain M (2020) Employee social sustainability: prioritizing dimensions in the UAE’s airlines industry. Soc Responsib J 16:349–367. https://doi.org/10.1108/SRJ-07-2018-0166

Alberton A, Kieling AP, Lyra FR, Hoffmann EM, Lopez MPV, Stefano SR (2020) Competencies for sustainability in hotels: insights from Brazil. Empl Relat Int J. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-01-2019-0093

Alcaraz JM, Susaeta L, Suarez E, Colon C, Gutiérrez-Martínez I, Cunha R, Leguizamón F, Idrovo S, Weisz N, Correia MF (2019) The human resources management contribution to social responsibility and environmental sustainability: explorations from Ibero-America. Int J Hum Resour Manag 30:3166–3189

Almarzooqi AH, Khan M, Khalid K (2019) The role of sustainable HRM in sustaining positive organizational outcomes. Int J Product Perform Manag 68:1272–1292. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPPM-04-2018-0165

Al-Minhas U, Ndubisi NO, Barrane FZ (2020) Corporate environmental management. Manag Environ Qual Int J 31:431–450. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEQ-07-2019-0161

Alvarez-Risco A, Estrada-Merino A, Perez-Luyo R (2020) Sustainable development goals in hospitality management. In: Ruël H, Lombarts A (eds) Sustainable hospitality management. Emerald Publishing Limited, pp 159–178

Chapter   Google Scholar  

Amrutha V, Geetha S (2020) A systematic review on green human resource management: Implications for social sustainability. J Clean Prod 247:119131

Anlesinya A, Amponsah-Tawiah K (2020) Towards a responsible talent management model. Eur J Train Dev 44:279–303. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJTD-07-2019-0114

Anlesinya A, Susomrith P (2020) Sustainable human resource management: a systematic review of a developing field. J Glob Responsib

App S, Büttgen M (2016) Lasting footprints of the employer brand: can sustainable HRM lead to brand commitment? Empl Relat 38:703–723. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-06-2015-0122

Ardichvili A (2012) Sustainability or limitless expansion: paradigm shift in HRD practice and teaching. Eur J Train Dev 36:873–887. https://doi.org/10.1108/03090591211280946

Arnold KA (2017) Transformational leadership and employee psychological well-being: a review and directions for future research. J Occup Health Psychol 22:381

Au WC, Ahmed PK (2014) Sustainable people management through work-life balance: a study of the Malaysian Chinese context. Asia-Pac J Bus Adm 6:262–280. https://doi.org/10.1108/APJBA-02-2014-0024

Aust I, Matthews B, Muller-Camen M (2020a) Common Good HRM: A paradigm shift in Sustainable HRM? Hum Resour Manag Rev 30:100705. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2019.100705

Aust I, Matthews B, Muller-Camen M (2020b) Common Good HRM: A paradigm shift in Sustainable HRM? Sustain Hum Resour Manag Triple Bottom Line Multi-Stakehold Strateg Concepts Engagem 30:100705. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2019.100705

Barrena-Martínez J, López-Fernández M, Romero-Fernández PM (2019) Towards a configuration of socially responsible human resource management policies and practices: Findings from an academic consensus. Int J Hum Resour Manag 30:2544–2580

Baum T, Hai NTT (2019) Applying sustainable employment principles in the tourism industry: righting human rights wrongs? Tour Recreat Res 44:371–381

Google Scholar  

Beer M, Boselie P, Brewster C (2015) Back to the future: implications for the field of HRM of the multistakeholder perspective proposed 30 years ago. Hum Resour Manage 54:427–438. https://doi.org/10.1002/hrm.21726

Bondarouk T, Brewster C (2016) Conceptualising the future of HRM and technology research. Int J Hum Resour Manag 27:2652–2671

Brannon DW, Burbach R (2021) Sustaining hospitality talent pools through a common pool resource lens. In: Jooss S, Burbach R, Ruël H (eds) Talent management innovations in the international hospitality industry. Emerald Publishing Limited, pp 53–78

Brunetto Y, Farr-Wharton B, Wankhade P, Saccon C, Xerri M (2022) Managing emotional labour: the importance of organisational support for managing police officers in England and Italy. Int J Hum Resour Manag 1–23

Bush JT (2020) Win-Win-Lose? Sustainable HRM and the promotion of unsustainable employee outcomes. Hum Resour Manag Rev 30:100676. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2018.11.004

Cabral C, Dhar RL (2021) Green competencies: insights and recommendations from a systematic literature review. Benchmark Int J 28:66–105. https://doi.org/10.1108/BIJ-11-2019-0489

Caldana ACF, Eustachio JHPP, Lespinasse Sampaio B, Gianotto ML, Talarico AC, da Batalhão SAC (2021) A hybrid approach to sustainable development competencies: the role of formal, informal and non-formal learning experiences. Int J Sustain High Educ. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSHE-10-2020-0420

Chams N, García-Blandón J (2019) On the importance of sustainable human resource management for the adoption of sustainable development goals. Resour Conserv Recycl 141:109–122

Chaudhary R (2019) Green human resource management and job pursuit intention: examining the underlying processes. Corp Soc Responsib Environ Manag 26:929–937. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.1732

Chaudhary R (2020) Corporate social responsibility and employee performance: a study among indian business executives. Int J Hum Resour Manag 31:2761–2784

Chillakuri B (2020) Understanding generation Z expectations for effective onboarding. J Organ Change Manag 33:1277–1296. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOCM-02-2020-0058

Chillakuri B, Vanka S (2020) Understanding the effects of perceived organizational support and high-performance work systems on health harm through sustainable HRM lens: a moderated mediated examination. Empl Relat Int J Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-01-2019-0046

Chillakuri B, Vanka S (2021) Examining the effects of workplace well-being and high-performance work systems on health harm: a sustainable HRM perspective. Soc Bus Rev 16:71–93. https://doi.org/10.1108/SBR-03-2020-0033

Christina S, Dainty A, Daniels K, Tregaskis O, Waterson P (2017) Shut the fridge door! HRM alignment, job redesign and energy performance. Hum Resour Manag J 27:382–402. https://doi.org/10.1111/1748-8583.12144

Clarke M (2011) Readings in HRM and Sustainability. Melb Tilde 117–132

Cook DJ, Mulrow CD, Haynes RB (1997) Systematic reviews: synthesis of best evidence for clinical decisions. Ann Intern Med 126:376–380

Cooke FL, Dickmann M, Parry E (2020) IJHRM after 30 years: taking stock in times of COVID-19 and looking towards the future of HR research. Int J Hum Resour Manag 32:1–23

Cooke FL, Xiao M, Chen Y (2021) Still in search of strategic human resource management? A review and suggestions for future research with China as an example. Hum Resour Manage 60:89–118

Cooper B, Wang J, Bartram T, Cooke FL (2019) Well-being-oriented human resource management practices and employee performance in the Chinese banking sector: The role of social climate and resilience. Hum Resour Manage 58:85–97

Csath M (2022) Organizational learning as the best business practice for adaptation in times of great changes: a viewpoint. Dev Learn Organ Int J

Dao V, Langella I, Carbo J (2011) From green to sustainability: information technology and an integrated sustainability framework. Green IT 20:63–79. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsis.2011.01.002

de Freitas SWR, Caldeira-Oliveira JH, Teixeira AA, Stefanelli NO, Teixeira TB (2020) Green human resource management and corporate social responsibility. Benchmark Int J 27:1551–1569. https://doi.org/10.1108/BIJ-12-2019-0543

de Freitas SWR, Caldeira Oliveira JH, Teixeira AA, Stefanelli NO (2021) Green human resource management, corporate social responsibility and customer relationship management: relationship analysis in the Brazilian context. Int J Product Perform Manag 70:1705–1727. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPPM-12-2019-0597

De Prins P, Van Beirendonck L, De Vos A, Segers J (2014) Sustainable HRM: bridging theory and practice through the ’respect openness continuity (ROC)’-model. Manag Rev 25:263–284

De Prins P, Stuer D, Gielens T (2020) Revitalizing social dialogue in the workplace: the impact of a cooperative industrial relations climate and sustainable HR practices on reducing employee harm. Int J Hum Resour Manag 31:1684–1704

De Witte H, Pienaar J, De Cuyper N (2016) Review of 30 years of longitudinal studies on the association between job insecurity and health and well-being: Is there causal evidence? Aust Psychol 51:18–31

De-la-Calle-Durán M-C, Rodríguez-Sánchez J-L (2021) Employee engagement and wellbeing in times of COVID-19: a proposal of the 5Cs model. Int J Environ Res Public Health 18:5470

del-Castillo-Feito C, Blanco-González A, Hernández-Perlines F (2022) The impacts of socially responsible human resources management on organizational legitimacy. Technol Forecast Soc Change 174:121274. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.techfore.2021.121274

Denyer D, Tranfield D (2009) Producing a systematic review

Deshwal P (2015) Green HRM: an organizational strategy of greening people. Int J Appl Res 1:176–181

Di Vaio A, Palladino R, Hassan R, Escobar O (2020) Artificial intelligence and business models in the sustainable development goals perspective: a systematic literature review. J Bus Res 121:283–314. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2020.08.019

Diaz-Carrion R, López-Fernández M, Romero-Fernandez PM (2018) Developing a sustainable HRM system from a contextual perspective. Corp Soc Responsib Environ Manag 25:1143–1153. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.1528

Diaz-Carrion R, López-Fernández M, Romero-Fernandez PM (2020) Sustainable human resource management and employee engagement: a holistic assessment instrument. Corp Soc Responsib Environ Manag 27:1749–1760. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.1921

Diaz-Carrion R, López-Fernández M, Romero-Fernandez PM (2021) Constructing an index for comparing human resources management sustainability in Europe. Hum Resour Manag J 31:120–142. https://doi.org/10.1111/1748-8583.12286

Díez-Martín F, Blanco-González A, Díez-de-Castro E (2021) Measuring a scientifically multifaceted concept. The jungle of organizational legitimacy. Eur Res Manag Bus Econ 27:100131

Dixon-Fowler H, O’Leary-Kelly A, Johnson J, Waite M (2020) Sustainability and ideology-infused psychological contracts: An organizational- and employee-level perspective. Hum Resour Manag Rev 30:100690. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2019.100690

Donald WE, Baruch Y, Ashleigh MJ (2020) Striving for sustainable graduate careers. Career Dev Int 25:90–110. https://doi.org/10.1108/CDI-03-2019-0079

DuBois CLZ, Dubois DA (2012) Strategic HRM as social design for environmental sustainability in organization. Hum Resour Manage 51:799–826. https://doi.org/10.1002/hrm.21504

Ehnert I, Harry W, Zink KJ (2014) Sustainability and HRM. In: Sustainability and human resource management. Springer, pp 3–32

ElAlfy A, Palaschuk N, El-Bassiouny D, Wilson J, Weber O (2020) Scoping the evolution of corporate social responsibility (CSR) research in the sustainable development goals (SDGs) era. Sustainability 12:5544

Elkington J (1999) Triple bottom-line reporting: looking for balance. Aust CPA 69:18–21

Gardas BB, Mangla SK, Raut RD, Narkhede B, Luthra S (2019) Green talent management to unlock sustainability in the oil and gas sector. J Clean Prod 229:850–862

Ghouri AM, Mani V, Khan MR, Khan NR, Srivastava AP (2020) Enhancing business performance through green human resource management practices: an empirical evidence from Malaysian manufacturing industry. Int J Product Perform Manag 69:1585–1607. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPPM-11-2019-0520

Gollan PJ (2000) Human resources, capabilities and sustainability

Gould-Williams J (2003) The importance of HR practices and workplace trust in achieving superior performance: a study of public-sector organizations. Int J Hum Resour Manag 14:28–54

Greenwood M, Anderson E (2009) ‘I used to be an employee but now I am a stakeholder’: implications of labelling employees as stakeholders. Asia Pac J Hum Resour 47:186–200

Greve HR (2021) The resource-based view and learning theory: overlaps, differences, and a shared future. J Manag 47:1720–1733

Guerci M, Shani ABR, Solari L (2014) A stakeholder perspective for sustainable HRM. Sustain Hum Resour Manag 205–223

Gutiérrez Crocco F, Martin A (2019) Towards a sustainable HRM in Latin America? Union-management relationship in Chile. Empl Relat Int J. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-01-2019-0036

Hameed Z, Naeem RM, Hassan M, Naeem M, Nazim M, Maqbool A (2021) How GHRM is related to green creativity? A moderated mediation model of green transformational leadership and green perceived organizational support. Int J Manpow. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-05-2020-0244

Hooi LW, Liu M-S, Lin JJJ (2021) Green human resource management and green organizational citizenship behavior: do green culture and green values matter? Int J Manpow Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-05-2020-0247

Hu X, Jiang Z (2018) Employee-oriented HRM and voice behavior: a moderated mediation model of moral identity and trust in management. Int J Hum Resour Manag 29:746–771

Jackson SE, Seo J (2010) The greening of strategic HRM scholarship. Organ Manag J 7:278–290

Jang S, Ardichvili A (2020) The role of HRD in CSR and sustainability: a content analysis of corporate responsibility reports. Eur J Train Dev 44:549–573. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJTD-01-2020-0006

Jerónimo HM, de Lacerda TC, Henriques PL (2020) From sustainable HRM to employee performance: a complex and intertwined road. Eur Manag Rev 17:871–884. https://doi.org/10.1111/emre.12402

Jithendran K, Baum T (2000) Human resources development and sustainability—the case of Indian tourism. Int J Tour Res 2:403–421

Kainzbauer A, Rungruang P, Hallinger P (2021) How does research on sustainable human resource management contribute to corporate sustainability: a document co-citation analysis, 1982–2021. Sustainability 13:11745

Kane C (2022) The future workplace: reimagining the office for the twenty-first century. in: european cities after COVID-19. Springer, pp 179–195

Kashyap V, Arora R (2020) Decent work and work–family enrichment: role of meaning at work and work engagement. Int J Product Perform Manag Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPPM-03-2020-0133

Kassen M (2022) Open data governance as a theoretical concept: a stakeholder and institutional analysis. In: Open data governance and its actors. Springer, pp 1–28

Kelloway EK, Barling J (1991) Job characteristics, role stress and mental health. J Occup Psychol 64:291–304

Kelman I (2021) Words without meaning? Examining sustainable development terminology through small states and territories. Small States Territories 4:231–244

Khan KS, Kunz R, Kleijnen J, Antes G (2003) Five steps to conducting a systematic review. J R Soc Med 96:118–121

Kitchenham B (2004) Procedures for performing systematic reviews. Keele UK Keele Univ 33:1–26

Kowalski TH, Loretto W (2017) Well-being and HRM in the changing workplace. Int J Hum Resour Manag 28:2229–2255

Kramar R (2014) Beyond strategic human resource management: is sustainable human resource management the next approach? Int J Hum Resour Manag 25:1069–1089

Kramar R (2021) Workplace performance: a sustainable approach. Asia Pac J Hum Resour 59:567–581. https://doi.org/10.1111/1744-7941.12289

Kumar Pradhan R, Prasad Panigrahy N, Kesari Jena L (2021) Self-efficacy and workplace well-being: understanding the role of resilience in manufacturing organizations. Bus Perspect Res 9:62–76

Kundu SC, Gahlawat N (2015) Socially responsible HR practices and employees’ intention to quit: The mediating role of job satisfaction. Hum Resour Dev Int 18:387–406

Lange T (2016) Sustainable HRM and employee well-being: an empirical agenda. Int J Manpow 37:918–923

Lansbury RD (2021) Introduction to the symposium ‘transforming our future: a new social contract at work’? Asia Pac J Hum Resour

Lăzăroiu G, Ionescu L, Andronie M, Dijmărescu I (2020) Sustainability management and performance in the urban corporate economy: a systematic literature review. Sustainability 12:7705

Lechuga Sancho MP, Martínez-Martínez D, Larran Jorge M, Herrera Madueño J (2018) Understanding the link between socially responsible human resource management and competitive performance in SMEs. Pers Rev 47:1211–1243. https://doi.org/10.1108/PR-05-2017-0165

Lee H-W (2017) Sustainable leadership: An empirical investigation of its effect on organizational effectiveness. Int J Organ Theory Behav 20:419–453. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOTB-20-04-2017-B001

Lee H-W (2019) How does sustainability-oriented human resource management work?: examining mediators on organizational performance. Int J Public Adm 42:974–984

Lisovskaia A (2022) Implementing well-being practices through russian context: HRD perspective. J East-West Bus 1–16

Lombardi R, Manfredi S, Cuozzo B, Palmaccio M (2020) The profitable relationship among corporate social responsibility and human resource management: a new sustainable key factor. Corp Soc Responsib Environ Manag 27:2657–2667. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.1990

Longoni A, Cagliano R (2016) Human resource and customer benefits through sustainable operations. Int J Oper Prod Manag 36:1719–1740. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOPM-11-2014-0564

Lopez-Cabrales A, Valle-Cabrera R (2020) Sustainable HRM strategies and employment relationships as drivers of the triple bottom line. Hum Resour Manag Rev 30:100689. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2019.100689

Luu TT (2021a) Socially responsible human resource practices and hospitality employee outcomes. Int J Contemp Hosp Manag 33:757–789. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-02-2020-0164

Luu TT (2021b) A tale of two countries: How do employees with disabilities respond to disability inclusive HR practices in tourism and hospitality industry? J Sustain Tour. https://doi.org/10.1080/09669582.2021.1876073

Macini N, Fernandes Rodrigues Alves M, Oranges Cezarino L, Bartocci Liboni L, Cristina Ferreira Caldana A (2020) Beyond money and reputation: sustainable HRM in Brazilian banks. Empl Relat Int J Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-12-2018-0331

Macke J, Genari D (2019) Systematic literature review on sustainable human resource management. J Clean Prod 208:806–815

Maheshwari M, Samal A, Bhamoriya V (2020) Role of employee relations and HRM in driving commitment to sustainability in MSME firms. Int J Product Perform Manag 69:1743–1764. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPPM-12-2019-0599

Mak A, Cheung L, Mak A, Leung L (2014) Confucian thinking and the implications for sustainability in HRM. Asia-Pac J Bus Adm 6:173–189. https://doi.org/10.1108/APJBA-02-2014-0029

Malik SY, Hayat Mughal Y, Azam T, Cao Y, Wan Z, Zhu H, Thurasamy R (2021) Corporate social responsibility, green human resources management, and sustainable performance: Is organizational citizenship behavior towards environment the missing link? Sustainability 13:1044

Mariappanadar S (2003) Sustainable human resource strategy. Int J Soc Econ 30:906–923. https://doi.org/10.1108/03068290310483779

Mariappanadar S (2012a) The harm indicators of negative externality of efficiency focused organizational practices. Int J Soc Econ 39:209–220. https://doi.org/10.1108/03068291211199378

Mariappanadar S (2012b) Harm of efficiency oriented HRM practices on stakeholders: an ethical issue for sustainability. Soc Bus Rev 7:168–184. https://doi.org/10.1108/17465681211237628

Mariappanadar S (2013) A conceptual framework for cost measures of harm of HRM practices. Asia-Pac J Bus Adm 5:103–114. https://doi.org/10.1108/17574321311321595

Mariappanadar S (2014) Stakeholder harm index: A framework to review work intensification from the critical HRM perspective. Hum Resour Manag Rev 24:313–329. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2014.03.009

Mariappanadar S (2016) Health harm of work from the sustainable HRM perspective: scale development and validation. Int J Manpow 37:924–944. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-12-2015-0204

Mariappanadar S (2020) Do HRM systems impose restrictions on employee quality of life? Evidence from a sustainable HRM perspective. J Bus Res 118:38–48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2020.06.039

Mariappanadar S, Aust I (2017) The dark side of overwork: an empirical evidence of social harm of work from a sustainable HRM perspective. Int Stud Manag Organ 47:372–387

Mariappanadar S, Kramar R (2014) Sustainable HRM: The synthesis effect of high performance work systems on organisational performance and employee harm. Asia-Pac J Bus Adm. https://doi.org/10.1108/APJBA-03-2014-0039

Mariappanadar S, Maurer I, Kramar R, Muller-Camen M (2021) Is it a sententious claim? An examination of the quality of occupational health, safety and well-being disclosures in global reporting initiative reports across industries and countries. Int Bus Rev. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ibusrev.2021.101922

Mashhady A, Khalili H, Sameti A (2021) Development and application of a service design-based process for improvement of human resource management service quality. Bus Process Manag J 27:459–485. https://doi.org/10.1108/BPMJ-04-2020-0164

Mowbray PK, Wilkinson A, Tse HHM (2021) High-performance work systems and employee voice behaviour: an integrated model and research agenda. Pers Rev 50:1530–1543. https://doi.org/10.1108/PR-12-2019-0692

Muisyo PK, Qin S, Julius MM, Ho TH, Ho TH (2021) Green HRM and employer branding: the role of collective affective commitment to environmental management change and environmental reputation. J Sustain Tour 1–18

Mujtaba M, Mubarik MS (2021) Talent management and organizational sustainability: role of sustainable behaviour. Int J Organ Anal Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOA-06-2020-2253

Müller-Christ G, Remer A (1999) Environmental economics or business ecology? Preliminary thoughts on a theory of resource management. Oper Environ Manag 21st Century Asp Tasks Perspect 69–87

Nuis JW, Peters P, Blomme R, Kievit H (2021) Dialogues in sustainable HRM: examining and positioning intended and continuous dialogue in sustainable HRM using a complexity thinking approach. Sustainability 13:10853

O’Donohue W, Torugsa N (2016) The moderating effect of ‘Green’HRM on the association between proactive environmental management and financial performance in small firms. Int J Hum Resour Manag 27:239–261

Okoli C, Schabram K (2010) A guide to conducting a systematic literature review of information systems research

Omidi A, Dal Zotto C (2022) Socially responsible human resource management: a systematic literature review and research agenda. Sustainability 14:2116

Onkila T, Sarna B (2021) A systematic literature review on employee relations with CSR: state of art and future research agenda. Corp Soc Responsib Environ Manag n/a. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.2210

Parng Y-J, Kurrahman T, Chen C-C, Tseng ML, Minh Hà H, Lin C-W (2021) Visualizing the hierarchical sustainable human resource management under qualitative information and complex interrelationships. Manag Environ Qual Int J 32:1422–1447. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEQ-04-2021-0086

Paulet R, Holland P, Morgan D (2021) A meta-review of 10 years of green human resource management: is Green HRM headed towards a roadblock or a revitalisation? Asia Pac J Hum Resour 59:159–183. https://doi.org/10.1111/1744-7941.12285

Pellegrini C, Rizzi F, Frey M (2018) The role of sustainable human resource practices in influencing employee behavior for corporate sustainability. Bus Strategy Environ 27:1221–1232

Peng L, Liu H, Nie Y, Xie Y, Tang X, Luo P (2020) The transnational happiness study with big data technology. ACM Trans Asian Low-Resour Lang Inf Process TALLIP 20:1–12

Pham DDT, Paillé P (2020) Green recruitment and selection: an insight into green patterns. Int J Manpow 41:258–272. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-05-2018-0155

Piwowar-Sulej K (2021a) Human resources development as an element of sustainable HRM: with the focus on production engineers. J Clean Prod 278:124008. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.124008

Piwowar-Sulej K (2021b) Core functions of Sustainable Human Resource Management. A hybrid literature review with the use of H-Classics methodology. Sustain Dev

Pizzi S, Caputo A, Corvino A, Venturelli A (2020) Management research and the UN sustainable development goals (SDGs): a bibliometric investigation and systematic review. J Clean Prod 276:124033

Pluta A, Rudawska A (2016) Holistic approach to human resources and organizational acceleration. J Organ Change Manag 29:293–309. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOCM-11-2014-0210

Podgorodnichenko N, Akmal A, Edgar F, Everett AM (2020a) Sustainable HRM: toward addressing diverse employee roles. Empl Relat Int J Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-01-2019-0016

Podgorodnichenko N, Edgar F, McAndrew I (2020b) The role of HRM in developing sustainable organizations: Contemporary challenges and contradictions. Hum Resour Manag Rev 30:100685. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2019.04.001

Podgorodnichenko N, Edgar F, Akmal A (2021) An integrative literature review of the CSR-HRM nexus: Learning from research-practice gaps. Hum Resour Manag Rev. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2021.100839

Poon TS-C, Law KK (2020) Sustainable HRM: An extension of the paradox perspective. Hum Resour Manag Rev. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2020.100818

Pradhan RK, Jena LK, Panigrahy NP (2020) Do sustainability practices buffer the impact of self-efficacy on organisational citizenship behaviour? J Indian Bus Res 12:509–528. https://doi.org/10.1108/JIBR-05-2019-0170

Randev KK, Jha JK (2019) Sustainable human resource management: a literature-based introduction. NHRD Netw J 12:241–252

Ranjbari M, Esfandabadi ZS, Zanetti MC, Scagnelli SD, Siebers P-O, Aghbashlo M, Peng W, Quatraro F, Tabatabaei M (2021) Three pillars of sustainability in the wake of COVID-19: A systematic review and future research agenda for sustainable development. J Clean Prod 297:126660

Raub SP, Martin-Rios C (2019) “Think sustainable, act local”—a stakeholder-filter-model for translating SDGs into sustainability initiatives with local impact. Int J Contemp Hosp Manag 31:2428–2447. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJCHM-06-2018-0453

Ren S, Jackson SE (2020) HRM institutional entrepreneurship for sustainable business organizations. Hum Resour Manag Rev 30:100691. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2019.100691

Ribeiro RP, Gavronski I (2021) Sustainable management of human resources and stakeholder theory: a review. Rev Gest Soc E Ambient 15:e02729–e02729

Richards J (2020) Putting employees at the centre of sustainable HRM: a review, map and research agenda. Empl Relat Int J Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-01-2019-0037

Rincon-Roldan F, Lopez-Cabrales A (2021a) Linking organisational values and sustainability: the role of AMO practices. Pers Rev Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/PR-06-2020-0414

Rincon-Roldan F, Lopez-Cabrales A (2021b) The impact of employment relationships on firm sustainability. Empl Relat Int J Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-12-2020-0522

Robinson RN, Martins A, Solnet D, Baum T (2019) Sustaining precarity: critically examining tourism and employment. J Sustain Tour 27:1008–1025

Roca-Puig V (2019) The circular path of social sustainability: an empirical analysis. J Clean Prod 212:916–924

Rubel MRB, Kee DMH, Rimi NN (2021) The influence of green HRM practices on green service behaviors: the mediating effect of green knowledge sharing. Empl Relat Int J 43:996–1015. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-04-2020-0163

Samimi E, Sydow J (2021) Human resource management in project-based organizations: revisiting the permanency assumption. Int J Hum Resour Manag 32:49–83

Santana M, Lopez-Cabrales A (2019) Sustainable development and human resource management: a science mapping approach. Corp Soc Responsib Environ Manag 26:1171–1183. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.1765

Sarvaiya H, Arrowsmith J (2021) Exploring the context and interface of corporate social responsibility and HRM. Asia Pac J Hum Resour n/a. https://doi.org/10.1111/1744-7941.12316

Sathasivam K, Che Hashim R, Abu Bakar R (2021) Automobile industry managers’ views on their roles in environmental sustainability: a qualitative study. Manag Environ Qual Int J 32:844–862. https://doi.org/10.1108/MEQ-09-2020-0194

Schulte P, Vainio H (2010) Well-being at work–overview and perspective. Scand J Work Environ Health 422–429

Secundo G, Ndou V, Del Vecchio P, De Pascale G (2020) Sustainable development, intellectual capital and technology policies: a structured literature review and future research agenda. Technol Forecast Soc Change 153:119917

Shah SMA, Jiang Y, Wu H, Ahmed Z, Ullah I, Adebayo TS (2021) Linking green human resource practices and environmental economics performance: the role of green economic organizational culture and green psychological climate. Int J Environ Res Public Health 18:10953

Sharpley R (2020) Tourism, sustainable development and the theoretical divide: 20 years on. J Sustain Tour 28:1932–1946

Shoaib M, Abbas Z, Yousaf M, Zámečník R, Ahmed J, Saqib S (2021) The role of GHRM practices towards organizational commitment: a mediation analysis of green human capital. Cogent Bus Manag 8:1870798

Silva S, Nuzum A-K, Schaltegger S (2019) Stakeholder expectations on sustainability performance measurement and assessment. a systematic literature review. J Clean Prod 217:204–215

Singh S, Vanka S (2019) Voice matters: Why HR should listen to employee voice? Strateg HR Rev 18:268–271. https://doi.org/10.1108/SHR-04-2019-0026

Singh SK, Pradhan RK, Panigrahy NP, Jena LK (2019) Self-efficacy and workplace well-being: moderating role of sustainability practices. Benchmarking Int J 26:1692–1708. https://doi.org/10.1108/BIJ-07-2018-0219

Sobhani FA, Haque A, Rahman S (2021) Socially responsible HRM, employee attitude, and bank reputation: the rise of CSR in Bangladesh. Sustainability 13:2753

Sorribes J, Celma D, Martínez-Garcia E (2021) Sustainable human resources management in crisis contexts: Interaction of socially responsible labour practices for the wellbeing of employees. Corp Soc Responsib Environ Manag 28:936–952. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.2111

Sotome R, Takahashi M (2014) Does the Japanese employment system harm productivity performance? Asia-Pac J Bus Adm 6:225–246. https://doi.org/10.1108/APJBA-02-2014-0031

Southey K (2016) To fight, sabotage or steal: are all forms of employee misbehaviour created equal? Int J Manpow 37:1067–1084. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJM-12-2015-0219

Stahl GK, Brewster CJ, Collings DG, Hajro A (2020) Enhancing the role of human resource management in corporate sustainability and social responsibility: A multi-stakeholder, multidimensional approach to HRM. Sustain Hum Resour Manag Triple Bottom Line Multi-Stakehold Strateg Concepts Engagem 30:100708. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.hrmr.2019.100708

Stankevičiūtė Ž, Savanevičienė A (2018) Designing sustainable HRM: the core characteristics of emerging field. Sustainability 10:4798

Stankevičiūtė Ž, Savanevičienė A (2019) Can sustainable HRM reduce work-related stress, work-family conflict, and burnout? Int Stud Manag Organ 49:79–98

Teeuwisse V, Brannon DW (2020) A qualititaive exploration of sustainble talent management of hospitality interns’ career intentions based on their pre-, post- and present practical placement experiences. In: Ruël H, Lombarts A (eds) Sustainable hospitality management. Emerald Publishing Limited, pp 63–82

Tworzydło D, Gawroński S, Opolska-Bielańska A, Lach M (2021) Changes in the demand for CSR activities and stakeholder engagement based on research conducted among public relations specialists in Poland, with consideration of the SARS-COV-2 pandemic. Corp Soc Responsib Environ Manag n/a. https://doi.org/10.1002/csr.2189

Úbeda-García M, Claver-Cortés E, Marco-Lajara B, Zaragoza-Sáez P (2021) Corporate social responsibility and firm performance in the hotel industry. the mediating role of green human resource management and environmental outcomes. J Bus Res 123:57–69. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbusres.2020.09.055

Van Buren III HJ (2020) The value of including employees: a pluralist perspective on sustainable HRM. Empl Relat Int J Ahead-of-Print. https://doi.org/10.1108/ER-01-2019-0041

Van Dam K, Van Vuuren T, Kemps S (2017) Sustainable employment: the importance of intrinsically valuable work and an age-supportive climate. Int J Hum Resour Manag 28:2449–2472

Vecchi A, Della Piana B, Feola R, Crudele C (2021) Talent management processes and outcomes in a virtual organization. Bus Process Manag J 27:1937–1965. https://doi.org/10.1108/BPMJ-06-2019-0227

Vyas L (2022) “New normal” at work in a post-COVID world: work–life balance and labor markets. Policy Soc 41:155–167

Wellton L, Lainpelto J (2021) The intertwinement of professional knowledge culture, leadership practices and sustainability in the restaurant industry. Scand J Hosp Tour 21:550–566

Westerman JW, Rao MB, Vanka S, Gupta M (2020) Sustainable human resource management and the triple bottom line: Multi-stakeholder strategies, concepts, and engagement. Hum Resour Manag Rev 30:100742

WHO (2021) Comprehensive Mental Health Action Plan 2013–2030

Wikhamn W (2019) Innovation, sustainable HRM and customer satisfaction. Int J Hosp Manag 76:102–110. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijhm.2018.04.009

Wright PM, Steinbach AL (2022) Pivoting after almost 50 years of SHRM research: toward a stakeholder view. Asia Pac J Hum Resour 60:22–40

Xiao Y, Watson M (2019) Guidance on conducting a systematic literature review. J Plan Educ Res 39:93–112

Yang W, Nawakitphaitoon K, Huang W, Harney B, Gollan PJ, Xu CY (2019) Towards better work in China: mapping the relationships between high-performance work systems, trade unions, and employee well-being. Asia Pac J Hum Resour 57:553–576. https://doi.org/10.1111/1744-7941.12205

Ybema JF, van Vuuren T, van Dam K (2020) HR practices for enhancing sustainable employability: implementation, use, and outcomes. Int J Hum Resour Manag 31:886–907

Yong JY, Yusliza M-Y, Jabbour CJC, Ahmad NH (2020) Exploratory cases on the interplay between green human resource management and advanced green manufacturing in light of the ability-motivation-opportunity theory. J Manag Dev 39:31–49. https://doi.org/10.1108/JMD-12-2018-0355

Yusliza M-Y, Norazmi NA, Jabbour CJC, Fernando Y, Fawehinmi O, Seles BMRP (2019) Top management commitment, corporate social responsibility and green human resource management. Benchmarking Int J 26:2051–2078. https://doi.org/10.1108/BIJ-09-2018-0283

Zaugg RJ, Blum A, Thom N (2001) Sustainability in human resource management. Eval Rep Surv Eur Co Inst Arbeitsbericht Inst Für Organ Pers Univ Bern Eidgenöss Pers

Zheng X, Zhu W, Zhao H, Zhang C (2015) Employee well-being in organizations: theoretical model, scale development, and cross-cultural validation. J Organ Behav 36:621–644. https://doi.org/10.1002/job.1990

Zink KJ (2011) The contribution of quality of work to organisational excellence. Total Qual Manag Bus Excell 22:567–585

Download references

Acknowledgements

There are no acknowledgements for this manuscript.

The authors declare that no funds, grants or other support were received during the preparation of this manuscript.

Author information

Authors and affiliations.

Department of Business Administration, Sukkur IBA University, Sukkur, Pakistan

Faisal Qamar, Gul Afshan & Salman Anwar Rana

You can also search for this author in PubMed   Google Scholar

Contributions

Dr. GA and Mr. FQ contributed to the study conception and design. Material preparation and analysis were performed by Mr. FQ and Mr. SR. The first draft of the manuscript was prepared by Mr. FQ. Dr. GA and Mr. SR then commented on previous versions of the manuscript. Mr. SR significantly contributed to prepare the final manuscript alongwith Mr. Faisal. Dr. GA supervised the overall work. Finally, all the authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Faisal Qamar .

Ethics declarations

Conflict of interest.

The authors have no relevant financial or non-financial interests to disclose.

Additional information

Publisher's note.

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Springer Nature or its licensor (e.g. a society or other partner) holds exclusive rights to this article under a publishing agreement with the author(s) or other rightsholder(s); author self-archiving of the accepted manuscript version of this article is solely governed by the terms of such publishing agreement and applicable law.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Qamar, F., Afshan, G. & Rana, S.A. Sustainable HRM and well-being: systematic review and future research agenda. Manag Rev Q (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11301-023-00360-6

Download citation

Received : 16 November 2022

Accepted : 21 June 2023

Published : 14 July 2023

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1007/s11301-023-00360-6

Share this article

Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:

Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.

Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative

  • Psychological health
  • Sustainable HRM
  • Find a journal
  • Publish with us
  • Track your research

Cart

  • SUGGESTED TOPICS
  • The Magazine
  • Newsletters
  • Managing Yourself
  • Managing Teams
  • Work-life Balance
  • The Big Idea
  • Data & Visuals
  • Reading Lists
  • Case Selections
  • HBR Learning
  • Topic Feeds
  • Account Settings
  • Email Preferences

To Retain Employees, Give Them a Sense of Purpose and Community

  • Ron Carucci

research articles human resource

Three strategies to help people feel like their work matters.

Leaders determined to stem the tide of talent defections during the Great Resignation could be surprised to learn they’re barking up the wrong tree by simply throwing money or perks at the problem. The author spoke with six human resource executives from companies reporting that their organizations are not experiencing higher-than-normal attrition. Among the many insightful perspectives shared, three practices appeared to be universal across these companies. First, build a culture of solidarity. Then, let employees co-create the workplace experience. Finally, coach your managers on how to genuinely care for others. The author offers several ways to put those practices into action.

Most employers are anxious about the mass exodus happening from today’s workplaces. Widespread conjecture about what’s behind “the Great Resignation” ranges from people wanting more work flexibility and higher-paying jobs to simply being utterly exhausted from pandemic burnout. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, more than 15 million people quit their jobs since April in the U.S. alone. Microsoft’s recent research suggests that 41% of workers across the world are thinking about quitting their jobs.

research articles human resource

  • Ron Carucci is co-founder and managing partner at  Navalent , working with CEOs and executives pursuing transformational change. He is the bestselling author of eight books, including To Be Honest and Rising to Power . Connect with him on Linked In at  RonCarucci , and download his free “How Honest is My Team?” assessment.

Partner Center

U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

The .gov means it’s official. Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you’re on a federal government site.

The site is secure. The https:// ensures that you are connecting to the official website and that any information you provide is encrypted and transmitted securely.

  • Publications
  • Account settings

Preview improvements coming to the PMC website in October 2024. Learn More or Try it out now .

  • Advanced Search
  • Journal List
  • Hum Resour Health
  • PMC10696747

Logo of humresour

Human resource management research in healthcare: a big data bibliometric study

Xiaoping qin.

1 School of Health Policy and Management, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, 100730 China

Yu-Ni Huang

2 College of Medical and Health Science, Asia University, Taichung, 41354 Taiwan

Kaiyan Chen

3 Department of Education, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, 100730 China

4 Department of Innovative Medical Research, Hospital Management Institute, Chinese People’s Liberation Army General Hospital, Beijing, 100853 China

Richard Szewei Wang

5 Affiliation Program of Data Analytics and Business Computing, Stern School of Business, New York University, New York, 10012 United States of America

6 Tsinghua-Berkeley Shenzhen Institute, Tsinghua University, Shenzhen, 518055 China

Bing-Long Wang

Associated data.

All data and materials generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article.

Human resource management (HRM) in healthcare is an important component in relation to the quality and efficiency of healthcare delivery. However, a comprehensive overview is lacking to assess and track the current status and trends of HRM research in healthcare. This study aims to describe the current situation and global trends in HRM research in healthcare as well as to indicate the frontiers and future directions of research. The research methodology is based on bibliometric mapping using scientific visualization software (VOSviewer). The data were collected from the Web of Science(WoS) core citation database. After applying the search criteria, we retrieved 833 publications, which have steadily increased over the last 30 years. In addition, 93 countries and regions have published relevant research. The United States and Australia have made significant contributions in this area. Current research articles focus on topics clustered into performance, hospital/COVID-19, job satisfaction, human resource management, occupational/mental health, and quality of care. The most frequently co-occurring keywords are human resource management, job satisfaction, nurses, hospitals, health services, quality of care, COVID-19, and nursing. There is limited research on compensation management and employee relations management, so the current HRM research field still has not been able to present a complete and systematic roadmap. We propose that our colleagues should consider focusing on these research gaps in the future.

Introduction

Among the many management elements, people are the most dynamic and active element, and they are an important asset in organizations [ 1 ]. The term “human resources” was first coined by the academic Peter F. Drucker in 1954 [ 2 ]. The key function of human resources management (HRM) is to “put the right people in the right jobs at the right time” [ 2 ]. HRM refers to the planned allocation of human resources in accordance with the requirements of organizational development through a series of processes, such as recruitment, training, use, assessment, motivation, and adjustment of employees, to mobilize their motivation, bring into play their potential and create value for the organization [ 1 ]. Ensuring the achievement of the organization’s strategic objectives, HRM activities mainly include human resource strategy formulation, staff recruitment and selection, training and development, performance management, compensation management, staff mobility management, staff relationship management, staff safety and health management, etc. Similarly, modern healthcare management has human resources as the core. The HRM level in hospitals is related to the quality and efficiency of medical services provided by hospitals, which is also the core of internal hospital management and the focus of health macro management [ 3 ].

The World Health Organization (WHO) states that health systems can only work with the help of health workers, and that improving the coverage of health services and realizing the right to the highest standard of health depends on the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of health workers [ 4 ]. In response to evolving characteristics in socio-economic development and the human resource market, healthcare system personnel reforms are evident in three key areas: first, decentralization and flexible employment practices grant hospital managers greater decision-making autonomy concerning priorities and access to medical resources. However, they also impose quantitative and functional constraints on physicians' working hours, career planning, and medical payment systems. Second, a focal point is the rational allocation of technical staff to achieve efficiency while controlling labor costs. Finally, hospital organization change and restructuring are prevalent. Many European countries have unionized hospital employees, limiting the ability to establish independent incentives and rewards. In contrast, U.S. hospital employees often do not belong to specific organizations, leading cost control efforts to revolve around adjusting the allocation of technical staff and employee numbers to reduce labor expenses [ 5 – 7 ].

The current global trend in the number of publications on HRM in healthcare is rising. However, there are currently several problems in HRM research. The following issues mainly exist: (1) the expertise and professionalism of HRM managers are limited. (2) Theoretical methods and technical applications are weak. (3) Insufficient regulation of regulations, systems and procedures. (4) Management is mainly at the level of operational work, and functions are too fragmented [ 8 , 9 ]. Although hospitals worldwide generally recognize the importance of HRM, they do not pay sufficient attention to it. The management of human resources is also stuck in the previous understanding that its work is carried out only by transferring positions in hospitals, promoting and reducing the salary of employees and a series of other operations [ 10 ]. Most senior management in hospitals have comprehensive medical knowledge; some are experts in a particular field. Still, they lack expertise in HRM, which makes them work in a transactional way in HRM. There is also currently a general health workforce imbalance in countries worldwide. The lack of well-being of healthcare workers is particularly problematic in foreign healthcare institutions [ 11 ], and to reduce costs, some organizations have reduced staffing levels. In turn, because of lower quality of service, the morale of healthcare providers often suffers. Patient satisfaction may decline [ 12 ]. In the process of data gathering, we found that the literature related to HRM in healthcare is still under-reported and that the research topics are scattered, and there is still a lack of generalization and summary of these literatures [ 13 ]. There is no systematic theoretical support in the current research, which defines the perspective that researchers should take when analyzing and interpreting the data to be collected, leading to biased interpretations of the results, and does not allow other researchers to combine the findings with existing research knowledge and then apply them to practice [ 14 ]. Second, data collection was not rigorous, and the downloading strategy was not appropriate to achieve completeness and accuracy of data. There is also a lack of information and incomplete use of features in the presentation of knowledge maps and visualization results [ 15 ].

Therefore, the aims of this study are the following; first, we provide a new way of viewing the field of healthcare HRM and its associations by examining co-occurrence data. Second, we relate our evolutionary analysis to a comprehensive future research agenda which may generate a new research agenda in healthcare hospital HRM. This review, therefore, focuses on illuminating the research frontiers and future roadmap for healthcare HRM research [ 16 , 17 ].

Materials and methods

This study provides a bibliometric analysis of the HRM research literature in health care over a 30-year period to describe the landscape and trajectory of change in the research field. The methodology used for this overview is based on bibliometric mapping [ 18 , 19 ], a visualization technique that quantitatively displays the landscape and dynamic aspects of the knowledge domain [ 20 ]. Data were collected from the Web of Science (WoS) core citation database. Two Java-based scientific visualization software packages (CiteSpace and VOSviewer), developed by Chaomei Chen and Van Eck and Waltman, were used to analyze the data [ 18 , 21 ].

The data for this study were retrieved from the Web of Science on 28 September 2022. Web of Science was chosen as the search engine, because it is the most widely accepted and commonly used database for analyzing scientific publications [ 22 ]. The keywords “human resource management” and “healthcare organization” were used as search topics. First, to get a complete picture of HRM research, we searched all the literature from 1977 to the date of the search.

Eight hundred thirty-three publications on HRM in healthcare organizations were identified (Fig.  1 ). We excluded publications before 1990, because the two documents before 1990 did not include complete information. In addition, articles, review articles, and early access articles were included in the study. To minimize language bias, we excluded literature published in languages other than English. Each publication in WoS contains detailed information, including the year of publication, author, author’s address, title, abstract, source journal, subject category, references, etc. A detailed description of the contents of the database preceded the bibliographic analysis. For example, some authors presented their names in different spellings when submitting articles, so reviewing and integrating the data in detail was necessary. A total of 718 publications were included and exported to VOSviewer and CiteSpace software to analyze the following topics: global publishing trends, countries, journals, authors, research orientations, institutions, and quality of publications.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 12960_2023_865_Fig1_HTML.jpg

Research flow chart of the bibliometric analysis

Introduction to CiteSpace and VOSviewer

VOSviewer is a software tool for building and visualizing bibliometric networks. It was developed by Van Eck and Waltman [ 21 ]. In VOSviewer, metric networks can be visualized and analyzed for factors, including journals, researchers, or individual publications. They can be constructed based on citations, bibliographic couplings, co-citations, or co-authorship relationships [ 21 ].

Global publication trends

Number of global trends.

After applying the search criteria, we retrieved a total of 718 articles. Figure  2 a shows the increase in articles from 1 in 1977 to 108 in 2021. To predict future trends, a linear regression model was used to create a time curve for the number of publications throughout the year, and the model fit curve for the growth trend is shown in Fig.  2 b. The trend in the number of publications fitted the time curve well at R 2  = 0.8802. The R-squared value is a measure of how well the trend line fits. This value reflects the degree of fit between the estimated value of the trend line and the corresponding actual data; the better the fit, the more reliable the trend line is [ 23 , 24 ]. Based on the model’s trends, it is also predicted that the number of articles on HRM in healthcare will increase to approximately 300 by 2030, an almost threefold increase compared to 2021.

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 12960_2023_865_Fig2_HTML.jpg

a Total number of publications related to HRM research. The bars indicate the number of publications per year. b Model fitting curves of global publication trends. c Top 10 countries of total publications. d Distribution world map of HRM research

Country and regional contributions

Figure  2 c, d shows the number of publications and the world distribution of the top 10 countries in total publication numbers. The USA contributed the most publications (172, 24.2%), followed by Australia (86, 12.0%), the UK (83, 11.6%), and China (78, 10.9%).

Total number of citations

The USA had the highest total number of citations of all included publications (5195) (Table ​ (Table1), 1 ), while the UK ranked second (2661), followed by Australia (1960) and the Netherlands (1271). The detailed rankings and numbers are shown in Fig.  3 a and Table ​ Table1 1 .

Contributions in publications of countries

CountryPublicationsSum of the Times CitedAverage Citations per ItemH-index
USA172519530.236
UNITED KINGDOM83266132.0627
AUSTRALIA86196022.7923
NETHERLANDS60127121.1821
CANADA46124827.1322
CHINA7899712.7819
BELGIUM1993649.2612
TAIWAN3679522.0815
GERMANY3159619.2311
IRAN2727710.269

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 12960_2023_865_Fig3_HTML.jpg

a Top 10 countries of average citations for each article. b Average number of citations. c Top 10 countries of the H-index

Average citation frequency

Belgium had the highest average number of citations (49.26), followed by the UK (32.06), the USA (30.2), and Canada (27.13), as shown in Fig.  3 b.

Total citations and the h-index reflect the quality of a country’s publications and academic impact[ 25 ]. Figure  3 c shows the ranking of the h-index, where the top country is the USA (h-index = 36), followed by the UK (h-index = 27), Australia (h-index = 23), and Canada (h-index = 22).

Analysis of publications

Table ​ Table2 2 shows the top 10 journals for publications on HRM in healthcare, with 54 articles published in “International Journal of Human Resource Management”, 44 articles published in “BMJ Open”, 30 articles published in “Journal of Nursing Management”, and 24 articles in “BMC Health Services Research”.

Top 10 journals of publications related to HRM research

PublicationsTimesPercentage(  = 718)
International Journal Of Human Resource Management547.521
Bmj Open446.128
Journal Of Nursing Management304.178
Bmc Health Services Research243.343
Journal Of Advanced Nursing182.507
Health Care Management Review162.228
Human Resources For Health162.228
Human Resource Management141.95
Plos One141.95
Human Resource Management Journal111.532

Table ​ Table3 3 shows the top 10 most published authors with 96 articles/reviews in the last decade, representing 13.4% of all literature in the field. Timothy Bartram from Australia has published 19 papers, followed by Sandra Leggat from Australia, Stanton P from the USA, and Townsend K from the UK with 13, 11, and 10 papers, respectively. All researchers listed as authors were included in this term for analysis, regardless of their relative contribution to the study. Notably, we have included all authors in this analysis regardless of their relative contribution to the study.

Top 20 authors of publications

AuthorPublicationsSum of the Times CitedAverage Citations
per Item
h-index
Bartram T197223812
Leggat SG1348837.549
Stanton P1151046.368
Townsend K10210218
Wilkinson A10210218
Van Rhenen W813817.255
Paauwe J725836.864
Boselie P633856.336
Kellner A68714.56
Marchal B616327.176

Research orientation

Figure  4 a shows the top 10 research orientations of the 100 research orientations. The most common research orientations were management (193 articles), nursing (107 articles), health policy services (105 articles), and health care sciences services (201 articles).

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 12960_2023_865_Fig4_HTML.jpg

a Top 10 research orientations and the number of publications in each orientation. b Top 20 institutions with the most publications

Institutions

Figure  4 shows the top 20 institutions with the most published papers. La Trobe University has the highest number of articles with 24, followed by the University of London (23) and Griffith University (18).

Co-occurrence analysis

In the keyword mapping on HRM research in healthcare, the size of the nodes represents the frequency, while the line between the nodes reflects the co-occurrence relationship. A total of 1914 keywords were included, and 59 met the criteria. All keywords were grouped into six clusters: performance (light blue cluster), job satisfaction (red cluster), quality of care (blue cluster), human resource management (brown cluster), occupational/mental health (purple cluster), and hospital/COVID-19 (green cluster) (Fig.  5 ).

An external file that holds a picture, illustration, etc.
Object name is 12960_2023_865_Fig5_HTML.jpg

Co-occurrence analysis of HRM research in healthcare

The most prominent themes in HRM research in healthcare are as below. In the “Performance” cluster, the keywords which have the greatest co-occurrence strength were “performance”, “systematic review”, “decentralization health system” and “motivation”. The main keywords in the “Job Satisfaction” cluster are “job satisfaction”, “organizational commitment”, “transformational leadership” and “turn over”. In the “Quality of care” cluster, the keywords that stand out are “quality of care”, “patient safety”, “high-performance work system”, “quality management” and “patient satisfaction”. In the “Human resource management” cluster, the prominent keywords include “human resource management”, “health policy”, “public health”, and “education and training”. In the “Occupational/Mental Health” cluster, the prominent keywords are “Occupational health”, “mental health”, “well-being” and “burnout”. The main keywords in the “Hospital/COVID-19” cluster were “hospitals”, “COVID-19” “workforce” and “qualitative research”.

Global trends in HMR in healthcare

Our study of HMR research in healthcare illustrates current and global trends in publications, contributing countries, institutions, and research orientations. The field of HMR research has evolved over the past three decades. However, as this study shows, the number of publications steadily increases yearly, with 93 countries or regions publishing in the field, suggesting that research focusing on HMR research and providing in-depth knowledge will likely increase.

Quality and status of publications worldwide

We find that most publishing countries are developed countries, but developing countries are catching up. The total citation rate and the h-index reflect the quality and scholarly impact of a country’s publications [ 25 ]. According to our study, the US ranks first among other countries in total publications, citations, and h-index, making the most substantial contribution to global HRM research. The UK and Canada also contribute significantly, with impressive total citation frequencies and h-index, especially the UK, which ranks second in average citation frequency. However, some countries, such as Belgium, Canada and Australia, also play an important role, given their high average citation frequency. In developing countries, HRM research has also served as a guide for hospitals to improve the quality of care. The study will serve as a reference for developing countries to learn from the experience of developed countries as their economic development gradually catches up with that of developed countries.

The impact and prestige of the journals can be seen in the number of articles published in the field and the influential journals in healthcare HRM research, including the BMC Health Services Research, the Journal of Nursing Management, the International Journal of Human Resource Management, the Health Care Management Review, and the Journal of Health Organisation and Management. These high-quality journals are thus the main source of information for researchers in this field on the latest developments in HRM in healthcare.

The study shows that almost all of the top 20 institutions come from the top five countries with the most publications, with the majority coming from the US, Australia and the Netherlands, reflecting the great academic influence of these three countries in the field of HRM in healthcare. These institutions play an important role in raising the academic performance of a country. Furthermore, the top 20 authors represent research leaders who are likely to impact the future direction of research significantly. Therefore, more attention should be paid to their work to stay abreast of the latest developments in the field.

Research Focus on HRM

Keywords play a crucial role in research papers as they contain vital information [ 26 ]. A systematic analysis of keywords within a specific research domain offers valuable insights into trends and focal points across various research areas [ 27 ]. Moreover, co-occurrence analysis relies on the number of joint publications to evaluate relationships among the identified keyword domains. As a result, it serves as an effective method for predicting future trends and focal points within the research areas of interest. These findings are expected to inspire more researchers to contribute to the future of HRM research in healthcare [ 28 ].

In this study, a total of six research domains were eventually summarized. Performance, Hospital/COVID-19, Job Satisfaction, Human resource management, Occupational/Mental Health, and Quality of care. By visualizing the analysis results, we can easily further clarify future trends. As the co-occurrence diagram shows, the keywords “Organizational culture”, “Patient safety”, “Nursing”, “Leadership”, “Quality of care” and “Hospitals” are highlighted as larger icons, so that investment and demand for quality research are necessary for the context of these six research directions.

Six modules and research directions in human resources

This study found that the visual clustering results and the keywords that emerged from the clusters were closely related to the HRM module s described in “Human Resources Management: Gaining a Competitive Advantage” by Noe. R . [ 29 ]. The modules have been cited in HRM research and are used as textbooks in universities [ 30 – 33 ]. Some of the keywords in each cluster correspond to human resource planning, performance management, recruitment and staffing, and training and development, respectively. The explanation of the HRM modules is described in the next paragraph. However, there are no explicit keywords in the modules related to employee relations management and compensation management results. This may be due to the private nature of the compensation structure in healthcare organizations during data collection, making it unavailable.

The explanation of the HRM modules [ 29 ]

  • Human resource planning is the starting point of HRM. It helps the organization forecast future personnel needs and their basic qualities, primarily through planning.
  • Recruitment and staffing, with HR planning as the input, is equivalent to the organization’s blood, nourishing the organization and solving the problem of staffing and staff matching.
  • Training and development, with the “education” theme.
  • Performance Management is at the heart of the six dimensions. It is also the primary input to the other dimensions.
  • Compensation management aims to motivate employees to solve the company’s problems.
  • Employee relations management aims to manage people and help the company form an effective cycle of rational human resource allocation.

Human resource planning

Human Resource Plan (HRP) stands for the implementation of the HR development strategy of the enterprise and the accomplishment of the enterprise’s goals, according to the changes in the internal and external environment and conditions of the enterprise, through the analysis and estimation of the future needs and supply of human resources and the use of scientific methods for organizational design, as well as the acquisition, allocation, utilization and maintenance of HR and other aspects of functional planning. HRP ensures that the organization has a balance of HR supply and demand at a needed time and in a required position, and achieves a reasonable allocation of HR and other resources to effectively motivate and develop of employees [ 34 ].

Decentralization health system, organizational culture/structure are high-frequency words in the clustering results related to “human resource management”. It is important to assess the extent to which decentralization can be used as a policy tool to improve national health systems. For policymakers and managers, based on relevant literature and research as well as country experience analysis, the experience of decentralization in relation to the organization and management of healthcare services is considered a forward-looking and pioneering concept capable of achieving optimal allocation of HR and other resources, in addition to the need to focus more on ex-ante and ex-post incentive development to deliver a 1 + 1 > 2 HRM effect [ 35 ]. HRP is the starting point and basis for all specific HRM activities. It directly affects the efficiency of the overall HRM of the enterprise. It is, therefore, taken as the primary job requirement for HR managers [ 36 ]. Organizational culture/structure significantly impacts the healthcare sector, such as excellence in healthcare delivery, ethical values, engagement, professionalism, cost of care, commitment to quality and strategic thinking, which are key cultural determinants of high-quality care delivery [ 37 ]. Therefore, as with other for-profit organizations, healthcare organizations must ensure that their organizational structure functions effectively to achieve their strategic goals. The organization formulates and implements HRM, an important task to achieve the development strategy goals.

Staff recruitment and allocation

Recruitment and staffing are the first steps in hospital HRM activities. Under the guidance of the organization’s human resources development plan, potential staff who meet the development conditions are attracted. Through the scientific selection of outstanding personnel, a platform with guaranteed treatment and development prospects is provided to ensure that the team of the healthcare organization is built solidly and meets the development needs. From the findings of this study, the keywords “workforce” and “workload” appear as high-frequency keywords in the co-occurrence analysis. Still, keywords related to traditional staff recruitment (e.g., analysis of recruitment needs, job analysis, competency analysis, recruitment procedures, and strategies) do not appear often. Recruitment and staffing are the prerequisites of human resources work. They bring a new dynamic source to healthcare organizations while complementing staff, making the organization full of vitality and vigor, facilitating organizational innovation and management innovation and helping improve the healthcare organization’s competitive advantage [ 38 ]. Recruitment and staffing, as a part of HR, directly impact the successful running of daily activities.

Training and development

Human resource training is an important component of quality and safety in the health care system. The keyword “education and training” shows a high frequency of co-occurrence in the clustering results of analysis, corresponding to the module “training and education”. However, it is connected to the keywords “human resource management” and “health policy”, and is in the same cluster with” public health”, “health care management”, and the distance between the lines and dots indicate that these topics are closely related, proving the importance of education and training in the HRM of health systems. Healthcare organizations (especially for non-professionals and caregivers) can improve the performance of their employees by enhancing their capabilities, knowledge and potential through learning and training, so that they can maximize their qualifications to match the demands of their work and advance their performance [ 39 , 40 ].

Performance management

Performance management, the core of the six modules, is also featured in the clustering results. Although this is an important focus for HR professionals, few studies have explored the link between HRM and health sector performance [ 6 ], the results show “performance” and “motivation”. The effectiveness of performance management is an important component of HRM, which effectively improves the quality of care in healthcare organizations/institutions [ 6 ]. Focusing on the effectiveness of performance management is considered to be crucial. First, as an integral part of HRM within an organization, it can help the organization meet its goals. Second, ineffective approaches can lead to negative attitudes among employees (including clinicians, nursing staff, administrators, etc.) and adversely affect performance due to decreased satisfaction among employees and patients. Third, given the increasing quality and cost reduction pressures on healthcare organizations, conducting further research on performance management and effectiveness is critical [ 41 ]. However, it is clear from our results that healthcare organizations have recognized the importance of performance management and are pursuing “high performance”. Although the topic of performance management in HRM in healthcare is one of the research priorities, the number is lacking and more discussion on performance management should be suggested for future research.

Compensation management

Compensation is an important tool to motivate employees to work hard and to motivate them to work hard. The results of the database's bibliographic analysis show that no keywords directly involved compensation. This indicates that “compensation management” has not been considered a hot topic or a research issue over 30 years of available literature. To clarify the content of this module, we further searched the database of 718 articles with keywords, such as compensation, remuneration, salary, etc., and found that only 35 of them mentioned or discussed compensation, and some years (e.g., 2018, 2009) even had no relevant literature being published. However, issues such as fairness of compensation management and employee compensation satisfaction are still important issues of concern to business management academics [ 42 , 43 ]. The actual situation is that it is difficult to conduct research on compensation management. Most organizations keep their employees’ compensation confidential, and when conducting research, HR managers avoid talking about their employees’ compensation or leave it vague, rendering it impossible for researchers to conduct further research.

Employee compensation is one factor that has the greatest impact on organizational performance. In the future, organizations should be encouraged to scientifically structure their compensation management and empower academic research to establish and implement fair compensation management systems based on empirical research while maintaining the privacy and security of organizational information.

Employee relations management

The connotation of employee relations management involves organizational culture and employee relations, as well as the coordination of the relationship between employers and employees. Healthcare organizations have complex structures with employees with varying skills, tasks or responsibilities, and such conflicts are often managed through the communication skills of administrative staff [ 44 ]. Although the keywords related to “employee relations management” did not occur in this study's analysis results, the six HRM modules are closely related. Therefore, this does not mean that no description of employee relations management was completely absent in the retrieved articles. It is clear that there is currently a lack of research on employee relations management in the healthcare field. Still, with the continuous development of the healthcare industry, it faces multiple challenges. If employee relations are not handled properly, healthcare organizations with social responsibility will face great public pressure, which will even affect the quality of healthcare services and performance, so it is especially important to strengthen the research on employee relations management.

This study inevitably has some limitations, the first of which arises from using quantitative methods to review documents in the field of HRM. The review relied on an analysis of the bibliographic data associated with the documents rather than a review of the research findings. The impact of the study was, therefore, limited to the general direction of developments in the field, rather than a synthesis of research findings. As a result, we may have missed some publications due to database bias. Second, most of the publications identified were in English and some articles relevant to other languages have not been included. Third, Since HRM exists in a wide range of industries and research areas, although researchers have set the screening criteria as detailed as possible, there may still be some literature that has not been detected.

This study describes the current state and global trends in HRM research in healthcare. The United States has made significant contributions in this field, establishing itself as a global leader. It is foreseeable that more and more publications will be published in the coming years, which indicates that HRM research in healthcare is booming. The analysis results of this study echoed the modules of HRM. It can be seen that in the current HRM research, many topics have been of interest. However, the focus and hotspots of the research are scattered, and there is presently no systematic research on the content of HRM in healthcare.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the Editor-in-Chief and the referees for their helpful comments which help to improve our manuscript significantly.

Author contributions

BW, ZH and LLconceived of the presented idea. BW, developed the theory. BW, YH, RW, KC and XQ collected the data and discussed the results. BW and YH encouraged XQ to investigate the hospital management field and supervised the findings of this work. All authors discussed the results and contributed to the final manuscript.

This research was supported by Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, China (Grant number: 2021-RC630-001).

Availability of data and materials

Declarations.

There are no human or animal studies in this manuscript, and no potentially identifiable human images or data are presented in this study.

Not applicable.

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Publisher's Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

  • Book a Speaker

right-icon

SHRM Research

Our vision is to advance the HR profession by providing evidence-based insights, recommendations and innovations at the intersection of people and work. The intended outcomes for our research are to improve the employee experience and advance business performance in organizations. 

research articles human resource

2024 Employee Benefits Survey

The SHRM Employee Benefits Survey is one of the longest-running annual research reports covering trends in employee benefits among organizations in the United States.

The logo for the voice of work research panel.

SHRM Voice of Work Research Panel FAQ

The SHRM Voice of Work Research Panel is a diverse group of HR professionals who represent U.S. organizations and the HR profession by serving as the voice of all things work, workers and the workplace.

research articles human resource

SHRM Benchmarking

Gain access to key HR and business metrics you can use at your own organization to craft stronger recommendations and make better decisions.

research articles human resource

Effective People Managers: The Linchpin of Organizational Success

In an era when organizations recognize people as their most vital assets, effective people management becomes indispensable. People managers are the linchpin that connects organizational goals with the efforts of employees, ultimately driving success.

Workplace employees gathered around a laptop

2023-2024 SHRM State of the Workplace

This year’s State of the Workplace report hones in on the major issues organizations faced in 2023 and what they foresee looking ahead into 2024. Integrating the perspectives of HR professionals, HR executives and U.S. workers, it addresses inflation, labor shortages, the state of HR departments and organizations’ adoption of AI.

woman laughing in front of computer

Employee Experience

Organizations have long attempted to gauge the mood of their workforces using measures such as employee job satisfaction, engagement or turnover intent. In recent years, employee experience has gained popularity as a more holistic concept.

The State of Global Workplace Culture in 2023

The State of Global Workplace Culture in 2023

research articles human resource

Expectations and Realities: Preparing the Next Generation of Talent for the World of Work

SHRM and Handshake conducted a joint survey to explore the skills emerging professionals need, how employers evaluate emerging talent, and what emerging professionals are looking for in an employer.

SHRM Research Business Solutions

Woman and her colleague high five

Employee Engagement Survey Service

Help your employees thrive as the world of work changes by learning what they need to enage, perform and stay.

Woman does research on her laptop at home.

Salary Data Service

Get empowered with trusted HR-reported data, intuitive software and insights you need to make smart decisions and get pay right.

Recommended by SHRM

HR Daily Newsletter

News, trends, analysis and breaking news alerts to help HR professionals do their jobs better each business day.

Success title

Success caption

Information

  • Author Services

Initiatives

You are accessing a machine-readable page. In order to be human-readable, please install an RSS reader.

All articles published by MDPI are made immediately available worldwide under an open access license. No special permission is required to reuse all or part of the article published by MDPI, including figures and tables. For articles published under an open access Creative Common CC BY license, any part of the article may be reused without permission provided that the original article is clearly cited. For more information, please refer to https://www.mdpi.com/openaccess .

Feature papers represent the most advanced research with significant potential for high impact in the field. A Feature Paper should be a substantial original Article that involves several techniques or approaches, provides an outlook for future research directions and describes possible research applications.

Feature papers are submitted upon individual invitation or recommendation by the scientific editors and must receive positive feedback from the reviewers.

Editor’s Choice articles are based on recommendations by the scientific editors of MDPI journals from around the world. Editors select a small number of articles recently published in the journal that they believe will be particularly interesting to readers, or important in the respective research area. The aim is to provide a snapshot of some of the most exciting work published in the various research areas of the journal.

Original Submission Date Received: .

  • Active Journals
  • Find a Journal
  • Proceedings Series
  • For Authors
  • For Reviewers
  • For Editors
  • For Librarians
  • For Publishers
  • For Societies
  • For Conference Organizers
  • Open Access Policy
  • Institutional Open Access Program
  • Special Issues Guidelines
  • Editorial Process
  • Research and Publication Ethics
  • Article Processing Charges
  • Testimonials
  • Preprints.org
  • SciProfiles
  • Encyclopedia

sustainability-logo

Article Menu

research articles human resource

  • Subscribe SciFeed
  • Recommended Articles
  • Google Scholar
  • on Google Scholar
  • Table of Contents

Find support for a specific problem in the support section of our website.

Please let us know what you think of our products and services.

Visit our dedicated information section to learn more about MDPI.

JSmol Viewer

Sustainable human resource management and employees’ performance: the impact of national culture.

research articles human resource

1. Introduction

2. background and hypothesis development, 2.1. sustainable human resource management practices and performance, 2.2. the mediating role of employees’ engagement, 2.3. the moderating role of national culture, 3.1. participants and procedure, 3.2. measures, 3.2.1. individual-level measures (questionnaire), sustainable human resource management (shrm), employees’ engagement, perceived performance, 3.2.2. national-level variable, tightness–looseness scores, 3.2.3. control variables, 3.3. analytic strategy, 3.4. preliminary tests for data quality, tests of hypothesis, 5. discussion, 5.1. theoretical implications, 5.2. practical implications, 5.3. limitations and suggestions for future research, 6. conclusions, institutional review board statement, informed consent statement, data availability statement, conflicts of interest.

  • Karman, A. Understanding sustainable human resource management–organizational value linkages: The strength of the SHRM system. Hum. Syst. Manag. 2020 , 39 , 51–68. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Sharma, M.; Luthra, S.; Joshi, S.; Kumar, A. Analysing the impact of sustainable human resource management practices and industry 4.0 technologies adoption on employability skills. Int. J. Manpow. 2022 , 43 , 463–485. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Tortia, E.C.; Sacchetti, S.; López-Arceiz, F.J. A human growth perspective on sustainable HRM practices, worker well-being, and organizational performance. Sustainability 2022 , 14 , 11064. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Westerman, J.W.; Rao, M.B.; Vanka, S.; Gupta, M. Sustainable human resource management and the triple bottom line: Multi-stakeholder strategies, concepts, and engagement. Hum. Resour. Manag. Rev. 2020 , 30 , 100742. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Jiang, Y.; Zaman, S.I.; Jamil, S.; Khan, S.A.; Kun, L. A triple theory approach to link corporate social performance and green human resource management. Environ. Dev. Sustain. 2023 , 26 , 15733–15776. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Mazur, B.; Walczyna, A. Bridging sustainable human resource management and corporate sustainability. Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 8987. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Ansari, N.Y.; Farrukh, M.; Raza, A. Green human resource management and employees pro-environmental behaviors: Examining the underlying mechanism. Corp. Soc. Responsib. Environ. Manag. 2021 , 28 , 229–238. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Swarnalatha, D.C.; Prasanna, T.S. Employee engagement: The key to organizational success. Int. J. Manag. (IJM) 2012 , 3 , 216–227. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Schuler, R.; EJackson, S. Human resource management and organizational effectiveness: Yesterday and today. J. Organ. Eff. People Perform. 2014 , 1 , 35–55. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Boselie, P.; van der Heijden, B. Strategic Human Resource Management: A Balanced Approach ; McGraw Hill: New York, NY, USA, 2024. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Rayner, J.; Morgan, D. An empirical study of ‘green’workplace behaviours: Ability, motivation and opportunity. Asia Pac. J. Hum. Resour. 2018 , 56 , 56–78. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Sikora, D.; Ferris, G.R. Critical factors in human resource practice implementation: Implications of cross-cultural contextual issues. Int. J. Hum. Resour. Dev. Manag. 2011 , 11 , 112–140. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Aycan, Z. The interplay between cultural and institutional/structural contingencies in human resource management practices. Int. J. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2005 , 16 , 1083–1119. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Peretz, H.; Knappert, L. The cultural lens. In The Oxford Handbook on Contextual Approaches to Human Resource Management ; Parry, E., Brewster, C., Morley, M., Eds.; Oxford University Press: Oxford, UK, 2021; pp. 24–59. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Hofstede, G. Culture’s Consequences: International Differences in Work-Related Values ; Sage: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 1984; Volume 5. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Tarique, I.; Briscoe, D.R.; Schuler, R.S. International Human Resource Management: Policies and Practices for Multinational Enterprises ; Routledge: London, UK, 2015. [ Google Scholar ]
  • DiMaggio, P.J.; Powell, W.W. (Eds.) The New Institutionalism in Organizational Analysis ; University of Chicago Press: Chicago, IL, USA, 1991; Volume 17. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Meyer, J.W.; Rowan, B. Institutionalized Organizations: Formal Structure as Myth and Ceremony. Am. J. Sociol. 1977 , 83 , 340–363. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Nyamubarwa, W.; Chipunza, C. Debunking the one-size-fits-all approach to human resource management: A review of human resource practices in small and medium-sized enterprise firms. SA J. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2019 , 17 , 1–6. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Santana, M.; Lopez-Cabrales, A. Sustainable development and human resource management: A science mapping approach. Corp. Soc. Responsib. Environ. Manag. 2019 , 26 , 1171–1183. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Poon, T.S.C.; Law, K.K. Sustainable HRM: An extension of the paradox perspective. Hum. Resour. Manag. Rev. 2022 , 32 , 100818. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Kramar, R. Beyond strategic human resource management: Is sustainable human resource management the next approach? Int. J. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2014 , 25 , 1069–1089. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Stankevičiūtė, Ž.; Savanevičienė, A. Designing sustainable HRM: The core characteristics of emerging field. Sustainability 2018 , 10 , 4798. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Aboramadan, M.; Karatepe, O.M. Green human resource management, perceived green organizational support and their effects on hotel employees’ behavioral outcomes. Int. J. Contemp. Hosp. Manag. 2021 , 33 , 3199–3222. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Stahl, G.K.; Brewster, C.J.; Collings, D.G.; Hajro, A. Enhancing the role of human resource management in corporate sustainability and social responsibility: A multi-stakeholder, multidimensional approach to HRM. Hum. Resour. Manag. Rev. 2020 , 30 , 100708. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Faisal, S. Twenty-year journey of sustainable human resource management research: A bibliometric analysis. Adm. Sci. 2023 , 13 , 139. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • AlKetbi, A.; Rice, J. The Impact of Green Human Resource Management Practices on Employees, Clients, and Organizational Performance: A Literature Review. Adm. Sci. 2024 , 14 , 78. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Järlström, M.; Saru, E.; Vanhala, S. Sustainable human resource management with salience of stakeholders: A top management perspective. J. Bus. Ethics 2018 , 152 , 703–724. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Florea, L.; Cheung, Y.H.; Herndon, N.C. For all good reasons: Role of values in organizational sustainability. J. Bus. Ethics 2013 , 114 , 393–408. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Ehnert, I.; Parsa, S.; Roper, I.; Wagner, M.; Muller-Camen, M. Reporting on sustainability and HRM: A comparative study of sustainability reporting practices by the world’s largest companies. Int. J. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2016 , 27 , 88–108. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Diaz-Carrion, R.; López-Fernández, M.; Romero-Fernandez, P.M. Developing a sustainable HRM system from a contextual perspective. Corp. Soc. Responsib. Environ. Manag. 2018 , 25 , 1143–1153. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Mariappanadar, S. A conceptual framework for cost measures of harm of HRM practices. Asia-Pac. J. Bus. Adm. 2013 , 5 , 103–114. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Bekele, A.Z.; Shigutu, A.D.; Tensay, A.T. The effect of employees’ perception of performance appraisal on their work outcomes. Int. J. Manag. Commer. Innov. 2014 , 2 , 136–173. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Vänni, K.; Virtanen, P.; Luukkaala, T.; Nygård, C.H. Relationship between perceived work ability and productivity loss. Int. J. Occup. Saf. Ergon. 2012 , 18 , 299–309. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Pellegrini, C.; Rizzi, F.; Frey, M. The role of sustainable human resource practices in influencing employee behavior for corporate sustainability. Bus. Strategy Environ. 2018 , 27 , 1221–1232. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Meyer, J.P.; Becker, T.E.; Vandenberghe, C. Employee commitment and motivation: A conceptual analysis and integrative model. J. Appl. Psychol. 2004 , 89 , 991. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ] [ PubMed ]
  • Dixon-Fowler, H.; O’Leary-Kelly, A.; Johnson, J.; Waite, M. Sustainability and ideology-infused psychological contracts: An organizational-and employee-level perspective. Hum. Resour. Manag. Rev. 2020 , 30 , 100690. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Cugueró-Escofet, N.; Ficapal-Cusí, P.; Torrent-Sellens, J. Sustainable human resource management: How to create a knowledge-sharing behavior through organizational justice, organizational support, satisfaction, and commitment. Sustainability 2019 , 11 , 5419. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Boon, C.; Den Hartog, D.N.; Boselie, P.; Paauwe, J. The relationship between perceptions of HR practices and employee outcomes: Examining the role of person-organization and person-job fit. Int. J. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2011 , 22 , 138–162. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Nazir, O.; Islam, J.U.; Rahman, Z. Effect of CSR participation on employee sense of purpose and experienced meaningfulness: A self-determination theory perspective. J. Hosp. Tour. Manag. 2021 , 46 , 123–133. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Mitra, R.; Buzzanell, P.M. Communicative tensions of meaningful work: The case of sustainability practitioners. Hum. Relat. 2017 , 70 , 594–616. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Glavas, A. Corporate social responsibility and employee engagement: Enabling employees to employ more of their whole selves at work. Front. Psychol. 2016 , 7 , 183377. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ] [ PubMed ]
  • Chatzopoulou, E.C.; Manolopoulos, D.; Agapitou, V. Corporate social responsibility and employee outcomes: Interrelations of external and internal orientations with job satisfaction and organizational commitment. J. Bus. Ethics 2022 , 179 , 795–817. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Kim, J.; Kim, H.; Kwon, H. The impact of employees’ perceptions of strategic alignment on sustainability: An empirical investigation of Korean firms. Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 4180. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Sroufe, R. Integration and organizational change towards sustainability. J. Clean. Prod. 2017 , 162 , 315–329. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Kim, W.; Han, S.J.; Park, J. Is the role of work engagement essential to employee performance or ‘nice to have’? Sustainability 2019 , 11 , 1050. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Sopiah, S.; Kurniawan, D.T.; Elfia, N.O.R.A.; Narmaditya, B.S. Does talent management affect employee performance?: The moderating role of work engagement. J. Asian Financ. Econ. Bus. 2020 , 7 , 335–341. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Aldabbas, H.; Pinnington, A.; Lahrech, A. The influence of perceived organizational support on employee creativity: The mediating role of work engagement. Curr. Psychol. 2023 , 42 , 6501–6515. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Caesens, G.; Stinglhamber, F. The relationship between perceived organizational support and work engagement: The role of self-efficacy and its outcomes. Eur. Rev. Appl. Psychol. 2014 , 64 , 259–267. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Al-Ajlouni, M.I. Can high-performance work systems (HPWS) promote organizational innovation? Employee perspective-taking, engagement, and creativity in a moderated mediation model. Employee Relations. Int. J. 2021 , 43 , 373–397. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Saks, A.M. Caring for human resources management and employee engagement. Hum. Resour. Manag. Rev. 2022 , 32 , 100835. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Pimenta, S.; Duarte, A.P.; Simões, E. How socially responsible human resource management fosters work engagement: The role of perceived organizational support and affective organizational commitment. Soc. Responsib. J. 2024 , 20 , 326–343. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Manuti, A.; Giancaspro, M.L.; Molino, M.; Ingusci, E.; Russo, V.; Signore, F.; Zito, M.; Cortese, C.G. “Everything will be fine”: A study on the relationship between employees’ perception of sustainable HRM practices and positive organizational behavior during COVID-19. Sustainability 2020 , 12 , 10216. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Markos, S.; Sridevi, M.S. Employee engagement: The key to improving performance. Int. J. Bus. Manag. 2010 , 5 , 89. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Cesário, F.; Chambel, M.J. Linking organizational commitment and work engagement to employee performance. Knowl. Process Manag. 2017 , 24 , 152–158. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Rich, B.L.; Lepine, J.A.; Crawford, E.R. Job engagement: Antecedents and effects on job performance. Acad. Manag. J. 2010 , 53 , 617–635. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Bakker, A.B.; Demerouti, E. The Job Demands-Resources model: State of the art. J. Manag. Psychol. 2007 , 22 , 309–328. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Xanthopoulou, D.; Bakker, A.B.; Demerouti, E.; Schaufeli, W.B. Reciprocal relationships between job resources, personal resources, and work engagement. J. Vocat. Behav. 2009 , 74 , 235–244. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Brauchli, R.; Schaufeli, W.B.; Jenny, G.J.; Füllemann, D.; Bauer, G.F. Disentangling stability and change in job resources, job demands, and employee well-being—A three-wave study on the Job-Demands Resources model. J. Vocat. Behav. 2013 , 83 , 117–129. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Bakker, A.B.; Hakanen, J.J.; Demerouti, E.; Xanthopoulou, D. Job resources boost work engagement, particularly when job demands are high. J. Educ. Psychol. 2007 , 99 , 274. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Schaufeli, W.B.; Bakker, A.B. Job demands, job resources, and their relationship with burnout and engagement: A multi-sample study. J. Organ. Behav. 2004 , 25 , 293–315. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Lehman, D.R.; Chiu, C.Y.; Schaller, M. Psychology and culture. Annu. Rev. Psychol. 2004 , 55 , 689–714. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Hanel, P.H.; Maio, G.R.; Soares, A.K.; Vione, K.C.; de Holanda Coelho, G.L.; Gouveia, V.V.; Manstead, A.S. Cross-cultural differences and similarities in human value instantiation. Front. Psychol. 2018 , 9 , 366179. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Thompson, W.F. Cross-Cultural Similarities and Differences ; Oxford Academic Press: San Diego, CA, USA, 2010. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Kroeber, A.L.; Kluckhohn, C. Culture: A Critical Review of Concepts and Definitions ; Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology, Harvard University: Cambridge, MA, USA, 1952. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Hofstede, G.; McCrae, R.R. Personality and culture revisited: Linking traits and dimensions of culture. Cross-Cult. Res. 2004 , 38 , 52–88. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Gupta, K.; McIver, R. Does national culture affect attitudes toward environment-friendly practices? In Handbook of Environmental and Sustainable Finance ; Academic Press: New York, NY, USA, 2016; pp. 241–263. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Halder, P.; Hansen, E.N.; Kangas, J.; Laukkanen, T. How national culture and ethics matter in consumers’ green consumption values. J. Clean. Prod. 2020 , 265 , 121754. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Delle, E.; Mensah, M.E. The influence of national culture on expatriate work adjustment, intention to leave and organizational commitment. Eur. J. Bus. Manag. 2013 , 5 , 1–8. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Delmas, M.; Toffel, M.W. Stakeholders and environmental management practices: An institutional framework. Bus. Strategy Environ. 2004 , 13 , 209–222. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Lammers, J.C.; Garcia, M.A.; Putnam, L.L.; Mumby, D.K. Institutional theory. In The SAGE Handbook of Organizational Communication: Advances in Theory, Research, and Methods ; Sage Publications: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 2014; pp. 195–216. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Clark, K.; Lengnick-Hall, M.L. MNC practice transfer: Institutional theory, strategic opportunities, and subsidiary HR configuration. Int. J. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2012 , 23 , 3813–3837. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Lewis, A.C.; Cardy, R.L.; Huang, L.S. Institutional theory and HRM: A new look. Hum. Resour. Manag. Rev. 2019 , 29 , 316–335. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Gelfand, M.J.; Nishii, L.H.; Raver, J.L. On the nature and importance of cultural tightness-looseness. J. Appl. Psychol. 2006 , 91 , 1225. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Harrington, J.R.; Gelfand, M.J. Tightness–looseness across the 50 United States. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 2014 , 111 , 7990–7995. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ] [ PubMed ]
  • Li, R.; Gordon, S.; Gelfand, M.J. Tightness–looseness: A new framework to understand consumer behavior. J. Consum. Psychol. 2017 , 27 , 377–391. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Uz, I. The index of cultural tightness and looseness among 68 countries. J. Cross-Cult. Psychol. 2015 , 46 , 319–335. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Knappert, L.; Peretz, H.; Aycan, Z.; Budhwar, P. Staffing effectiveness across countries: An institutional perspective. Hum. Resour. Manag. J. 2023 , 33 , 17–46. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Zeffane, R.; Al Zarooni, H.A.M. The influence of empowerment, commitment, job satisfaction and trust on perceived managers’ performance. Int. J. Bus. Excell. 2008 , 1 , 193–209. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Shah, T.A.; Khattak, M.N.; Zolin, R.; Shah, S.Z.A. Psychological empowerment and employee attitudinal outcomes: The pivotal role of psychological capital. Manag. Res. Rev. 2019 , 42 , 797–817. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Ochoa Pacheco, P.; Coello-Montecel, D.; Tello, M. Psychological empowerment and job performance: Examining serial mediation effects of self-efficacy and affective commitment. Adm. Sci. 2023 , 13 , 76. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Chua, R.Y.; Roth, Y.; Lemoine, J.F. The impact of culture on creativity: How cultural tightness and cultural distance affect global innovation crowdsourcing work. Adm. Sci. Q. 2015 , 60 , 189–227. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Marcus, J.; Aksoy, E.; Tesfa Alemu, G. Perceptions of organizational tightness–looseness moderate associations between perceived unfair discrimination and employees’ job attitudes. J. Cross-Cult. Psychol. 2022 , 53 , 426–445. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Schaufeli, W.B.; Salanova, M.; González-Romá, V.; Bakker, A.B. The measurement of engagement and burnout: A two sample confirmatory factor analytic approach. J. Happiness Stud. 2002 , 3 , 71–92. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Riordan, C.M.; Shore, L.M. Demographic diversity and employee attitudes: An empirical examination of relational demography within work units. J. Appl. Psychol. 1997 , 82 , 342. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Gelfand, M.J. Differences between tight and loose cultures: A 33-nation study. Science 2011 , 332 , 1100–1104. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Eriksson, K.; Strimling, P.; Gelfand, M.; Wu, J.; Abernathy, J.; Akotia, C.S.; Van Lange, P.A. Perceptions of the appropriate response to norm violation in 57 societies. Nat. Commun. 2021 , 12 , 1481. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Nakrošienė, A.; Bučiūnienė, I.; Goštautaitė, B. Working from home: Characteristics and outcomes of telework. Int. J. Manpow. 2019 , 40 , 87–101. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Muthén, B.; Muthén, L. Mplus. In Handbook of Item Response Theory ; Chapman and Hall/CRC: Boca Raton, FL, USA, 2017; pp. 507–518. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Snijders, T.A.B.; Bosker, R.J. Discrete dependent variables. In Multilevel Analysis: An Introduction to Basic and Advanced Multilevel Modeling ; SAGE Publications Ltd.: London, UK, 2012; pp. 304–307. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Cheung, M.W.L.; Leung, K.; Au, K. Evaluating multilevel models in cross-cultural research: An illustration with social axioms. J. Cross-Cult. Psychol. 2006 , 37 , 522–541. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Lazarova, M.; Peretz, H.; Fried, Y. Locals know best? Subsidiary HR autonomy and subsidiary performance. J. World Bus. 2017 , 52 , 83–96. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Vandenberg, R.J.; Lance, C.E. A review and synthesis of the measurement invariance literature: Suggestions, practices, and recommendations for organizational research. Organ. Res. Methods 2000 , 3 , 4–70. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Bauer, D.J.; Preacher, K.J.; Gil, K.M. Conceptualizing and testing random indirect effects and moderated mediation in multilevel models: New procedures and recommendations. Psychol. Methods 2006 , 11 , 142. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Bakker, A.B.; Demerouti, E.; Sanz-Vergel, A. Job demands-resources theory: Ten years later. Annu. Rev. Organ. Psychol. Organ. Behav. 2023 , 10 , 25–53. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Latorre, F.; Guest, D.; Ramos, J.; Gracia, F.J. High commitment HR practices, the employment relationship and job performance: A test of a mediation model. Eur. Manag. J. 2016 , 34 , 328–337. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Tzafrir, S.S. The relationship between trust, HRM practices, and firm performance. Int. J. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2005 , 16 , 1600–1622. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Renwick, D.W.; Redman, T.; Maguire, S. Green human resource management: A review and research agenda. Int. J. Manag. Rev. 2013 , 15 , 1–14. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Stubbs, W.; Higgins, C.; Milne, M. Why do companies not produce sustainability reports? Bus. Strategy Environ. 2013 , 22 , 456–470. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Van den Broeck, A.; Van Ruysseveldt, J.; Vanbelle, E.; De Witte, H. The job demands-resources model: Overview and suggestions for future research. In Advances in Positive Organizational Psychology ; Emerald Group Publishing Limited: Bingley, UK, 2013; pp. 83–105. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Scott, W.R. Institutions and Organizations: Ideas and Interests ; Sage Publications: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 2008. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Meyer, J.W.; Greenwood, R.; Oliver, C. Reflections on institutional theories of organizations. In The Sage Handbook of Organizational Institutionalism ; Sage Publications: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 2017; pp. 831–852. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Jabbour, C.J.; Santos, F.C. The central role of human resource management in the search for sustainable organizations. Int. J. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2008 , 19 , 2133. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]
  • Jabbour, C.J.C.; de Sousa Jabbour, A.B.L. Fundamentals of human resource management for environmentally sustainable supply chains. In Handbook on the Sustainable Supply Chain ; Edward Elgar Publishing: Cheltenham, UK, 2019; pp. 105–118. [ Google Scholar ]
  • Ren, S.; Cooke, F.L.; Stahl, G.K.; Fan, D.; Timming, A.R. Advancing the sustainability agenda through strategic human resource management: Insights and suggestions for future research. Hum. Resour. Manag. 2023 , 62 , 251–265. [ Google Scholar ] [ CrossRef ]

Click here to enlarge figure

VariableScoreTightness Level
Argentina1.56Low
Australia1.9Medium
Austria2.1High
Brazil1.69Low
Canada1.83Medium
Chile1.68Low
Estonia1.62Low
Finland1.75Medium
Germany2.03High
Greece1.71Medium
Hungary1.46Low
Iceland1.94High
India2.48High
Ireland1.8Medium
Israel1.66Low
Italy1.87Medium
Japan2.09High
Korea2.09High
Mexico1.69Low
The Netherlands1.59Low
Poland1.7Medium
Portugal2High
Spain1.71Medium
Sweden2.2High
UK1.77Medium
USA1.82Medium
VariableMeanSD1234
1. Social SHRM3.420.73
2. Psychological SHRM3.370.700.45 **
3. Ecological SHRM3.240.690.41 **0.39 **
4. Employees’ perceived performance3.760.710.32 **0.29 **0.42 **
5. Cultural tightness1.650.65−0.30 **−0.27 **−0.21 **−0.15 **
Employees’ Perceived Performance
Level 1 Main Effects
Age0.14 * (0.04)
Gender0.04 (0.02)
Educational level0.24 ** (0.11)
Social SHRM0.28 ** (0.15)
Psychological SHRM0.23 ** (0.10)
Ecological SHRM0.36 ** (0.15)
~R20.15
Employees’ Perceived Performance
Variables Model 1 Model 2
Level 1 Main Effects
Age0.14 * (0.04)0.12 * (0.04)
Gender0.04 (0.02)0.03 (0.01)
Educational level0.24 ** (0.11)0.20 ** (0.09)
Social SHRM0.28 ** (0.15)0.19 ** (0.08)
Psychological SHRM0.23 ** (0.10)0.15 ** (0.06)
Ecological SHRM0.36 ** (0.15)0.21 ** (0.10)
Employees’ engagement0.32 ** (0.12)0.24 ** (0.11)
Level 1 Indirect Effects
Social SHRM via employees’ engagement 0.21 ** (0.09)
Psychological SHRM via employees’ engagement 0.19 ** (0.08)
Ecological SHRM via employees’ engagement 0.25 ** (0.12)
~R20.180.28
Δ~R2 0.10
Employees’ Perceived Performance
Variables Model 1 Model 2
Level 1 Main Effects
Age0.13 * (0.04)0.13 * (0.04)
Gender0.04 (0.02)0.03 (0.02)
Educational level0.22 ** (0.11)0.22 ** (0.11)
Social SHRM0.26 ** (0.14)0.24 ** (0.12)
Psychological SHRM0.21 ** (0.10)0.18 ** (0.09)
Ecological SHRM0.33 ** (0.14)0.27 ** (0.12)
Level 2 Main Effects
Cultural tightness level (TL)−0.18 ** (0.07)−0.15 ** (0.06)
Cross–Level Interactions
Social SHRM × TL −0.20 ** (0.07)
Psychological SHRM × TL −21 ** (0.08)
Ecological SHRM × TL −24 ** (0.08)
~R20.170.25
Δ~R2 0.08
The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Share and Cite

Peretz, H. Sustainable Human Resource Management and Employees’ Performance: The Impact of National Culture. Sustainability 2024 , 16 , 7281. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16177281

Peretz H. Sustainable Human Resource Management and Employees’ Performance: The Impact of National Culture. Sustainability . 2024; 16(17):7281. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16177281

Peretz, Hilla. 2024. "Sustainable Human Resource Management and Employees’ Performance: The Impact of National Culture" Sustainability 16, no. 17: 7281. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16177281

Article Metrics

Further information, mdpi initiatives, follow mdpi.

MDPI

Subscribe to receive issue release notifications and newsletters from MDPI journals

  • Open access
  • Published: 05 December 2023

Human resource management research in healthcare: a big data bibliometric study

  • Xiaoping Qin 1 ,
  • Yu-Ni Huang 2 ,
  • Zhiyuan Hu 1 ,
  • Kaiyan Chen 3 ,
  • Richard Szewei Wang 5 , 6 &
  • Bing-Long Wang   ORCID: orcid.org/0000-0001-9910-9804 1  

Human Resources for Health volume  21 , Article number:  94 ( 2023 ) Cite this article

8153 Accesses

1 Citations

3 Altmetric

Metrics details

Human resource management (HRM) in healthcare is an important component in relation to the quality and efficiency of healthcare delivery. However, a comprehensive overview is lacking to assess and track the current status and trends of HRM research in healthcare. This study aims to describe the current situation and global trends in HRM research in healthcare as well as to indicate the frontiers and future directions of research. The research methodology is based on bibliometric mapping using scientific visualization software (VOSviewer). The data were collected from the Web of Science(WoS) core citation database. After applying the search criteria, we retrieved 833 publications, which have steadily increased over the last 30 years. In addition, 93 countries and regions have published relevant research. The United States and Australia have made significant contributions in this area. Current research articles focus on topics clustered into performance, hospital/COVID-19, job satisfaction, human resource management, occupational/mental health, and quality of care. The most frequently co-occurring keywords are human resource management, job satisfaction, nurses, hospitals, health services, quality of care, COVID-19, and nursing. There is limited research on compensation management and employee relations management, so the current HRM research field still has not been able to present a complete and systematic roadmap. We propose that our colleagues should consider focusing on these research gaps in the future.

Peer Review reports

Introduction

Among the many management elements, people are the most dynamic and active element, and they are an important asset in organizations [ 1 ]. The term “human resources” was first coined by the academic Peter F. Drucker in 1954 [ 2 ]. The key function of human resources management (HRM) is to “put the right people in the right jobs at the right time” [ 2 ]. HRM refers to the planned allocation of human resources in accordance with the requirements of organizational development through a series of processes, such as recruitment, training, use, assessment, motivation, and adjustment of employees, to mobilize their motivation, bring into play their potential and create value for the organization [ 1 ]. Ensuring the achievement of the organization’s strategic objectives, HRM activities mainly include human resource strategy formulation, staff recruitment and selection, training and development, performance management, compensation management, staff mobility management, staff relationship management, staff safety and health management, etc. Similarly, modern healthcare management has human resources as the core. The HRM level in hospitals is related to the quality and efficiency of medical services provided by hospitals, which is also the core of internal hospital management and the focus of health macro management [ 3 ].

The World Health Organization (WHO) states that health systems can only work with the help of health workers, and that improving the coverage of health services and realizing the right to the highest standard of health depends on the availability, accessibility, acceptability and quality of health workers [ 4 ]. In response to evolving characteristics in socio-economic development and the human resource market, healthcare system personnel reforms are evident in three key areas: first, decentralization and flexible employment practices grant hospital managers greater decision-making autonomy concerning priorities and access to medical resources. However, they also impose quantitative and functional constraints on physicians' working hours, career planning, and medical payment systems. Second, a focal point is the rational allocation of technical staff to achieve efficiency while controlling labor costs. Finally, hospital organization change and restructuring are prevalent. Many European countries have unionized hospital employees, limiting the ability to establish independent incentives and rewards. In contrast, U.S. hospital employees often do not belong to specific organizations, leading cost control efforts to revolve around adjusting the allocation of technical staff and employee numbers to reduce labor expenses [ 5 , 6 , 7 ].

The current global trend in the number of publications on HRM in healthcare is rising. However, there are currently several problems in HRM research. The following issues mainly exist: (1) the expertise and professionalism of HRM managers are limited. (2) Theoretical methods and technical applications are weak. (3) Insufficient regulation of regulations, systems and procedures. (4) Management is mainly at the level of operational work, and functions are too fragmented [ 8 , 9 ]. Although hospitals worldwide generally recognize the importance of HRM, they do not pay sufficient attention to it. The management of human resources is also stuck in the previous understanding that its work is carried out only by transferring positions in hospitals, promoting and reducing the salary of employees and a series of other operations [ 10 ]. Most senior management in hospitals have comprehensive medical knowledge; some are experts in a particular field. Still, they lack expertise in HRM, which makes them work in a transactional way in HRM. There is also currently a general health workforce imbalance in countries worldwide. The lack of well-being of healthcare workers is particularly problematic in foreign healthcare institutions [ 11 ], and to reduce costs, some organizations have reduced staffing levels. In turn, because of lower quality of service, the morale of healthcare providers often suffers. Patient satisfaction may decline [ 12 ]. In the process of data gathering, we found that the literature related to HRM in healthcare is still under-reported and that the research topics are scattered, and there is still a lack of generalization and summary of these literatures [ 13 ]. There is no systematic theoretical support in the current research, which defines the perspective that researchers should take when analyzing and interpreting the data to be collected, leading to biased interpretations of the results, and does not allow other researchers to combine the findings with existing research knowledge and then apply them to practice [ 14 ]. Second, data collection was not rigorous, and the downloading strategy was not appropriate to achieve completeness and accuracy of data. There is also a lack of information and incomplete use of features in the presentation of knowledge maps and visualization results [ 15 ].

Therefore, the aims of this study are the following; first, we provide a new way of viewing the field of healthcare HRM and its associations by examining co-occurrence data. Second, we relate our evolutionary analysis to a comprehensive future research agenda which may generate a new research agenda in healthcare hospital HRM. This review, therefore, focuses on illuminating the research frontiers and future roadmap for healthcare HRM research [ 16 , 17 ].

Materials and methods

This study provides a bibliometric analysis of the HRM research literature in health care over a 30-year period to describe the landscape and trajectory of change in the research field. The methodology used for this overview is based on bibliometric mapping [ 18 , 19 ], a visualization technique that quantitatively displays the landscape and dynamic aspects of the knowledge domain [ 20 ]. Data were collected from the Web of Science (WoS) core citation database. Two Java-based scientific visualization software packages (CiteSpace and VOSviewer), developed by Chaomei Chen and Van Eck and Waltman, were used to analyze the data [ 18 , 21 ].

The data for this study were retrieved from the Web of Science on 28 September 2022. Web of Science was chosen as the search engine, because it is the most widely accepted and commonly used database for analyzing scientific publications [ 22 ]. The keywords “human resource management” and “healthcare organization” were used as search topics. First, to get a complete picture of HRM research, we searched all the literature from 1977 to the date of the search.

Eight hundred thirty-three publications on HRM in healthcare organizations were identified (Fig.  1 ). We excluded publications before 1990, because the two documents before 1990 did not include complete information. In addition, articles, review articles, and early access articles were included in the study. To minimize language bias, we excluded literature published in languages other than English. Each publication in WoS contains detailed information, including the year of publication, author, author’s address, title, abstract, source journal, subject category, references, etc. A detailed description of the contents of the database preceded the bibliographic analysis. For example, some authors presented their names in different spellings when submitting articles, so reviewing and integrating the data in detail was necessary. A total of 718 publications were included and exported to VOSviewer and CiteSpace software to analyze the following topics: global publishing trends, countries, journals, authors, research orientations, institutions, and quality of publications.

figure 1

Research flow chart of the bibliometric analysis

Introduction to CiteSpace and VOSviewer

VOSviewer is a software tool for building and visualizing bibliometric networks. It was developed by Van Eck and Waltman [ 21 ]. In VOSviewer, metric networks can be visualized and analyzed for factors, including journals, researchers, or individual publications. They can be constructed based on citations, bibliographic couplings, co-citations, or co-authorship relationships [ 21 ].

Global publication trends

Number of global trends.

After applying the search criteria, we retrieved a total of 718 articles. Figure  2 a shows the increase in articles from 1 in 1977 to 108 in 2021. To predict future trends, a linear regression model was used to create a time curve for the number of publications throughout the year, and the model fit curve for the growth trend is shown in Fig.  2 b. The trend in the number of publications fitted the time curve well at R 2  = 0.8802. The R-squared value is a measure of how well the trend line fits. This value reflects the degree of fit between the estimated value of the trend line and the corresponding actual data; the better the fit, the more reliable the trend line is [ 23 , 24 ]. Based on the model’s trends, it is also predicted that the number of articles on HRM in healthcare will increase to approximately 300 by 2030, an almost threefold increase compared to 2021.

figure 2

a Total number of publications related to HRM research. The bars indicate the number of publications per year. b Model fitting curves of global publication trends. c Top 10 countries of total publications. d Distribution world map of HRM research

Country and regional contributions

Figure  2 c, d shows the number of publications and the world distribution of the top 10 countries in total publication numbers. The USA contributed the most publications (172, 24.2%), followed by Australia (86, 12.0%), the UK (83, 11.6%), and China (78, 10.9%).

Total number of citations

The USA had the highest total number of citations of all included publications (5195) (Table 1 ), while the UK ranked second (2661), followed by Australia (1960) and the Netherlands (1271). The detailed rankings and numbers are shown in Fig.  3 a and Table 1 .

figure 3

a Top 10 countries of average citations for each article. b Average number of citations. c Top 10 countries of the H-index

Average citation frequency

Belgium had the highest average number of citations (49.26), followed by the UK (32.06), the USA (30.2), and Canada (27.13), as shown in Fig.  3 b.

Total citations and the h-index reflect the quality of a country’s publications and academic impact[ 25 ]. Figure  3 c shows the ranking of the h-index, where the top country is the USA (h-index = 36), followed by the UK (h-index = 27), Australia (h-index = 23), and Canada (h-index = 22).

Analysis of publications

Table 2 shows the top 10 journals for publications on HRM in healthcare, with 54 articles published in “International Journal of Human Resource Management”, 44 articles published in “BMJ Open”, 30 articles published in “Journal of Nursing Management”, and 24 articles in “BMC Health Services Research”.

Table 3 shows the top 10 most published authors with 96 articles/reviews in the last decade, representing 13.4% of all literature in the field. Timothy Bartram from Australia has published 19 papers, followed by Sandra Leggat from Australia, Stanton P from the USA, and Townsend K from the UK with 13, 11, and 10 papers, respectively. All researchers listed as authors were included in this term for analysis, regardless of their relative contribution to the study. Notably, we have included all authors in this analysis regardless of their relative contribution to the study.

Research orientation

Figure  4 a shows the top 10 research orientations of the 100 research orientations. The most common research orientations were management (193 articles), nursing (107 articles), health policy services (105 articles), and health care sciences services (201 articles).

figure 4

a Top 10 research orientations and the number of publications in each orientation. b Top 20 institutions with the most publications

Institutions

Figure  4 shows the top 20 institutions with the most published papers. La Trobe University has the highest number of articles with 24, followed by the University of London (23) and Griffith University (18).

Co-occurrence analysis

In the keyword mapping on HRM research in healthcare, the size of the nodes represents the frequency, while the line between the nodes reflects the co-occurrence relationship. A total of 1914 keywords were included, and 59 met the criteria. All keywords were grouped into six clusters: performance (light blue cluster), job satisfaction (red cluster), quality of care (blue cluster), human resource management (brown cluster), occupational/mental health (purple cluster), and hospital/COVID-19 (green cluster) (Fig.  5 ).

figure 5

Co-occurrence analysis of HRM research in healthcare

The most prominent themes in HRM research in healthcare are as below. In the “Performance” cluster, the keywords which have the greatest co-occurrence strength were “performance”, “systematic review”, “decentralization health system” and “motivation”. The main keywords in the “Job Satisfaction” cluster are “job satisfaction”, “organizational commitment”, “transformational leadership” and “turn over”. In the “Quality of care” cluster, the keywords that stand out are “quality of care”, “patient safety”, “high-performance work system”, “quality management” and “patient satisfaction”. In the “Human resource management” cluster, the prominent keywords include “human resource management”, “health policy”, “public health”, and “education and training”. In the “Occupational/Mental Health” cluster, the prominent keywords are “Occupational health”, “mental health”, “well-being” and “burnout”. The main keywords in the “Hospital/COVID-19” cluster were “hospitals”, “COVID-19” “workforce” and “qualitative research”.

Global trends in HMR in healthcare

Our study of HMR research in healthcare illustrates current and global trends in publications, contributing countries, institutions, and research orientations. The field of HMR research has evolved over the past three decades. However, as this study shows, the number of publications steadily increases yearly, with 93 countries or regions publishing in the field, suggesting that research focusing on HMR research and providing in-depth knowledge will likely increase.

Quality and status of publications worldwide

We find that most publishing countries are developed countries, but developing countries are catching up. The total citation rate and the h-index reflect the quality and scholarly impact of a country’s publications [ 25 ]. According to our study, the US ranks first among other countries in total publications, citations, and h-index, making the most substantial contribution to global HRM research. The UK and Canada also contribute significantly, with impressive total citation frequencies and h-index, especially the UK, which ranks second in average citation frequency. However, some countries, such as Belgium, Canada and Australia, also play an important role, given their high average citation frequency. In developing countries, HRM research has also served as a guide for hospitals to improve the quality of care. The study will serve as a reference for developing countries to learn from the experience of developed countries as their economic development gradually catches up with that of developed countries.

The impact and prestige of the journals can be seen in the number of articles published in the field and the influential journals in healthcare HRM research, including the BMC Health Services Research, the Journal of Nursing Management, the International Journal of Human Resource Management, the Health Care Management Review, and the Journal of Health Organisation and Management. These high-quality journals are thus the main source of information for researchers in this field on the latest developments in HRM in healthcare.

The study shows that almost all of the top 20 institutions come from the top five countries with the most publications, with the majority coming from the US, Australia and the Netherlands, reflecting the great academic influence of these three countries in the field of HRM in healthcare. These institutions play an important role in raising the academic performance of a country. Furthermore, the top 20 authors represent research leaders who are likely to impact the future direction of research significantly. Therefore, more attention should be paid to their work to stay abreast of the latest developments in the field.

Research Focus on HRM

Keywords play a crucial role in research papers as they contain vital information [ 26 ]. A systematic analysis of keywords within a specific research domain offers valuable insights into trends and focal points across various research areas [ 27 ]. Moreover, co-occurrence analysis relies on the number of joint publications to evaluate relationships among the identified keyword domains. As a result, it serves as an effective method for predicting future trends and focal points within the research areas of interest. These findings are expected to inspire more researchers to contribute to the future of HRM research in healthcare [ 28 ].

In this study, a total of six research domains were eventually summarized. Performance, Hospital/COVID-19, Job Satisfaction, Human resource management, Occupational/Mental Health, and Quality of care. By visualizing the analysis results, we can easily further clarify future trends. As the co-occurrence diagram shows, the keywords “Organizational culture”, “Patient safety”, “Nursing”, “Leadership”, “Quality of care” and “Hospitals” are highlighted as larger icons, so that investment and demand for quality research are necessary for the context of these six research directions.

Six modules and research directions in human resources

This study found that the visual clustering results and the keywords that emerged from the clusters were closely related to the HRM module s described in “Human Resources Management: Gaining a Competitive Advantage” by Noe. R . [ 29 ]. The modules have been cited in HRM research and are used as textbooks in universities [ 30 , 31 , 32 , 33 ]. Some of the keywords in each cluster correspond to human resource planning, performance management, recruitment and staffing, and training and development, respectively. The explanation of the HRM modules is described in the next paragraph. However, there are no explicit keywords in the modules related to employee relations management and compensation management results. This may be due to the private nature of the compensation structure in healthcare organizations during data collection, making it unavailable.

The explanation of the HRM modules [ 29 ]

Human resource planning is the starting point of HRM. It helps the organization forecast future personnel needs and their basic qualities, primarily through planning.

Recruitment and staffing, with HR planning as the input, is equivalent to the organization’s blood, nourishing the organization and solving the problem of staffing and staff matching.

Training and development, with the “education” theme.

Performance Management is at the heart of the six dimensions. It is also the primary input to the other dimensions.

Compensation management aims to motivate employees to solve the company’s problems.

Employee relations management aims to manage people and help the company form an effective cycle of rational human resource allocation.

Human resource planning

Human Resource Plan (HRP) stands for the implementation of the HR development strategy of the enterprise and the accomplishment of the enterprise’s goals, according to the changes in the internal and external environment and conditions of the enterprise, through the analysis and estimation of the future needs and supply of human resources and the use of scientific methods for organizational design, as well as the acquisition, allocation, utilization and maintenance of HR and other aspects of functional planning. HRP ensures that the organization has a balance of HR supply and demand at a needed time and in a required position, and achieves a reasonable allocation of HR and other resources to effectively motivate and develop of employees [ 34 ].

Decentralization health system, organizational culture/structure are high-frequency words in the clustering results related to “human resource management”. It is important to assess the extent to which decentralization can be used as a policy tool to improve national health systems. For policymakers and managers, based on relevant literature and research as well as country experience analysis, the experience of decentralization in relation to the organization and management of healthcare services is considered a forward-looking and pioneering concept capable of achieving optimal allocation of HR and other resources, in addition to the need to focus more on ex-ante and ex-post incentive development to deliver a 1 + 1 > 2 HRM effect [ 35 ]. HRP is the starting point and basis for all specific HRM activities. It directly affects the efficiency of the overall HRM of the enterprise. It is, therefore, taken as the primary job requirement for HR managers [ 36 ]. Organizational culture/structure significantly impacts the healthcare sector, such as excellence in healthcare delivery, ethical values, engagement, professionalism, cost of care, commitment to quality and strategic thinking, which are key cultural determinants of high-quality care delivery [ 37 ]. Therefore, as with other for-profit organizations, healthcare organizations must ensure that their organizational structure functions effectively to achieve their strategic goals. The organization formulates and implements HRM, an important task to achieve the development strategy goals.

Staff recruitment and allocation

Recruitment and staffing are the first steps in hospital HRM activities. Under the guidance of the organization’s human resources development plan, potential staff who meet the development conditions are attracted. Through the scientific selection of outstanding personnel, a platform with guaranteed treatment and development prospects is provided to ensure that the team of the healthcare organization is built solidly and meets the development needs. From the findings of this study, the keywords “workforce” and “workload” appear as high-frequency keywords in the co-occurrence analysis. Still, keywords related to traditional staff recruitment (e.g., analysis of recruitment needs, job analysis, competency analysis, recruitment procedures, and strategies) do not appear often. Recruitment and staffing are the prerequisites of human resources work. They bring a new dynamic source to healthcare organizations while complementing staff, making the organization full of vitality and vigor, facilitating organizational innovation and management innovation and helping improve the healthcare organization’s competitive advantage [ 38 ]. Recruitment and staffing, as a part of HR, directly impact the successful running of daily activities.

Training and development

Human resource training is an important component of quality and safety in the health care system. The keyword “education and training” shows a high frequency of co-occurrence in the clustering results of analysis, corresponding to the module “training and education”. However, it is connected to the keywords “human resource management” and “health policy”, and is in the same cluster with” public health”, “health care management”, and the distance between the lines and dots indicate that these topics are closely related, proving the importance of education and training in the HRM of health systems. Healthcare organizations (especially for non-professionals and caregivers) can improve the performance of their employees by enhancing their capabilities, knowledge and potential through learning and training, so that they can maximize their qualifications to match the demands of their work and advance their performance [ 39 , 40 ].

Performance management

Performance management, the core of the six modules, is also featured in the clustering results. Although this is an important focus for HR professionals, few studies have explored the link between HRM and health sector performance [ 6 ], the results show “performance” and “motivation”. The effectiveness of performance management is an important component of HRM, which effectively improves the quality of care in healthcare organizations/institutions [ 6 ]. Focusing on the effectiveness of performance management is considered to be crucial. First, as an integral part of HRM within an organization, it can help the organization meet its goals. Second, ineffective approaches can lead to negative attitudes among employees (including clinicians, nursing staff, administrators, etc.) and adversely affect performance due to decreased satisfaction among employees and patients. Third, given the increasing quality and cost reduction pressures on healthcare organizations, conducting further research on performance management and effectiveness is critical [ 41 ]. However, it is clear from our results that healthcare organizations have recognized the importance of performance management and are pursuing “high performance”. Although the topic of performance management in HRM in healthcare is one of the research priorities, the number is lacking and more discussion on performance management should be suggested for future research.

Compensation management

Compensation is an important tool to motivate employees to work hard and to motivate them to work hard. The results of the database's bibliographic analysis show that no keywords directly involved compensation. This indicates that “compensation management” has not been considered a hot topic or a research issue over 30 years of available literature. To clarify the content of this module, we further searched the database of 718 articles with keywords, such as compensation, remuneration, salary, etc., and found that only 35 of them mentioned or discussed compensation, and some years (e.g., 2018, 2009) even had no relevant literature being published. However, issues such as fairness of compensation management and employee compensation satisfaction are still important issues of concern to business management academics [ 42 , 43 ]. The actual situation is that it is difficult to conduct research on compensation management. Most organizations keep their employees’ compensation confidential, and when conducting research, HR managers avoid talking about their employees’ compensation or leave it vague, rendering it impossible for researchers to conduct further research.

Employee compensation is one factor that has the greatest impact on organizational performance. In the future, organizations should be encouraged to scientifically structure their compensation management and empower academic research to establish and implement fair compensation management systems based on empirical research while maintaining the privacy and security of organizational information.

Employee relations management

The connotation of employee relations management involves organizational culture and employee relations, as well as the coordination of the relationship between employers and employees. Healthcare organizations have complex structures with employees with varying skills, tasks or responsibilities, and such conflicts are often managed through the communication skills of administrative staff [ 44 ]. Although the keywords related to “employee relations management” did not occur in this study's analysis results, the six HRM modules are closely related. Therefore, this does not mean that no description of employee relations management was completely absent in the retrieved articles. It is clear that there is currently a lack of research on employee relations management in the healthcare field. Still, with the continuous development of the healthcare industry, it faces multiple challenges. If employee relations are not handled properly, healthcare organizations with social responsibility will face great public pressure, which will even affect the quality of healthcare services and performance, so it is especially important to strengthen the research on employee relations management.

This study inevitably has some limitations, the first of which arises from using quantitative methods to review documents in the field of HRM. The review relied on an analysis of the bibliographic data associated with the documents rather than a review of the research findings. The impact of the study was, therefore, limited to the general direction of developments in the field, rather than a synthesis of research findings. As a result, we may have missed some publications due to database bias. Second, most of the publications identified were in English and some articles relevant to other languages have not been included. Third, Since HRM exists in a wide range of industries and research areas, although researchers have set the screening criteria as detailed as possible, there may still be some literature that has not been detected.

This study describes the current state and global trends in HRM research in healthcare. The United States has made significant contributions in this field, establishing itself as a global leader. It is foreseeable that more and more publications will be published in the coming years, which indicates that HRM research in healthcare is booming. The analysis results of this study echoed the modules of HRM. It can be seen that in the current HRM research, many topics have been of interest. However, the focus and hotspots of the research are scattered, and there is presently no systematic research on the content of HRM in healthcare.

Availability of data and materials

All data and materials generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article.

Chen Y. Human resource management in hospitals. Beijing: China Union Medical University Press; 2022.

Google Scholar  

Drucker P. The practice of management. UK: Routledge; 2012.

Book   Google Scholar  

Liu J, Li J. A brief discussion on strengthening human resource management in modern hospitals. Chin Hosp Manag. 2006;26(6):2. https://doi.org/10.3969/j.issn.1001-5329.2006.06.015 .

Article   Google Scholar  

World Health Organization. Global strategy on human resources for health: workforce 2030. 2016.

Flynn WJ, Valentine SR, Meglich P. Healthcare human resource management. Cengage Learning; 2021.

Harris C, Cortvriend P, Hyde P. Human resource management and performance in healthcare organisations. J Health Organ Manag. 2007. https://doi.org/10.1108/14777260710778961 .

Article   PubMed   Google Scholar  

Yi S, Tang Y, Jiang X. Reflections on human resource management in hospitals under the new situation. Chin Hosp Manag 2011. CNKI:SUN:YYGL.0.2011-04-028.

He J. Thinking on the construction of standardization system of modern hospital human resource management. Hum Resour Manag Rev. 2016;2:2 ( CNKI:SUN:ORLZ.0.2016-02-116 ).

Jiang Z, Nong S. A study on the use of human-centred management in hospital human resource management. Chin Hosp Manag. 2016;36(12):2 ( CNKI:SUN:YYGL.0.2016-12-020 ).

Li H. A discussion on human resource management and practice in modern hospitals. Hum Res. 2020;4:1 ( CNKI:SUN:RLZY.0.2020-04-088 ).

Xiao Q, Cooke FL, Chen L. Nurses’ well‐being and implications for human resource management: a systematic literature review. Int J Manag Rev. 2022.

Sadatsafavi H, Walewski J, Shepley MM. The influence of facility design and human resource management on health care professionals. Health Care Manag Rev. 2015;40(2):126–38.

Li J, Liu Z. Citespace-based visualization of human resource management in hospitals at home and abroad. Chinese Primary Health Care. 2020;34(6):5 ( CNKI:SUN:ZGCW.0.2020-06-007 ).

CAS   Google Scholar  

Osanloo A, Grant C. Understanding, selecting, and integrating a theoretical framework in dissertation research: creating the blueprint for your “house.” Admin Issues J. 2016;4(2):7.

Chen Y, Chen C, Liu Z, Hu Z, Wang X. CiteSpace Knowledge Graph methodological functions. Sci Res. 2015;33(2):242–53. https://doi.org/10.16192/j.cnki.1003-2053.2015.02.009 .

Anwar G, Abdullah NN. The impact of Human resource management practice on Organizational performance. IJEBM. 2021;5.

Davidescu AA, Apostu S-A, Paul A, Casuneanu I. Work flexibility, job satisfaction, and job performance among Romanian employees—Implications for sustainable human resource management. Sustainability. 2020;12(15):6086.

Chen C. CiteSpace II: Detecting and visualizing emerging trends and transient patterns in scientific literature. J Am Soc Inform Sci Technol. 2006;57(3):359–77.

Cobo MJ, López-Herrera AG, Herrera-Viedma E, Herrera F. Science mapping software tools: Review, analysis, and cooperative study among tools. J Am Soc Inform Sci Technol. 2011;62(7):1382–402.

Börner K, Chen C, Boyack KW. Visualizing knowledge domains. Ann Rev Inf Sci Technol. 2003;37(1):179–255.

Van Eck NJ, Waltman L. Citation-based clustering of publications using CitNetExplorer and VOSviewer. Scientometrics. 2017;111(2):1053–70.

Article   PubMed   PubMed Central   Google Scholar  

Liu A-Y, Fu H-Z, Li S-Y, Guo Y-Q. Comments on “Global trends of solid waste research from 1997 to 2011 by using bibliometric analysis.” Scientometrics. 2014;98(1):767–74.

Qin X, Wang R, Huang Y-N, Zhao J, Chiu H-C, Tung T-H, et al. Organisational culture research in healthcare: a big data bibliometric study. Healthcare: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute; 2023. p. 169.

Morrison FA. Obtaining uncertainty measures on slope and intercept of a least squares fit with Excel’s LINEST. Houghton: Department of Chemical Engineering, Michigan Technological University Retrieved August. 2014;6:2015.

Gao J, Xing D, Dong S, Lin J. The primary total knee arthroplasty: a global analysis. J Orthop Surg Res. 2020;15:1–12.

Wang H, Liu M, Hong S, Zhuang Y. A historical review and bibliometric analysis of GPS research from 1991–2010. Scientometrics. 2013.

Guo L, Xu F, Feng Z, Zhang G. A bibliometric analysis of oyster research from 1991 to 2014. Aquacult Int. 2016;24:327–44.

Shi J-G, Miao W, Si H. Visualization and analysis of mapping knowledge domain of urban vitality research. Sustainability. 2019;11(4):988.

Noe R, Hollenbeck J, Gerhart B, Wright P. Human resources management: gaining a competitive advantage. Tenth Global Edition. New York: McGraw-Hill Education; 2006.

Prasanna R, Jayasundara J, Naradda Gamage SK, Ekanayake E, Rajapakshe P, Abeyrathne G. Sustainability of SMEs in the competition: a systemic review on technological challenges and SME performance. J Open Innov. 2019;5(4):100.

Atrizka D, Lubis H, Simanjuntak CW, Pratama I. Ensuring better affective commitment and organizational citizenship behavior through talent management and psychological contract fulfillment: an empirical study of indonesia pharmaceutical sector. Syst Rev Pharm. 2020;11(1).

Putri AD, Ghazali A, Ahluwalia L. Analysis of company capability using 7s mckinsey framework to support corporate succession (case study: PT x Indonesia): analisa kapabilitas perusahaan dengan menggunakan framework 7s mckinsey untuk mendukung kesuksesan perusahaan (Studi Kasus: Pt x Indonesia). Manajemen Bisnis. 2021;11(1):44–53.

Diamantidis AD, Chatzoglou P. Factors affecting employee performance: an empirical approach. Int J Product Perform Manag. 2019;68(1):171–93.

Hoch JE, Dulebohn JH. Shared leadership in enterprise resource planning and human resource management system implementation. Hum Resour Manag Rev. 2013;23(1):114–25.

Mills A, Vaughan JP, Smith DL, Tabibzadeh I, World Health Organization. Health system decentralization: concepts, issues and country experience. Geneva: World Health Organization; 1990.

Nkomo SM. Human resource planning and organization performance: an exploratory analysis. Strateg Manag J. 1987;8(4):387–92.

Carney M. Influence of organizational culture on quality healthcare delivery. Int J Health Care Qual Assur. 2011. https://doi.org/10.1108/09526861111160562 .

Patterson F, Driver R. Selection & recruitment in the healthcare professions. Research, theory and practice. Springer, 2018

Atkin K, Hirst M, Lunt N, Parker G. The role and self-perceived training needs of nurses employed in general practice: observations from a national census of practice nurses in England and Wales. J Adv Nurs. 2010;20(1):46–52.

Ward J, Wood C. Education and training of healthcare staff: the barriers to its success. Eur J Cancer Care (Engl). 2000;9(2):80–5. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2354.2000.00205.x .

Article   CAS   PubMed   Google Scholar  

Yu Y, Baird KM, Tung A. Human resource management in Australian hospitals: the role of controls in influencing the effectiveness of performance management systems. Int J Hum Resour Manag. 2021;32(4):920–47. https://doi.org/10.1080/09585192.2018.1511618 .

Scarpello V, Carraher SM. Are pay satisfaction and pay fairness the same construct? A cross-country examination among the self-employed in Latvia, Germany, the UK, and the USA. Balt J Manag. 2008;3(1):23–39.

Jawahar I, Stone TH. Fairness perceptions and satisfaction with components of pay satisfaction. J Manag Psychol. 2011;26(4):297–312.

Dialechti T, Grose CA, Talias MA. Managing labor relations in Greek hospitals—a nursing approach. business development and economic governance in Southeastern Europe: 13th International Conference on the Economies of the Balkan and Eastern European Countries (EBEEC), Pafos, Cyprus, 2021: Springer; 2022. pp. 151–65.

Download references

Acknowledgements

The authors thank the Editor-in-Chief and the referees for their helpful comments which help to improve our manuscript significantly.

This research was supported by Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, China (Grant number: 2021-RC630-001).

Author information

Authors and affiliations.

School of Health Policy and Management, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, 100730, China

Xiaoping Qin, Zhiyuan Hu & Bing-Long Wang

College of Medical and Health Science, Asia University, Taichung, 41354, Taiwan

Yu-Ni Huang

Department of Education, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College, Beijing, 100730, China

Kaiyan Chen

Department of Innovative Medical Research, Hospital Management Institute, Chinese People’s Liberation Army General Hospital, Beijing, 100853, China

Affiliation Program of Data Analytics and Business Computing, Stern School of Business, New York University, New York, 10012, United States of America

Richard Szewei Wang

Tsinghua-Berkeley Shenzhen Institute, Tsinghua University, Shenzhen, 518055, China

You can also search for this author in PubMed   Google Scholar

Contributions

BW, ZH and LLconceived of the presented idea. BW, developed the theory. BW, YH, RW, KC and XQ collected the data and discussed the results. BW and YH encouraged XQ to investigate the hospital management field and supervised the findings of this work. All authors discussed the results and contributed to the final manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Bing-Long Wang .

Ethics declarations

Ethics approval and consent to participate.

There are no human or animal studies in this manuscript, and no potentially identifiable human images or data are presented in this study.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Additional information

Publisher's note.

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ . The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver ( http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ ) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article.

Qin, X., Huang, YN., Hu, Z. et al. Human resource management research in healthcare: a big data bibliometric study. Hum Resour Health 21 , 94 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-023-00865-x

Download citation

Received : 28 March 2023

Accepted : 02 October 2023

Published : 05 December 2023

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1186/s12960-023-00865-x

Share this article

Anyone you share the following link with will be able to read this content:

Sorry, a shareable link is not currently available for this article.

Provided by the Springer Nature SharedIt content-sharing initiative

  • Human Resource Management
  • Bibliographic analysis
  • Health Trends

Human Resources for Health

ISSN: 1478-4491

  • Submission enquiries: Access here and click Contact Us
  • General enquiries: [email protected]

research articles human resource

COMMENTS

  1. Human Resource Articles, Research, & Case Studies

    Case studies by Linda Hill offer an inside look at how Delta CEO Ed Bastian is creating a more equitable company and a stronger talent pipeline. 1. 2. …. 14. 15. →. New research on human resources from HBS faculty on issues including organizational design, compensation, incentive plans, hiring practices, and recruitment.

  2. A Systematic Review of Human Resource Management Systems and Their

    Strategic human resource management (SHRM) research increasingly focuses on the performance effects of human resource (HR) systems rather than individual HR practices (Combs, Liu, Hall, & Ketchen, 2006).Researchers tend to agree that the focus should be on systems because employees are simultaneously exposed to an interrelated set of HR practices rather than single practices one at a time, and ...

  3. HR's New Role

    Summary. Though the human resources function was once a strong advocate for employees, in the 1980s things changed. As labor markets became slack, HR shifted its focus to relentless cost cutting ...

  4. Human resource management

    Leadership Magazine Article. Claudio Fernández-Aráoz. Hitting the hiring bull's-eye is one of an executive's most important—and most difficult—responsibilities. Ten common mistakes can ...

  5. 152086 PDFs

    Explore the latest full-text research PDFs, articles, conference papers, preprints and more on HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT. Find methods information, sources, references or conduct a literature ...

  6. HR practices and work relationships: A 20 year review of relational HRM

    1 INTRODUCTION. The new millennium has witnessed the rapid growth of a promising literature at the juncture of employment practices and interpersonal work relationships (Soltis et al., 2018).This literature, referred to as relational Human Resource Management (HRM), is driven by accumulating evidence on the benefits of high-quality relationships and the role of HRM in creating and sustaining ...

  7. Human Resource Management Journal

    Human Resource Management Journal (CABS/AJG 4*) is a globally orientated HRM journal that promotes the understanding of human resource management to academics and practicing managers. We provide an international forum for discussion and debate, and stress the critical importance of people management to wider economic, political and social concerns.

  8. Human Resource Management

    Human Resource Management has strong global recognition and readership, and is filled with conceptual and empirical articles that uniquely advance the academic literature as well as having clear practical implications. We accept cutting-edge research and thought leadership on micro-, macro-, or multi-level phenomena relating to all HRM topics and issues, and utilize the full range of ...

  9. Human Resource Management Review

    Conceptual Development for Future Research. The Human Resource Management Review (HRMR) is a quarterly academic journal devoted to the publication of scholarly conceptual/theoretical articles pertaining to human resource management and allied fields (e.g. industrial/organizational psychology, human capital, labor relations, organizational behavior). ). HRMR welcomes manuscripts that focus on ...

  10. Sustainable HRM and well-being: systematic review and future research

    A total of 134 research articles were finally selected. It was found that sustainable HRM predicts well-being at work. However, our findings suggest that the area is largely underexplored and empirical work is too rare. ... How does research on sustainable human resource management contribute to corporate sustainability: a document co-citation ...

  11. Emerging Trends in People-Centric Human Resource Management: A

    Given the significance of human resources and people management in the current dynamic environment, this article systematically identifies, synthesizes and analyses the research published on various themes and trends in people-centric human resource management (HRM).

  12. Full article: Human resource management in times of crisis: what have

    In addition, we summarize the six articles that make-up this special issue. Based on the insights obtained from the review, and the content of the special issue, we then develop a comprehensive agenda for future research on how to manage human resources during times of crisis.

  13. Full article: The employee perspective on HR practices: A systematic

    Introduction. Using the SHRM process model (Nishii & Wright, Citation 2008), researchers within the field of SHRM describe the process of the development, implementation, and perceptions of HR policies and practices, from different stakeholders, and how these work towards organizational performance.A key feature in this model is the particular attention devoted to the potential differences ...

  14. To Retain Employees, Give Them a Sense of Purpose and Community

    The author spoke with six human resource executives from companies reporting that their organizations are not experiencing higher-than-normal attrition. ... Microsoft's recent research suggests ...

  15. Human resource management research in healthcare: a big data

    Abstract. Human resource management (HRM) in healthcare is an important component in relation to the quality and efficiency of healthcare delivery. However, a comprehensive overview is lacking to assess and track the current status and trends of HRM research in healthcare. This study aims to describe the current situation and global trends in ...

  16. Full article: Context and HRM: Theory, Evidence, and Proposals

    Abstract. Human resource management (HRM) has paid insufficient attention to the impact of context. In this article, we outline the need for HRM to take full account of context, particularly national context, and to use both cultural theories and, particularly, institutional theories to do that. We use research publications that utilize the ...

  17. Strengthening links between HRM theories, HR ...

    High-performance work systems (HPWS) theory, which dominates research on HRM and outcomes, draws on business strategy, the resource-based view of the firm, human capital theory and the AMO model. Indeed, Wright and McMahan ( 1992 ) outline six theories that inform the HRM—performance relationship including agency/transactional cost theory ...

  18. HR & Workplace Research

    The SHRM Voice of Work Research Panel is a diverse group of HR professionals who represent U.S. organizations and the HR profession by serving as the voice of all things work, workers and the ...

  19. What HRD Is Doing—What HRD Should be Doing: The Case for Transforming

    Human resource development (HRD) is no longer expected to be the primary agency for promoting learning and development among employees. ... Changing demographics and the shifting nature of careers: Implications for research and human resource development. Human Resource Development Review, 13, 181-206. Crossref. Web of Science. Google Scholar ...

  20. Full article: Important issues in human resource management

    In this fourth annual review issue published by The International Journal of Human Resource Management (IJHRM), we are delighted to present five articles that cover some of the important areas in people management in contemporary work settings. Our review articles cover topics that are less well-researched, compared with some popular themes, as ...

  21. Sustainable Human Resource Management and Employees ...

    In an era of rapid globalization and increased environmental consciousness, organizations must align their business practices with sustainable development goals. The main objective of this study is to explore the impact of sustainable human resource management (SHRM) on employees' performance, focusing on the mediating role of employee engagement and the moderating effect of national culture ...

  22. Human Resource Management Journal

    1 INTRODUCTION. In this editorial, we look back at the 30 years of Human Resource Management Journal (HRMJ) publishing quality research focused on the management of people at work.In so doing, we chart the development of the journal from its early origins to now being viewed as a leading international journal of choice as evidenced by its top tier position in several national journal rankings ...

  23. Research Topics and Collaboration in Human Resource Development Review

    In celebrating HRDR's 20 years of publication, this study aims to shed light on research trends in the journal and future research needs by examining 10 years of publications from a structural perspective.We used three complementary computational methods to find major research trends and themes including keyword network analysis, topic modeling, and bibliographic coupling.

  24. How the human resource (HR) function adds strategic value: A relational

    1 INTRODUCTION. There has been a remarkable growth in theory and evidence about the strategic importance of a firm's management of human capital resources (HCRs) over the past three decades (Nyberg & Wright, 2015).Research across different disciplines, such as economics, applied psychology, and management, has repeatedly shown that HCRs, as well as their management, can produce positive ...

  25. Exploring healthcare workers' perceptions of child health research at

    Children's health is a global public health priority and a determinant of development and sustainability. Its effective delivery and further improvements require constant and dedicated research on children, especially by child healthcare workers (HCWs). Studies have shown a high involvement of child HCWs from developed countries in child health research, with an under-representation from the ...

  26. Human resource management research in healthcare: a big data

    Human resource management (HRM) in healthcare is an important component in relation to the quality and efficiency of healthcare delivery. However, a comprehensive overview is lacking to assess and track the current status and trends of HRM research in healthcare. This study aims to describe the current situation and global trends in HRM research in healthcare as well as to indicate the ...

  27. Full article: The influence of green human resource management

    1. Introduction. The issue of environmental pollution is getting worse while the degradation of natural ecosystems has worsened. Governments and non-governmental organizations from all over the world promote the development of rules and regulations to decrease the negative effects of environmental destruction on the natural environment and human society (Munawar et al., Citation 2022; Tang et ...