WASHINGTON, March 10, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- As the nation faces increased strains on its public health workforce from the COVID-19 outbreak, a new report examines the makeup of the U.S. public health workforce. This new primer describes the current public health workforce size, expectations for growth, employee demographics, job tenure, and the skill sets most in demand. This description is offered against the broader backdrop of the overall state and local government sector.
The new report, How Does the Public Health Workforce Compare with the Broader Public Sector?, was prepared by the Center for State and Local Government Excellence (SLGE) with the support of the de Beaumont Foundation.
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"As we are seeing real-time with the coronavirus outbreak, public health professionals in state and local government play a critical role in protecting and improving the lives of residents," said Joshua Franzel PhD, report author and SLGE president and chief executive officer. "This sector, and the state and local government workforce overall, is rapidly changing and continues to face a range of employee recruitment and retention challenges."
"The report is offered to describe the underlying composition of the public health labor force and how it relates to the structure of the state and local government workforce more broadly," Franzel said. "This information is essential as health departments and other components of the public sector identify and implement strategies to develop their future workforces."
Brian C. Castrucci, DrPH, president and CEO of the de Beaumont Foundation, which commissioned the report, said, "These data are an important supplement to our Public Health Workforce Interests and Needs Survey (PH WINS). That survey provides insight about the demographics and attitudes of public health employees, and this new report offers a context for that information. It is the first analysis of its type to illustrate how the needs and challenges of state and local governmental public health agencies compare with those in other areas of government."
Key data included in the report is as follows:
- In terms of workforce size, there were 19,544,000 state and local government employees as of May 2017; 1,227,330 (6.3 percent) work in healthcare practitioner and technical or healthcare support occupations. More specifically, 244,230 (1.2 percent of the overall state and local workforce) work in direct public health roles.
- Regarding gender, the overall state and local workforce is 60 percent female, while the public health workforce has a greater proportion of females at 77 percent.
- In 2017, the public health workforce was more diverse in terms of race and ethnicity than the overall state and local government workforce. Non-white cohorts – such as Blacks, Asians and Latinos – make up larger portions of the public health workforce, relative to the overall state and local public sector workforce.
- The age distributions of the public health workforce and overall state and local government workforce tend to follow the same general pattern. More than two-thirds of workers for the public health and overall government workforce are in the 36-to-65 age bracket. But, the public health workforce skews somewhat older than the overall public sector workforce.
- Given the knowledge-based roles of most state and local government workers, a sizable majority – 81 percent for the public health workforce and 67 percent for the overall state and local government workforce – has completed some type of post- secondary education.
- The annual salary distribution of both the public health and overall state and local government workforce follows similar patterns, with there being fewer public health professionals in the lowest salary range.
- Members of the public health workforce typically have a longer tenure than the state and local workforce overall. In 2017, the median length of time public health employees stayed with their respective employers was eight years, while the state and local government workforce overall had a median of 6.7 years.
SLGE will continue to explore ways that public health departments and local governments are partnering to address today's greatest public health challenges. A forthcoming report will share survey results and case studies of how jurisdictions are collaborating across sectors to achieve their missions, leverage expertise, reduce duplication of efforts, and attract knowledge workers with essential skill sets.
The Center for State and Local Government Excellence (SLGE) helps local and state governments become knowledgeable and competitive employers so they can attract and retain a talented and committed workforce. SLGE identifies leading practices and conducts research on public retirement plans, health and wellness benefits, workforce demographics and skill set needs, and labor force development. SLGE brings state and local leaders together with respected researchers. Access all SLGE publications and sign up for its newsletter at slge.org and follow @4GovtExcellence on Twitter.
SOURCE Center for State and Local Government Excellence
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