Saturday, December 24, 2022

Not out of the woods yet: Health care groups struggle to solve the workforce shortage

 

Not out of the woods yet: Health care groups struggle to solve the workforce shortage

Melissa Ellin
Boston University Statehouse Program
Published Dec. 24, 2022 

Health care leaders are trying to find new ways of retaining and recruiting employees across the field as the workforce shortage, which started in 2020, worsens nationwide. There are no clear solutions to the labor shortage, and in Massachusetts, health professionals say it’s going to take more than one.

In state hospitals alone, around 19,000 acute care positions are unfilled and more than 70% of the average hospital dollar is going toward labor costs — “wages, benefits, and purchased services” — according to an October report from the Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association. Travel labor expenses — for out-of-state employees who keep hospitals running — are projected to reach $1 billion, MHA predicts.

The report outlines its own series of potential answers, which includes additional spending and various methods to attract new workers, but solutions will need to extend beyond acute care.

Stae Sen. Julian Cry, D-Truro, said “funding is essential” to solve the shortage of health care workers and the state has already made appropriations, but the outcome is yet to be seen.

Labor advocates like Marlishia Aho, regional communications manager for 1199SEIU, which represents hundreds of health care employees in the state, said change needs to start with wages.

“It requires all stakeholders to be at the table and again, centering workers' voices in that discussion,” Aho said. “One of the easiest things we can say is talking about paying people more.”

Health care workers might have been labeled as “heroes” during the pandemic, Aho said, but more action is necessary. In particular, she said, low-wage workers — in-home caretakers and others not necessarily in the hospital setting — need to be remembered, because the entire field is being affected, not just doctors and nurses.

“Many have been burned out who have been struggling and are not paid adequately to thrive outside of work, and can go to a less stressful job, like at a Target or somewhere where they can make the same amount of pay, unfortunately,” Aho said.

Health care workers are 'really struggling' financially

For behavioral health, Diane Gould, president and CEO of Advocates, a human and social service nonprofit in Framingham, said employees are “really struggling.”

Workforce salaries need to be “front and center” in the conversation, she said, and reimbursement rates are an important component of pay. Oftentimes, she said potential student loan debt — about $200,000 for the average public medical school student the Association of American Medical Colleges reports — drives health worker hopefuls away from such an important industry.

“The work that our people and our staff do is critically important,” Gould said. “Health care is the backbone of the health and well-being of the commonwealth.”

'You can't conjure a psych nurse'

Sen. Julian Cyr, D-Truro, Senate chair for the Legislature’s Committee on Mental Health, Substance Use and Recovery, said he thinks “funding is essential,” and the state has already made appropriations, but the outcome is yet to be seen.

“It's going to take some time for that to take root,” Cyr said.

Recruitment also takes time, Cyr added, and even in the best-case scenario, training often takes two years.

“You can't conjure a psych nurse,” Cyr said. “So even though we desperately need psychiatric nurses and providers across the spectrum it's not that it can be done swiftly.”

In the meantime, patients in a mental health crisis are being sent to emergency rooms, when hospitals already have their own staffing issues. Lown Institute Senior Fellow Paul Hattis said these types of domino effects are common because the health care system is so interwoven.

Nursing homes can't get enough staff'

“Even if things get better for the hospitals, if a nursing home can't get enough staff, they can't admit the patient from the hospital,” Hattis said. “It backs up.”

Hattis, a former member of the state’s Health Policy Commission, added that hospitals don’t have enough money to increase wages and other labor costs, so the state has stepped in to provide some funding. Most recently, around $350 million from the economic development bill went toward hospitals, but that only helps for the immediate future.

“The long-term solution is about pipeline issues,” Hattis said, which includes recruiting more labor and providing mobility paths for current workers.

Patricia Noga, vice president of clinical affairs for MHA, said the short-term must include supporting the existing workers.

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“You almost need to customize your approach given the needs of the individual worker,” Noga said. “Looking at the other things in their lives that affect their work. I mean can we assist with child care? What about transportation? What about parking? What about financial advice and guidance that they may need?”

Kenneth White, dean of the School of Nursing at MGH Institute of Health Professions, said the pandemic, retirement of the baby boomer generation, and increased patient needs all combined to create the “perfect storm.”

White, also the president of the American Academy of Nursing, said it’s impossible to gauge when the shortage might improve, but “it would be hastened if we had more government policy that would support this issue.”

State considering clinical placements for student nurses

A step in the right direction, he said, is for the Department of Labor to institute a program it’s currently considering that will provide student nurses with the opportunity for more clinical placements, which are essential for learning.

He called this just “a drop in the bucket,” though, and said, as with behavioral health and other areas, the government needs to provide funding, particularly for loan reimbursements.

“I think there’s a lot that can be done on the policy front to expedite these changes,” White said.

MHA’s Chief Communications Officer Sam Melnick said the organization has released a toolkit that includes current case studies in Massachusetts hospitals. The goal, he added, is to provide resources for health leaders as they chart their own path forward.

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“Every hospital is doing something innovative right now to address these issues,” Melnick said.

Ultimately, Noga of MHA said, the labor issues are not confined to the pandemic and with so many efforts going into solving the issue, results and result assessment are not going to be immediately apparent.

“We've got to see how a lot of these interventions and innovations shake out over time,” Noga said. “It's almost like you got to kind of wait and see every five years where are we? See where we are and where we’re going to be going next.”


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