Speakers discuss health care workforce crisis: A dire shortage and getting worse
Latest News
July 22, 2021

Speakers discuss health care workforce crisis: A dire shortage and getting worse

By Stacy Wolford

By JEFF STITT
jstitt@yourmvi.com

Dr. Theresa Brown, a registered nurse, painted a very blunt and heart-wrenching portrait of what life was like for a health care worker in an intensive care unit amid the coronavirus pandemic.
She said the pandemic caused trauma and risks for nurses and health care workers and also contributed to a figurative wound for the industry by way of a nursing shortage.
She said that wound can’t be healed by calling someone “a hero.”
Brown, author of “Shift: One Nurse, Twelve House, Four Patients’ Lives,” spoke during a state Senate Democratic Policy Committee hearing Wednesday about a health care workforce crisis, and said issues with health care staffing and workers rights were brewing pre-pandemic.
The panel was led by Sen. Katie Muth, but was well represented by local officials including Senate Minority Leader Jay Costa of Forest Hills, state Rep. Austin Davis, D-McKeesport, and Sen. Jim Brewster, a Democrat from McKeesport who joined via Zoom.
Other members of the state House and Senate took part in the hearing as well, but a majority of the time was spent listening to two panels of health care workers, mental health experts and others in related fields.
The point of the hearing was to discuss the patterns of under staffing, poor pay and occupational segregation, and to deliberate on solutions for safe staffing levels, lifting wages and protections for caregivers, workplace safety, union security and positively increasing patient health outcomes.
Brown used COVID ICU experiences to illustrate that a lot is asked of health care workers and that their voice needs to be heard, they need to be fairly compensated and have benefits and protections.
“I am going to paint a mental picture of what nurses’ work was like during the pandemic,” Brown said, later saying, “As a bedside nurse, I sent one patient to the ICU because his oxygen saturation was 70% and he was turning blue — that is not a joke. Another patient’s blood pressure was too low to pump blood to his whole body, putting his organs at risk of dying. Without the tools of the ICU — ventilators, and drugs to raise blood pressure and control heart rate—those patients would have died.”
She asked the panel to imagine they were working in a “COVID ICU”
“Simply entering patients’ rooms requires an entire set of protective gear — which many hospitals either didn’t have or rationed — because the patients are contagious and put nurses at risk,” she said, later adding “The patients aren’t allowed visitors so the nurse has to be a friend, sister, husband, chaplain. When patients are dying, nurses use iPads to allow families to say goodbye.”
She said clinical recommendations called for one ICU nurse for each COVID patient. However, the usual ICU standard is one nurse for every two patients.
“So imagine you show up at work and you have two COVID patients. Meanwhile, nurses are getting sick from COVID, others are simply quitting, and the hospital is overwhelmed, so now you show up at work and have three patients, then four patients, then five,” she said, later adding that “nurses working in COVID ICUs knew that some of their patients would die because they could not care properly for them.”
Brown said “patients come to hospitals for nursing care, but squeezing nurses, expecting them to do more with less, is a time-honored way for hospitals to improve their bottom line.”
She said a nursing shortage was predicted before the pandemic. The Bureau of Labor Statistics expects that almost 1.5 million registered nurse positions will need to be filled by 2029.
“If we do not fix our health care problems, nurses will quit and patients will die. Truth,” she said.
Health care and social assistance is the largest category of jobs in our country and are important to the people of Western Pennsylvania, according to Gabriel-Winant. Author of “The Next Shift: the Fall of Industry and the Rise of Healthcare in the Rust Belt.”
He said in Allegheny County, more than one in six people work in that field.
“If you drill down a level further, you’ll find that there are places where these numbers reach astonishing heights,” he said. “Here in Allegheny County, in McKeesport 26% of jobs are in health care and social assistance.”
He said 34% of jobs in Duquesne are related to health care or social assistance.
He said in terms of health care, those jobs range from doctors and nurses, to technicians, home-health aids, nursing assistants, dietary aides, environmental services workers and similar jobs.

To read the rest of the story, please see a copy of Thursday’s Mon Valley Independent, call 724-314-0035 to subscribe or subscribe to our online edition at http://monvalleyindependent.com.

Graduation day at PennWest California
Latest News, Main
December 15, 2025
Hannah Smith, an elementary education major from Cecil, celebrates with fellow graduates during PennWest California’s Fall 2025 commencement ceremony Saturday at the Convocation Center. See more photo...
BVA investigating social media threats
Latest News, Main
December 15, 2025
In response, police will have an increased presence today at Rostraver Elementary. By LADIMIR GARCIA and TAYLOR BROWN lgarcia@yourmvi.com tbrown@yourmvi.com Belle Vernon Area School District officials...
Up to 6 inches of snow blankets the Mon Valley
Latest News, Main
By TAYLOR BROWN, Senior Reporter 
December 15, 2025
The storm was followed by bitter cold, but a warmup is in the forecast for later this week. Snow from a weekend winter storm tapered off early Sunday morning, but not before dropping several inches ac...
Latest winners honored in Ideas 2 Enterprise program
Latest News, Main
By TAYLOR BROWN, Senior Reporter 
December 15, 2025
Hannah Widdifield of Simple String Studio won first-place honors and a $5,000 grant. Big ideas and small businesses were in the spotlight Thursday as local entrepreneurs gathered to celebrate the late...
Carnegie Free Library of McKeesport has new director
Around The Valley, Latest News, Main
December 15, 2025
Michael Chirichella wants people to feel at home whenever they visit the library. By COLETTE FUNCHES McKeesport Community Newsroom When visitors enter the doors of the Carnegie Free Library of McKeesp...
Elizabeth Township sets water shut-off procedure
Around The Valley, Latest News, Main
By SARAH PELLIS spellis@yourmvi.com 
December 15, 2025
It runs through March 31, covering non-payment issues for the winter. Elizabeth Township has approved a water shut-off procedure with Pennsylvania American Water for customers who don’t pay their bill...