U.S. healthcare faces mass exodus as 55% plan to quit — Harris Poll

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — A survey reveals a healthcare system on the brink, with 55% of its frontline workers actively planning to leave their jobs.
This looming exodus threatens to exacerbate a projected national shortage of nearly 700,000 physicians and nurses by 2037, according to the Health Resources and Services Administration.
“Given the unprecedented need for care driven by the aging Baby Boomer population, these findings offer critical insights into how to better retain, support, and prepare the people at the heart of our nation’s healthcare system,” said Jennifer Musil, Global President of Research at The Harris Poll.
Burnout, undervaluation push healthcare workers to quit
The survey results are a grim story of a demotivated workforce that is essentially undervalued. The disconnect between the front-line workers and the management was serious, as a huge majority of 84% of healthcare workers said that they did not feel valued by their current employer.
This feeling is enhanced by the fact that there is no belief in institutional support, with only a fifth of workers holding the view that their employer cares about their long-term career development.
This profound dissatisfaction is directly translating into an unprecedented attrition risk. The study found that 55% of surveyed healthcare workers intend to search for, interview for, or switch jobs within the next year.
As Adele Webb, a nurse with over 40 years of experience, stressed, “We are losing more staff than we have ever lost. Jobs are harder, patients are older and more chronically ill. We do not have enough staff,” highlighting the unprecedented scale of the current crisis.
Education benefits tied to stronger worker retention
The research identifies a powerful, yet underutilized, tool for retention: employer-supported education and career advancement.
A significant 63% of healthcare employees stated they would be more likely to stay with their current employer if tuition assistance were offered, directly linking educational investment to loyalty.
Employers corroborate this, with 48% acknowledging that a lack of advancement and educational opportunities is a key reason employees depart.
This is especially a key strategy towards retaining the young generations who are the future of the industry. Gen Z and millennial employees are the most susceptible to education benefits, and these are the most likely to find themselves interested in new employment; 61% of Gen Z workers mentioned it as a major reason for remaining.
Despite this explicit data, tuition assistance is not an official retention model used by healthcare employers at present, with 47%
Younger workers most at risk, AI skill gaps add to uncertainty
The youngest employee group is leaving the healthcare talent pipeline at the quickest rate, which poses a severe risk to long-term stability.
The employers claimed that younger and early-career workers are one of the most difficult to keep, which proves that the industry has a problem keeping its future.
This generational gap highlights the necessity to prioritize the development of unique retention policies, which can meet the unique needs of a new generation of employees.
Compounding this generational challenge is the rising anxiety and skill gap surrounding artificial intelligence. AI is the number one clinical skill employees expect to need in the next five years, yet 42% worry it will replace aspects of their job.
While 92% of employers identify AI skills training as a priority, 60% report difficulty finding the right resources, creating a new barrier to adequate support and preparation.

Independent




