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Tag: healthcare staffing

Is California Staffed For the Crisis? Not Yet.

By JAKE SEGAL and KAREN LARSEN

Call 988 in California and someone picks up. In parts of the state, a mobile crisis team might arrive at your door instead of police. Through Proposition 1, the state is putting billions into treatment beds, supportive housing, and youth services. On paper, California is in the middle of the most ambitious behavioral health expansion in the country.

And yet, about two-thirds of adults and adolescents in need of care don’t get treatment. A behavioral health system that you can’t staff is just a blueprint, not a strategy.

Even as demand for mental health and substance use treatment surges, the supply of trained professionals is not keeping pace. California needs 375,000 behavioral workers by 2030, doubling positions  statewide. State officials estimate a 38% shortfall in psychiatrists and a gap of roughly one-third among the 100,000 licensed therapists needed. Rural and underserved communities are especially hard hit; many have no child and adolescent psychiatrists at all. And shortages extend beyond doctors and therapists. Clinical social workers, addiction counselors, peer support specialists, and community health workers are also in short supply. 

Building on State Leadership

California is not starting from scratch. The Department of Health Care Access and Information (HCAI) already administers several scholarship and loan repayment programs that encourage clinicians to practice in high-need settings, including loan repayment for nurses, licensed mental health providers, substance use disorder counselors, and psychiatric nurse practitioners. Through the BH-CONNECT federal waiver, HCAI is rolling out five workforce programs over 2025–2030, including a Medi-Cal Behavioral Health Student Loan Repayment Program

These are important efforts, but they aren’t scaled to the size of the crisis. Loan repayment awards are often a fraction of a graduate’s full debt, and have limited availability. Even the largest programs will only target a few hundred providers; California needs thousands more.

Repayment alone doesn’t solve the immediate affordability problem: people can’t enter training if they can’t pay rent while they are doing it.

A $1 Billion Statewide Workforce Fund for California

California should create a statewide Behavioral Health Workforce “Pay It Forward” Fund: a $1 billion pool that lends money to trainees at zero interest, gets paid back as they get good jobs, and lends those same dollars out again.

Continue reading…

Nomad Health’s Next Move: $63M Raise Takes On-Demand Healthcare Staffing into Workforce Management

By JESSICA DaMASSA, WTF HEALTH

Not all who wander are lost: Nomad Health lands a $63M Series D round after a year of 5X revenue growth for their tech-driven healthcare staffing marketplace that helps hospitals hire nurses on-demand. This round, led by Adams Street Partners with participation from all existing investors, brings the company’s total fundraising up to $113M. Co-founder & CEO Alexi Nazem stops by to tell us how the startup is not only planning to expand its focus from nurses to other types of healthcare providers but how the process of doing so will transform Nomad from an on-demand staffing agency to “‘THE’ workforce management platform for healthcare.”

Alexi puts it this way: “In healthcare, the product is CARE. And, who is the product team? It’s the doctors, the nurses, the allied health professionals…and the fact that there’s no intentional management of this group of people who steward $1.5 trillion dollars of cost in the US every year is beyond unbelievable.”

The problem is twofold. First, there’s the way temporary staffing is currently being handled: by 2,500 different staffing agencies that take a fragmented, predominantly people-powered approach to sourcing, vetting, and hiring candidates. The cost is high to a health system looking to shore up their nursing staff, and the experience for job-seeking nurses is very opaque, with information being revealed about a job only after a significant investment of time within the application process. If the match falls apart, all the people involved in the process are left to try again.

This leads to the second issue – that, big picture, the status-quo way of temporary staffing is leaving behind a LOT of valuable data. Data about the clinician that is useful to the management of their career, and data about the workforce that would prove valuable to a hospital looking to better manage its care delivery resources.

We journey into the details behind Nomad’s business model, which is cutting costs for hospitals while also increasing pay for the 150,000+ clinicians on its platform. AND, while we’re there, we also find out how they expect their on-demand staffing approach to playing out in the booming virtual care space.

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