우리나라 대형 종합병원의 아웃소싱 실태

Outsourcing in Hospital Services: Experience of Korean Hospitals

  • 노태훈 (동국대학교 일산병원, 연세대학교 보건대학원) ;
  • 이해종 (연세대학교 보건행정학과) ;
  • 박은철 (국립암센터) ;
  • 강혜영 (연세대학교 보건대학원)
  • Noh, Tae-Hoon (Dongguk University Hospital, Graduate School of Public Health, Yonsei University) ;
  • Lee, Hae-Jong (Department of Health Administration, College of Health Sciences, Yonsei University) ;
  • Park, Eun-Cheol (National Cancer Center) ;
  • Kang, Hye-Young (Graduate School of Public Health, Yonsei University)
  • 발행 : 2003.12.30

초록

This study was conducted to investigate the degree of utilization of outsourcing in large hospitals in Korea. We also investigated the outcome and the level of satisfaction for adopting outsourcing in these hospitals. Types of work areas that were currently operated by outsourcing and were planned to adopt outsourcing in the future were identified. A total of 83 hospitals were eligible for this study, which had more than 500 beds, and were identified from the 2003 National Hospital List published by the Korean Hospital Association. A self-administered Questionnaire survey was conducted between April 25th and May 20th in 2003 with a personnel being charged of arrangement of outsourcing in each hospital. Among the 58 hospitals responding the survey(response rate=69.9%), 49 hospitals(84.5%) utilized outsourcing in at least one work field in their organizations. The largest proportion of the hospitals(85.7%) using outsourcing responded that the biggest outcome after introducing outsourcing were cost reduction(49.0%), followed by improved efficiency in operating the organization or human resources(34.7%) and the improved quality of the work(6.1%). The degree of satisfaction for outsourcing among the hospital managers(3.43) was significantly higher than that among the employees(3.l4) on a S-point Likert-type scale(p<0.05). Among the 7 work areas, the hospitals used outsourcing most frequently in facility management(housekeeping, building maintenance, hospital security and parking management), followed by non-medical profit business(funeral, convenient store, and cafeteria), logistics(provision of patient meal, in-house delivery, and purchasing), and information and computing system(hospital information system, maintenance of personal computers and printers). The work areas that the hospitals planned to adopt or expand the outsourcing in the future most frequently were facility management, non-medical profit business, logistics, and information and computing systems. In conclusion, outsourcing was highly diffused in large Korean hospitals, particularly in the work field of facility management and non-medical profit business. The satisfaction for outsourcing was not high yet in Korean hospitals.

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