...Demographic and socioeconomic changes are already reshaping the nation and will dramatically impact the healthcare system….and may overwhelm efforts to address the health workforce in a timely and comprehensive manner. The problem…calls for us to educate the public, harmonize standards, increase access and funding for education, improve working conditions, invest in technology, update our infrastructure, and rethink the way we conduct research on the workforce.
Steven A. Wartman, MD, PhD, MACP
AAHC President and CEO
Out of Order, Out of Time: The State of the Nation’s Health Workforce is a report undertaken by the Association of Academic Health Centers (AAHC) to focus attention on the critical need for a new, collaborative, coordinated, national health workforce planning initiative. The report’s seven chapters include more than 40 findings that document what is “out of order” with respect to the nation’s health workforce, as well as the looming social and economic forces that leave no time for further delay before the problems get dramatically worse.
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The Academic Health Centers Role
Academic health centers are uniquely qualified to take a leadership role to resolve health workforce issues. These institutions:
Defining the Health Workforce
Health workforce, in general, comprises the many individuals (with and without professional degrees) who are required to deliver healthcare in the complex patient care environment. Out of Order, Out of Time focus on practitioners with post-secondary education degrees.
Current Health Workforce Policy
Economic Impact of Workforce
Evidence of Shortages
Rising Demand for Health Services
Faculty Shortages
Physician Workforce Makeup
Workforce Diversity
Schools and Enrollment
Financing Medical Education
Student Debt
The health sector now accounts for 15 percent of our nation’s economy and the health workforce accounts for approximately 11 percent of the total US workforce.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that by 2014, one of every five new jobs will be in health care.
The World Health Organization’s World Health Report 2006: Working Together for Health revealed an estimated worldwide shortage of almost 4.3 million physicians, nurses, midwives, and other health personnel.
An early 2007 projection anticipates a shortfall of 340,000 registered nurses by 2020.
Dentist-to-population ratios have been dropping for the past decade and are expected to decline further, to a rate of 52-55 dentists per 100,000 people by 2020.
The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) estimates that approximately 50 million Americans live in underserved areas.
In 2011, the first of the Baby Boomers will turn 65. By 2030, the proportion of Americans who are over 65 years old will be one in five, compared to one in eight today. The over-85 population is expected to increase by 40 percent between now and 2015, and to grow even more quickly from then until 2050. The population of the “oldest old,” those who are over 85 years old, is expected to more than triple by 2050.
Almost one half of Americans take at least one prescription medication.
Worsening faculty shortages in academic health centers are threatening the nation’s health professions educational infrastructure. The AAHC finds that 94 percent of CEOs think faculty shortages are a problem in at least one health professions school, and 69 percent think that these shortages are a problem for the entire institution.(more...)
States Lack Clear Agenda to Avoid Health Workforce Crises
The AAHC finds that states lack comprehensive and coordinated long-term planning for the health workforce and thus are ill-prepared to address an emerging national health workforce crisis.
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The American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) found that more than 32,000 qualified- applicants to baccalaureate nursing programs were rejected in 2006. Over 70 percent of the nursing schools responding to an AACN survey pointed to faculty shortages as a reason for not accepting all qualified applicants into their nursing programs. The same survey shows a national nurse faculty vacancy rate of 7.9 percent, or approximately two faculty vacancies per school, with most of the vacancies requiring a doctoral degree.
The American Dental Education Association (ADEA) reports that between 2004 and 2005, the number of full-time faculty vacancies in U.S. dental schools increased by 50 percent, rising from 250 to 374, the highest number in over a decade.
A November 2006 survey by the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (AACP) found an average of more than five faculty vacancies per school of pharmacy, the vast majority of which were for full-time positions.
As just one example within allied health, the American Society of Radiologic Technologists recently reported that over 67 percent of directors of educational programs for radiographers, radiation therapists, and nuclear medicine technologists expressed difficulty recruiting faculty members.