Vaccine Mandates Hit Amid Historic Health-Care Staff Shortage – Many of Them Are Leaving

Nurses inside the Covid-19 unit of Salinas Valley Memorial Hospital in Salinas, California, U.S., on Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021. On Monday, 2,128 Covid-19 patients were in ICUs statewide, a number not seen since mid-February, reported the Los Angeles Times. Photographer: Nic Coury/Bloomberg

(Bloomberg) — Nearly one in four beds lies empty at TaraVista Behavioral Health Center in central Massachusetts — not for lack of patients, but for lack of staff.

Even before the pandemic, nurses and lower-paid aides were in perennially short supply, but the 116-bed facility could still run full, said Chief Executive Officer Michael Krupa. At similar hospitals around Massachusetts, hundreds of beds can’t be filled, and “the reason is exclusively staff,” he said.

What some are calling the worst U.S. health-care labor crisis in memory is sharpening concerns about attrition from resistance to vaccine mandates — even in the medical mecca of Massachusetts, where Covid cases remain well within hospital capacity. About 16% of American hospitals had critical staffing shortages as of Oct. 1, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

The uptick initially coincided with a surge in Covid-19 hospitalizations, but shortages have persisted even as the virus ebbs, suggesting other factors.

“We don’t have a single position we can afford to lose right now,” Eric Dickson, president of UMass Memorial Health, told Bloomberg Radio last month. “I have areas that have a 50% vacancy rate. And God forbid we lose any more.”

In recent weeks, worker shortages have prompted extreme measures, even in regions that aren’t Covid hot spots. In Virginia, five state psychiatric hospitals had to stop accepting patients. A lack of nurses forced Rhode Island Hospital to close part of its emergency department. And a major Michigan hospital chain says 5% of its beds can’t be filled for lack of staff.

At TaraVista, a modern building of airy corridors and big windows, demand for psychiatric and detox beds is soaring amid the heightened emotional stress and substance use of the pandemic. “Parents call me crying: ‘Please take my child,’” said admissions director Sheila Crowley. It hurts to turn them down, she said.

Everything at Once
Historically, severe health-care labor shortages have cropped up in scattered areas and hard-to-hire sectors like nursing homes, said Karen Donelan, a professor of health policy at Brandeis University. But “at this point, we’re hearing about them in most states,” she said, and even in large, wealthy institutions that haven’t traditionally struggled.

Factors include exhaustion-fueled retirements and resignations; absences due to illness and quarantine; immigration limits in recent years; and the lure of lucrative “travel” contracts from competing employers around the country. Now, add vaccine resistance to the mix.

“All of those challenges at the same time,” Donelan said.

Nurses’ wages have remained relatively flat for many years when adjusted for inflation, she said, and pay for less-skilled jobs has also stagnated. The country has nearly 4 million nurses and the supply has been growing steadily in the last decade, she said. Demand, spurred by an aging population, has also been rising and is expected to accelerate in the coming decade.

In some markets, raises and bonuses in response to the pandemic may represent a long-term correction, Donelan said, though that isn’t clear yet.

Overall, employment in the health-care sector remains below prepandemic levels. The gaps are biggest in nursing homes and residential care settings: Nursing facilities employed about 14% fewer people in August than in January 2020, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. In residential mental-health facilities, the drop is 8%.

Physician offices employ about the same number of workers they did before the pandemic, while employment in labs and dental offices has increased.

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Source: MSN