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Dive into the research topics where Matthew Carter is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew Carter.


International Journal of Human Resource Management | 2002

The link between the management of employees and patient mortality in acute hospitals

Michael A. West; Carol Borrill; Jeremy Dawson; Judith Scully; Matthew Carter; Stephen Anelay; Malcolm Patterson; Justin Waring

The relationship between human resource management practices and organizational performance (including quality of care in health-care organizations) is an important topic in the organizational sciences but little research has been conducted examining this relationship in hospital settings. Human resource (HR) directors from sixty-one acute hospitals in England (Hospital Trusts) completed questionnaires or interviews exploring HR practices and procedures. The interviews probed for information about the extensiveness and sophistication of appraisal for employees, the extent and sophistication of training for employees and the percentage of staff working in teams. Data on patient mortality were also gathered. The findings revealed strong associations between HR practices and patient mortality generally. The extent and sophistication of appraisal in the hospitals was particularly strongly related, but there were links too with the sophistication of training for staff, and also with the percentages of staff working in teams.


European Journal of Work and Organizational Psychology | 2015

24-Karat or fool’s gold? Consequences of real team and co-acting group membership in healthcare organizations

Joanne Lyubovnikova; Michael A. West; Jeremy Dawson; Matthew Carter

Although theory on team membership is emerging, limited empirical attention has been paid to the effects of different types of team membership on outcomes. We propose that an important but overlooked distinction is that between membership of real teams and membership of co-acting groups, with the former being characterized by members who report that their teams have shared objectives, and structural interdependence and engage in team reflexivity. We hypothesize that real team membership will be associated with more positive individual- and organizational-level outcomes. These predictions were tested in the English National Health Service, using data from 62,733 respondents from 147 acute hospitals. The results revealed that individuals reporting the characteristics of real team membership, in comparison with those reporting the characteristics of co-acting group membership, witnessed fewer errors and incidents, experienced fewer work related injuries and illness, were less likely to be victims of violence and harassment, and were less likely to intend to leave their current employment. At the organizational level, hospitals with higher proportions of staff reporting the characteristics of real team membership had lower levels of patient mortality and sickness absence. The results suggest the need to clearly delineate real team membership in order to advance scientific understanding of the processes and outcomes of organizational teamwork.


Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology | 2018

Congruency of resources and demands and their effects on staff turnover within the English health care sector

Luke Fletcher; Matthew Carter; Joanne Lyubovnikova

This study examines, at the organizational level, the congruency between job demands and resources and their effects on staff turnover within the English healthcare sector. Polynomial regression analyses conducted on 164 acute hospitals trusts found support for the predictions that organizations with congruent levels of resources and demands would have relatively low staff turnover whereas those with incongruent levels would have relatively high staff turnover. Overall the study indicates that individual job design should be considered within a broader organizational design perspective.


Journal of Organizational Behavior | 2006

Reducing patient mortality in hospitals: the role of human resource management

Michael A. West; James P. Guthrie; Jeremy Dawson; Carol Borrill; Matthew Carter


Journal of Advanced Nursing | 2012

Staying in nursing: what factors determine whether nurses intend to remain employed?

Matthew Carter; Ann E. Tourangeau


Archive | 2008

Team-based working in healthcare: an organisational level perspective

Joanne Richardson; Matthew Carter


Archive | 2005

Rewarding customer service? Using reward and recognition to deliver your customer service strategy

Michael A. West; Gary K. Fisher; Matthew Carter; Vikki Gould; Judith Scully


Archive | 2005

Employee involvement in health service organisations : effects on individual and trust performance

Michael A. West; Carol Borrill; Matthew Carter; Jeremy Dawson; Judy Scully


Journal of Product Innovation Management | 2018

When team identity helps innovation and when it hurts: team identity and its relationship to team and cross-team innovative behavior

Robert C. Litchfield; Zahide Karakitapoğlu-Aygün; Lale Gumusluoglu; Matthew Carter; Giles Hirst


Academy of Management Proceedings | 2013

Connecting the Dots from Team Innovation to Performing Managerial Objectives

Matthew Carter; Zahide Karakitapoðlu-Aygün; Lale Gumusluoglu; Robert C. Litchfield; Giles Hirst

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Justin Waring

University of Nottingham

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