comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Health care month - Page 7 : comparemela.com

Minnesota recruits teens to health care jobs amid workforce crisis

Minnesota is working to recruit young people into health care jobs as the state continues to battle a workforce crisis.

Minnesota recruits teens to health care jobs amid workforce crisis

Minnesota is working to recruit young people into health care jobs as the state continues to battle a workforce crisis.

Central Michigan Life - Q&A: CMU professor discusses COVID-19 experiences, women in academia

Central Michigan Life - Q&A: CMU professor discusses COVID-19 experiences, women in academia
cm-life.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cm-life.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Health care leaders speak out about attracting more workers to the industry

Health care leaders speak out about attracting more workers to the industry In a webinar this afternoon, folks in the fields of education, medical and state government came to a consensus, they want to see more people choosing health care as a career option. Posted: Jan 27, 2021 9:51 PM Updated: Jan 28, 2021 6:50 AM Posted By: Nick Kruszalnicki ROCHESTER, Minn. - Governor Tim Walz is declaring January Health Care Month. The Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development is saying health care accounts for 17% of jobs in the state.  Now the state government wants more people to join the growing industry. In a webinar this afternoon, folks in the fields of education, medical and state government came to a consensus, they want to see more people choosing health care as a career option.

Pandemic takes bite out of state s health care employment

Copy shortlink: The number of people working in health care Minnesota s largest industry by worker head count typically grows 2.7% between January and December. But at the end of 2020, the state had 367,000 employees in its hospitals, nursing homes, doctor s offices and walk-in clinics, a decline of 10,000 since the start of the year, state employment data released Thursday show. The same pattern held at the national level. The 19.9 million Americans working in health care and social-assistance jobs in December represented a decline of about 780,000 since January, the first such decline in federal labor data going back to 1990. It s a paradox in a way, because some areas had an intense uptick in demand, but anything that could be viewed as elective . dropped in demand a lot. So it really shocked the system, said Anthony Schaffhauser, health care workforce development director at HealthForce Minnesota.

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.