Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on CSR Activities of Healthcare Providers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Definition of CSR
- I.
- The three main areas of engagement are society, environment, and business—whereby society usually refers to doing something good for society; involvement in environmental activities ranges from supporting environmental and climate initiatives by only sourcing local or fair-trade products, to re-evaluating and changing a company’s statutes to become more (i.e., energy) efficient; and business denotes economic decisions, such as becoming an attractive employer through extending additional benefits to employees or by making processes more efficient, all leading to increased satisfaction and sustainability. Quite often, approaches to support and strengthen human rights or to take the opinions of customers into account explicitly mention these three elements to emphasize their importance [3,4,5]. Complementing these are the legal and ethical spheres [6], elements of which are found in all three areas. In addition, fundamental philanthropical ideas can often be found in various CSR activities [7].
- II.
- External social, economic, and environmental factors play into the decision-making processes within a company. Such factors can include, for example, regulators, employees, shareholders, customers, activists, researchers, or any other form of stakeholder [8].
- III.
- Stakeholders legitimize the company’s CSR activities. This is often shown in terms of how much support a company gets for its activities, i.e., donations, time employees maintain in the company before they turn over or spend on helping out and engaging [9,10], and how much stakeholders trust that the company’s image is befitting of its actions [11,12].
1.2. Corporate Social Responsibility—Concepts, Models, and Theories
1.3. Corporate Social Performance and Social Responsibility Theories
1.4. The Pyramid of CSR by Carroll
1.5. The CSR Model by Quazi and O’Brian
1.6. The Three-Dimensional CSR Approach by Carroll and Schwartz
- (i)
- Only economic
- (ii)
- Only legal
- (iii)
- Only ethical
- (iv)
- Combined economic-legal
- (v)
- Combined economic-ethical
- (vi)
- Combined legal ethical
- (vii)
- Combined economic-legal-ethical
1.7. Corporate Social Irresponsibility
1.8. The Development of CSR—A Scoping Review
- (i)
- Is corporate social responsibility mentioned in the abstract and in the keywords?
- (ii)
- Do the authors refer to any form of monitoring of activities related to corporate social responsibility?
- (iii)
- Is the sample size large enough to be statistically significant?
- (i)
- the full text was not accessible, and the authors did not respond to inquiries within 6 weeks;
- (ii)
- the content was based on a very narrow or a too specific study sample (e.g., one company or one country plus one specific sector), so broader applications of the input did not seem possible;
- (iii)
- CSR was mentioned, but it was not the focus of the paper;
- (iv)
- the CSR focus was purely on improving human rights or the situations of workers;
- (v)
- CSR was only mentioned in the combination of reporting certain corporate activities, but monitoring did not play a part.
- (i)
- Common understanding—general information
- (ii)
- The convergence of standards
- (iii)
- Monitoring bodies
- (iv)
- Monitoring mechanisms
- (v)
- Acknowledging influence
- (vi)
- Monitoring costs to give an overview
- (vii)
- (Shareholders) monitoring of individual people (i.e., mostly managers)
1.9. Crises-Related CSR in the Healthcare Sector
1.10. A New and Transtheoretical Model for CSR in the Healthcare Sector
1.11. Aims of the Empirical Study
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Coding of the Interviews
3.2. Effects of the Pandemic
3.2.1. Effects on CSR-Related Activities
3.2.2. Effects of the Pandemic on Medical Care Structures
3.3. Change in Times of Crisis
3.3.1. Changes in the Well-Being, Satisfaction, and Motivation of Employees during the Pandemic
3.3.2. Changes in the Internal and External Communication Due to the Pandemic
3.3.3. Structural Changes Due to the Pandemic
3.3.4. Opportunities and Challenges in Everyday Routines
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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General Understanding | Convergence of Standards | Monitoring Institutions | Monitoring Mechanisms | Acknowledging Influence | Monitoring Costs | Monitoring of Managers |
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Participant | Headcount | Yearly Revenue (EUR ) | Part of a Corporate Group | Non-Profit or Profit Organization |
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1 | 13,500 | 1.2 billion | No | Profit |
2 | 16,000 | 872 million | Yes | Non-profit |
3 | 73,000 | 6 billion | Yes | Profit |
4 | 30,000 | 1.632 billion | Yes | Non-profit |
5 | 2600 | 183 million | Yes | Non-profit |
6 | 1800 | 110 million | Yes | Profit |
7 | 3200 | 200 million | Yes | Non-profit |
8 | 900 | 950 million (group) | Yes | Non-profit |
9 | 4000 | 400 million | Yes | Profit |
Code | Number of Segments 1 |
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COVID-19—Effects of the pandemic | 29 |
COVID-19—Effects on CSR-related activities | 27 |
COVID-19—Challenges the pandemic brought along | 28 |
COVID-19—Changes in the internal and external communication by the pandemic | 27 |
COVID-19—Where the pandemic forced structural changes | 17 |
COVID-19—Changes in everyday routines | 7 |
COVID-19—Opportunities the pandemic offered | 36 |
COVID-19—Changes in the well-being, satisfaction, and motivation of employees during the pandemic | 31 |
Internal Communication | External Communication |
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Challenges of the Pandemic | Opportunities of the Pandemic |
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© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Deselaers, C.; Dahmen, A.; Lippke, S. Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on CSR Activities of Healthcare Providers. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 368. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010368
Deselaers C, Dahmen A, Lippke S. Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on CSR Activities of Healthcare Providers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(1):368. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010368
Chicago/Turabian StyleDeselaers, Christina, Alina Dahmen, and Sonia Lippke. 2023. "Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on CSR Activities of Healthcare Providers" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 1: 368. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010368
APA StyleDeselaers, C., Dahmen, A., & Lippke, S. (2023). Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on CSR Activities of Healthcare Providers. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(1), 368. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20010368