Keith Mueller, Ph.D. |
The report analyzed the current workforce — physicians, nurses, dentists, pharmacists, primary care providers, allied health, public health and mental health professionals. It projected future needs and determined shortages in various fields and geographic areas.
“We face a looming crisis in the number of health care workers and the professionals we have are not distributed across the state in the same way as our population,” said Keith Mueller, Ph.D., professor in UNMC’s College of Public Health and director of the Nebraska Center for Rural Health Research (NCRHR), which conducted the study.
The report showed that Nebraska faces significant shortages in several fields and also has an aging health care work force (See table on the right).
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“Nebraska faces an explosion of aging patients but if we begin providing coverage for thousands of uninsured patients, it could push the need for primary care providers to urgent levels,” he said. “We’re not ready. Neither are any other states.”
The report will serve as a guide for state policy makers to address future shortages, Dr. Mueller said.
It will soon be presented to state health officials and the University of Nebraska Board of Regents.
Some of the recommendations from the NCRHR include:
- Create a state health workforce center;
- Expand the role of pipeline (recruitment) programs aimed at provider shortage; areas; and
- Increase funding for current debt relief programs aimed at new graduates.
The $100,000 project was funded by the Larson Medical Research Fund through the University of Nebraska Foundation and included input from key stakeholders.