More Black Health Care Workers Left the Workforce Post-Pandemic

Post-pandemic, Black healthcare worker exits rose. Addressing burnout and hiring is crucial. Explore full study for policy implications.

There was an increase in health care workforce turnover after the pandemic, according to a study published online Jan. 26 in JAMA Health Forum.

Karen Shen, Ph.D., from Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore, and colleagues quantified the number of workers exiting from and entering into the health care workforce before and after the COVID-19 pandemic using U.S. Census Bureau state unemployment insurance data.

According to a 2023 study, Black and Indigenous health care workers faced reduced employment after the pandemic compared other racial groups.

The researchers found approximately 18.8 million people were working in the health care sector in this sample in quarter 1 of 2020. At the onset of the pandemic, there was an increase in the exit rate for health care workers, from a baseline quarterly mean of 5.9 percentage points to 8.0 percentage points in 2018 and quarter 1 of 2020, respectively. Through quarter 4 of 2021, exit rates remained higher than baseline levels, with the health care exit rate 7.7 percentage points higher than the baseline in 2018. The increase in health care worker exit rates was dominated by an increase in workers exiting to nonemployment in quarter 1 of 2020 (78 percent increase versus baseline); in contrast, the exit rate was dominated by workers exiting to employment in non-health care sectors by quarter 4 of 2021 (38 percent increase). There was an increase seen in entry rates in health care in the post-pandemic period, suggesting increased turnover of health care staff.

“Given these findings, policy efforts to address health care worker burnout and improve health care worker hiring pipelines are well warranted,” the authors write.

Abstract/Full Text

AI-Powered Search. Human-Created Content.

What is the most critical factor in managing vasomotor symptoms?

Based on: https://blackdoctor.pro/peer-insights-vasomotor-symptoms-black-women/

What is the most critical factor in managing vasomotor symptoms?

Expert Medical Insights, Straight to Your Inbox

Insights That Keep Black Healthcare Leaders at the Forefront

By subscribing, you consent to receive emails from BlackDoctor.pro You may unsubscribe at any time. Privacy Policy & Terms of Service.

Top Articles

Empowering Culturally-Sensitive Healthcare Professionals

BlackDoctor Pro is an online destination created specifically for Black doctors and culturally-sensitive healthcare professionals. Our platform delivers trusted, relevant, and timely medical content, including in-depth articles, the latest treatment updates, healthcare policy, and emerging clinical studies. We are committed to empowering HCPs with the knowledge, resources, and support needed to achieve exceptional health outcomes in black communities.
Copyright © 2026, BlackDoctor, Inc. All rights reserved.
BlackDoctor Pro is an online destination created specifically for Black doctors and other culturally-sensitive healthcare professionals. Our platform delivers trusted, relevant, and timely medical content, including in-depth articles, the latest treatment updates, healthcare policy, and emerging clinical studies.
AI-Powered Search. Human-Created Content.