Pay increases helped Mayo Clinic recruit more workers and stabilize staffing levels last year, just as demand for some services recovered from pandemic setbacks.
The changes helped boost Mayo’s annual operating profit to nearly $1.1 billion, according to financial results released Wednesday.
Strong financial performance will help fund the clinic’s ambitious $5 billion expansion at its Rochester campus over the next several years. Mayo says it’s also investing once again in worker wages, with most staff receiving a 4% minimum increase in base pay starting next month.
“We do have a few residual pockets of staff shortages, but our attrition rate is back to pre-pandemic numbers,” Dennis Dahlen, chief financial officer at Mayo Clinic, said in an interview.
“We were able to successfully recruit and increase our retention as well, but the recruiting aspect was probably the main driver of the increased staff stability,” Dahlen added. “The enhanced salary increase in early 2023 played a role in that.”
Last year, Mayo cared for more than 1.3 million patients from over 130 countries. They made about 5.2 million outpatient visits in 2023 — the highest one-year tally since before COVID-19 arrived and knocked down patient volumes.
“It felt a little bit like 2019 again,” Dahlen said. “The patients were coming without constraints.”
Mayo Clinic is Minnesota’s largest employer with about 49,000 workers. With operations in Arizona, Florida, Iowa and Wisconsin, as well, the clinic overall employs about 80,000 people.