The job vacancy rate in Minnesota hospitals has surged from 6% to 21% over the past year, leaving health care systems scrambling to maintain patient care with high-cost temporary help.
Rising labor costs drove 56% of Minnesota hospitals and health care systems' finances into the red through the first half of 2022, according to a report released Tuesday by the Minnesota Hospital Association. That compares with 41% reporting negative operating margins last year.
"The workforce issues are driving part of the financial crisis and making it significantly worse," said Dr. Rahul Koranne, the trade association's president and chief executive.
Koranne said the report will kick-start a strong lobbying effort to increase government support for hospitals before the declining workforce and revenues compromise patient care. Unlike other industries, hospitals have a legal and ethical obligation to be open, he said, whenever a patient has an urgent medical need or a random 12-year-old arrives at the emergency room.
"We must have competent staff waiting at the door when that 12-year-old comes," he said. "That's our mission. We can't fail on that."
Some of the labor pressures were exacerbated by the stresses of the COVID-19 pandemic, including the more than 9,800 vacancies for 40 different direct patient care jobs.
Other problems have been emerging for years, including the aging of the baby-boomer generation that is pushing many veteran hospital workers into retirement. One-third of surgeons and doctors in procedural specialties will be over age 65 within 10 years.
"COVID merely precipitated it and created a crisis," said Dr. Cindy Firkins Smith, senior vice president for rural health for the St. Cloud-based CentraCare system. "Instead of it gradually elevating and escalating, boom, it came very quickly."