Workforce

Workforce


The Issue

With more people expected to rely on the American health care system in the near future, there is an urgent need to develop new skills among the health care workforce and attract others to health care professions, especially in areas related to primary care.

Why It Matters

  • The United States population and health care workforce are aging. This aging population and workforce set the stage for shortages and a sweeping loss of experience in all health fields, particularly in nursing, as Baby Boomers retire over the next 20 years.
  • The Affordable Care Act (ACA) provides health coverage to more than 30 million previously uninsured Americans. The increased number of insured Americans will increase demand for primary care services that are already scarce in many areas.
  • America is increasingly racially and ethnically diverse, which challenges health care providers to deliver more culturally competent care in the near future.
  • Emerging diseases and technological and scientific innovations demand that health workers continually adapt and work in teams to learn and update the skills necessary to facilitate interprofessional collaboration.

Policy Context

Increasing and modernizing the health care workforce is a major goal of the ACA. The health reform law contains dozens of provisions related to health care workforce issues including strengthening primary care through payment reform, academic and financial assistance programs and examining the changing role of front-line health care workers like nurse practitioners who are increasingly providing primary care to medically underserved communities.

The number of home health aide jobs is projected to grow, from 920,000 in 2008 to 1.38 million in 2018. Over the same time, 276,000 jobs will be created for nursing aides, orderlies and attendants, and 376,000 jobs for personal and home care aides. In all, by 2018, nearly 1.7 million new jobs are expected to be created for nurses, home health aides, nursing aides, and orderlies and attendants. That accounts for more than 11 percent of all new jobs likely to be created in that period.
Source:  Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor

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