Corporate decision-making: A case study of decision support systems and financial performance in health care organizations

Marla Jane Roberts, The University of Texas School of Public Health

Abstract

The purpose of this study was twofold: (1) To describe the relation of the intensity of DSS implementation to financial performance as an empirical exploration of improved performance at the organizational level. (2) To describe the relation of the intensity of DSS implementation to the type of organizational decision culture. A multiple case study design was utilized to compare three groups of paired cases. A pattern matching strategy was applied in this study. Four predictions were specified and compared to the empirical data. A progressively upward trend in the scores was predicted for the following theoretical relationships. (1) The greater the number of DSSs, the higher the sophistication index. (2) The greater the number of DSSs, the higher the financial ratios. (3) The greater the number of DSSs, the higher the culture score. (4) The higher the culture score, the higher the financial ratios. The data did not support any of the predicted trends except the relation between the number of DSSs and the financial ratios. The Income/Revenue ratio indicates the efficiency of a company's operations. One would expect that this ratio would be most affected by the operational and financial decision support systems. The majority of the systems measured in the study supported decisions tangential to the patient service areas. The evidence suggested that the type and number of decision support systems affects the bottom line.

Subject Area

Health care

Recommended Citation

Roberts, Marla Jane, "Corporate decision-making: A case study of decision support systems and financial performance in health care organizations" (1988). Texas Medical Center Dissertations (via ProQuest). AAI8914301.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/dissertations/AAI8914301

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