6 Hospital Workforce Trends

Employee productivity, staff retention and the quality of hires are all major issues within the hospital and healthcare workforce, and many labor trends related to those issues bubbled to the surface last year, according to the 2013/14 Human Capital Effectiveness Report from PwC.

PwC's report includes labor data from calendar year 2012 from roughly 60 hospitals and health systems, which represent more than 1 million employees. Analysis on PwC's report from 2011 can be read here.

Here are six trends in the hospital workforce, according to PwC's most recent report.

1. Employee productivity rose, while labor costs declined. In 2012, hospitals said the average revenue per full-time equivalent was $192,304 — an increase from $189,479 recorded in 2011. It is also significantly higher than 2010, when the average revenue per FTE was $180,536. PwC analysts said this is a clear sign hospital employee productivity is increasing to pre-recession levels.

In addition, as employees worked harder and longer hours, hospitals lowered their labor costs. In 2012, the average labor costs per FTE at hospitals, which included compensation and benefits, was $87,221 compared with $92,712 in 2011. The average across all industries, according to PwC, is $101,566, meaning healthcare is already efficient in this area.

2. More hospital employees voluntarily left their positions. Despite higher productivity and lower labor costs, hospitals are still facing a looming long-term challenge: The voluntary turnover rate, or the rate at which hospital employees willingly left their position, increased from 8.9 percent in 2011 to 9.5 percent in 2012. Nurses had the highest voluntary separation rate at 9.6 percent, while 6.3 percent of physicians left voluntarily.

"With the improving economy, job opportunities are starting to increase, leading employees to explore alternative options," PwC's report said. "It is important for organizations to understand the primary drivers of engagement and turnover in an effort to minimize the costly consequences of losing talent."

3. Hospitals paid larger shares toward employee health benefits. Hospitals and health systems continue to pay more in employee healthcare costs, as is the trend across the entire workforce. PwC analysts said to compensate for higher healthcare costs, hospitals are scaling back other benefits, like pensions and retirement funds, "to ease the burden."

4. Hospitals improved their first-year turnover rate. The first-year turnover rate for healthcare providers — the number of employees who left or were fired within their first year — decreased from 28.3 percent in 2011 to 27 percent in 2012. While the mark is still higher than the 22.6 percent across all industries, PwC said hospitals made progress in the quality of their hires.

5. Healthcare placed a bigger emphasis on diversity hiring. Hospitals and health systems have looked to create a more diverse employee population, and they took major steps toward that goal last year. In 2011, the percent of managers who were considered to be "ethnically diverse" was 8.4 percent, while the percent of ethnically diverse executives was 6.7 percent. In 2012, those figures jumped to 12.5 percent and 8.2 percent, respectively.

"Diversity is no longer viewed simply as a compliance measure," PwC's report said. "It has evolved into a way for organizations to strengthen their employee value proposition, marketplace reputation and patient experience."

6. Investments in human resources continued to lag. Within hospitals, the HR costs per employee dipped slightly to $794 in 2012. Comparatively, HR costs per FTE across the entire market were $1,923 in 2012.

However, PwC said hospitals will increase their investments in HR over time because many are starting to view that department as an arm that can carry out "strategic" internal initiatives, such as succession planning, career management and performance management.

More Articles on Hospital Labor:
More Healthcare Workers Likely to Job Hunt, Survey Says
10 Biggest Talent Management Challenges for Healthcare Organizations
5 Mistakes Hospitals Make in Employee Relations

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