Publication | Closed Access
The Exodus Of State And Local Public Health Employees: Separations Started Before And Continued Throughout COVID-19
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Citations
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2023
Year
Health AdministrationOrganizationsHealth ReformHealth DisparitiesHealth PoliticsSocial Determinants Of HealthHealth Care ManagementWorker HealthUnited StatesCovid-19Public Health SystemActual SeparationsPublic Health PracticePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchPublic PolicyHealth PolicyHealth WorkforceSeparation TrendsGlobal Health CrisisCovid-19 PandemicHealth EquityPublic Health PolicyHealth SystemsHealth EconomicsWorkplace Health SurveillanceGlobal HealthInternational HealthHealth Services ManagementSocial PolicyMedicineThroughout Covid-19
Understanding the size and composition of the state and local governmental public health workforce in the United States is critical for promoting and protecting the health of the public. Using pandemic-era data from the Public Health Workforce Interests and Needs Survey fielded in 2017 and 2021, this study compared intent to leave or retire in 2017 with actual separations through 2021 among state and local public health agency staff. We also examined how employee age, region, and intent to leave correlated with separations and considered the effect on the workforce if trends were to continue. In our analytic sample, nearly half of all employees in state and local public health agencies left between 2017 and 2021, a proportion that rose to three-quarters for those ages thirty-five and younger or with shorter tenures. If separation trends continue, by 2025 this would represent more than 100,000 staff leaving their organizations, or as much as half of the governmental public health workforce in total. Given the likelihood of increasing outbreaks and future global pandemics, strategies to improve recruitment and retention must be prioritized.
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