communications specialist and research assistant, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
research associate and data analyst, Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina.
N C Med J. 2021 Jan-Feb;82(1):29-35. doi: 10.18043/ncm.82.1.29.
In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, health care decision-makers in North Carolina needed information about the available health workforce in order to conduct workforce surge planning and to anticipate concerns about professional or geographic workforce shortages. Descriptive and cartographic analyses were conducted using licensure data held by the North Carolina Health Professions Data System to assess the supply of respiratory therapists, nurses, and critical care physicians in North Carolina. Licensure data were merged with population data and numbers of intensive care unit (ICU) beds drawn from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) Healthcare Cost Report Information System (HCRIS). The pandemic highlighted how critical data infrastructure is to public health infrastructure. Respiratory therapists and acute care, emergency, and critical care nurses were diffused broadly throughout the state, with higher concentrations in urban areas. Critical care physicians were primarily based in areas with academic health centers. Data were unavailable to capture the rapid changes in supply due to clinicians reentering or exiting the workforce. County-level analyses did not reflect individual, facility-level supply, which was needed to plan organizational responses. Health care decision-makers in North Carolina were able to access information about the supply of clinicians critical to caring for COVID-19 patients due to the state's long-standing investments in health workforce data infrastructure. Ability to respond was made easier due to strong working relationships between the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, the North Carolina Area Health Education Centers Program, the health professional licensure boards, and state government health care agencies.
在 COVID-19 大流行的早期,北卡罗来纳州的医疗保健决策者需要有关现有卫生劳动力的信息,以便进行劳动力激增规划,并预测对专业或地理劳动力短缺的担忧。使用北卡罗来纳州卫生专业人员数据系统持有的许可数据进行描述性和制图分析,以评估北卡罗来纳州呼吸治疗师、护士和重症监护医生的供应情况。许可数据与人口数据以及来自医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心 (CMS) 医疗保健成本报告信息系统 (HCRIS) 的重症监护病房 (ICU) 床位数量合并。大流行凸显了关键数据基础设施对公共卫生基础设施的重要性。呼吸治疗师以及急性护理、急诊和重症监护护士广泛分布在全州,城市地区的浓度更高。重症监护医生主要分布在拥有学术医疗中心的地区。由于临床医生重新进入或退出劳动力市场,数据无法捕捉供应的快速变化。由于需要规划组织应对措施,县一级的分析无法反映个人、设施一级的供应情况。由于北卡罗来纳州在卫生劳动力数据基础设施方面的长期投资,医疗保健决策者能够获得有关照顾 COVID-19 患者的关键临床医生供应情况的信息。由于北卡罗来纳大学教堂山分校 Cecil G. Sheps 卫生服务研究中心、北卡罗来纳州地区卫生教育中心计划、卫生专业人员许可委员会以及州政府卫生保健机构之间的密切工作关系,应对能力变得更加容易。