ISSN 0303-5212
 

Original Research 


Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management

Nazia Tasleem.


Abstract
Objective: To synthesize recent evidence (2022–2025) on data-driven human resource (HR) strategies and present a conceptual framework linking HR analytics to workforce planning, talent management, operational efficiency, and patient outcomes in healthcare.
Methodology: A conceptual-analytical review was conducted using the keywords “data-driven HR,” “people analytics,” and “workforce analytics in healthcare.” High-quality peer-reviewed studies from 2022–2025 were selected and coded into themes. NVivo 14 facilitated thematic coding; Microsoft Excel (2022) and IBM SPSS 29 supported descriptive synthesis and cross-study comparison.
Results: Four themes emerged: workforce planning, talent management, technological enablers, and implementation challenges. Predictive staffing and turnover-risk analytics improved workforce allocation and retention. Competency mapping and analytics-informed training enhanced skill alignment and care quality. AI-enabled scheduling reduced burnout and improved patient safety. Key barriers included data integration, governance, algorithmic bias, and limited HR analytics capacity. Even simple dashboards in resource-limited settings improved workforce deployment.
Conclusion: Data-driven HR is a strategic enabler of resilient, efficient, patient-centered healthcare systems. Adoption requires leadership commitment, ethical governance, and capacity building. These practices are scalable and adaptable, offering actionable solutions for both high- and low-resource healthcare settings.

Key words: Data-driven HR, healthcare management, workforce analytics, artificial intelligence in HR.


 
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Pubmed Style

Nazia Tasleem. Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management. RMJ. 2026; 51(1): 219-223. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402


Web Style

Nazia Tasleem. Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management. https://www.rmj.org.pk/?mno=282342 [Access: February 21, 2026]. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402


AMA (American Medical Association) Style

Nazia Tasleem. Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management. RMJ. 2026; 51(1): 219-223. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402



Vancouver/ICMJE Style

Nazia Tasleem. Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management. RMJ. (2026), [cited February 21, 2026]; 51(1): 219-223. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402



Harvard Style

Nazia Tasleem (2026) Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management. RMJ, 51 (1), 219-223. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402



Turabian Style

Nazia Tasleem. 2026. Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management. Rawal Medical Journal, 51 (1), 219-223. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402



Chicago Style

Nazia Tasleem. "Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management." Rawal Medical Journal 51 (2026), 219-223. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402



MLA (The Modern Language Association) Style

Nazia Tasleem. "Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management." Rawal Medical Journal 51.1 (2026), 219-223. Print. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402



APA (American Psychological Association) Style

Nazia Tasleem (2026) Data-driven human resource strategies for smarter healthcare management. Rawal Medical Journal, 51 (1), 219-223. doi:10.5455/rmj.20250907012402