Effects of Working Capital Management on Financial Performance of Level Three and Four Public Hospitals in Meru County
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Date
2024-09Author
Kanana, Kimathi Doreen
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Financial performance of Kenya's public hospitals is essential for the nation's economic
development. The notion of hospital quality improvement is centered on measuring
public hospital performance. A description of what hospitals actually accomplish can be
made possible by measuring hospital financial performance. Level three and four
hospitals in Kenya focus on the provision of health care activities and develop individual
spending plans and budgetary needs based on recommendations from headquarters
distributed throughout the counties. In addition to other issues, the MOH health care
delivery system was plagued by diminishing resources, ineffective use of those that were
still available, and unfair resource distribution by 2015. Public health institutions now
have to manage their own internal resources more effectively as the government's power
to save failing institutions of higher learning was severely undermined. The purpose of
this study was to ascertain how working capital management techniques affected the level
three and level four hospitals in Meru County in terms of their financial performance.
The particular objectives were to determine the effect of cash management, inventory
management, accounts receivable, and accounts payable on the financial performance of
Meru County's Level three and Four Hospitals. The study was grounded on the
theoretical premise of contingency, resource-based theory, liquidity preference theory
and cash conversion cycle theory. The study's research design was descriptive survey,
which allowed the researcher to explain the elements of interest with regard to their
attributes. The study used a questionnaire for data collection purposes. The target
population consisted of fifty-three senior managers from all the fifty-three public Level
three and Four Hospitals in Meru County. These managers included Hospital
administrator or finance manager where applicable. The investigation was conducted in
Kenya's eastern Provence, in the county of Meru. Data analysis was conducted using
SPSS version 27. Utilizing both descriptive and inferential statistics, the examined data
was displayed. Regressions, both linear and multilinear, were utilized to determine the
association between the variables. The investigation's findings showed that the majority
of respondents were female, Additionally, most of the participants were between 31-40
years of age. According to the data, undergraduates made up the majority of respondents
with the highest level of education. The investigation concluded that working capital
management techniques, which include inventory control, cash management, and cash
payables and receivables management, significantly impact financial performance. The
accounts payable results ultimately show a statistically significant correlation
coefficients, thereby supporting the rejection of the all the null hypotheses. The study
thus recommended that the head of finance in these hospitals should continuously
communicate payment terms to the clients in a timely manner as this would ensure the
payment terms adherence. Further, the study recommends that credit officers of these
hospitals should time to time review accounts receivables age so as to facilitate
continuous follow up on unpaid dues.
Publisher
KeMU
Subject
EffectsWorking capital management
Financial performance
Level three public hospitals
Level four public hospitals