Organ transplantation and hospital administration represent interdependent components of modern healthcare systems addressing end-stage organ failure. Growing procedural complexity, resource constraints, and persistent inequities highlight a gap in integrated understanding of how hospital-level administrative practices shape transplant performance beyond clinical interventions alone. This review aims to examine how organisational structures, leadership models, operational pathways, and digital infrastructure influence efficiency, equity, and clinical outcomes within transplant programs. A narrative review methodology was employed, drawing evidence from major biomedical and interdisciplinary databases covering publications from 2015 to 2025. The synthesis evaluated institutional governance, workforce management, information systems, quality frameworks, and patient-centred administrative practices across transplant settings. Findings indicate that coordinated governance, multidisciplinary leadership, standardised workflows, and robust health information systems are associated with improved donor utilisation, equitable access, outcome monitoring, and program sustainability. Administrative strategies supporting quality benchmarking and resource stewardship demonstrate relevance during periods of system stress and regulatory change. These observations emphasise aligning administrative design with clinical objectives to strengthen transplant delivery. The review highlights hospitals as stewards of complex transplant pathways, where organisational coherence influences patient and graft outcomes. Optimising transplant programs requires sustained integration of administrative innovation with clinical excellence to ensure resilient, equitable transplant systems globally.
Shrigiriwar et al. (Wed,) studied this question.