Although this
line of work probably interests you because of its humanitarian
and service aspects, the industry as a whole—hospitals,
nursing homes, home health care, specialized clinics, and
nontraditional options such as homeopathic treatment—is
all business these days. That said, the business of health
care is booming. In 2002, it’s expected that the U.S. will
spend a whopping $1.37 trillion on health care—almost 14
percent of the gross domestic product.
The health care industry provides diagnostic, healing, rehabilitation,
and prevention services for the injured, ailing, incapacitated,
and disabled. The individual physician is its first line
of contact with consumers. However, the health care organization—the
hospital or health management organization (HMO)—is the
conduit of insurance payments, which form the preponderance
of the industry's, and the physician's, revenues. The lion's
share of these revenues comes from employee health insurance
plans, Medicare (health insurance for Americans over the
age of 65), and Medicaid (health insurance for Americans
on welfare). Health care organizations, except for county
hospitals, are usually run for profit. This creates tension
between doctors who want to prescribe expensive treatments
and diagnostic tests and health care organizations, which
want to cut costs.
There are an abundance of opportunities for people interested
in health care—whether or not you have an MD (or even a
bachelor's degree). As of December 2001, more than ten million
people nationwide worked in the health care service industry.
That number will only rise as people are living longer and
needing more preventative and long-term care. The demand
for health care workers is expected to grow faster than
the average rate of increase for all other occupations until
2010. Statistics indicate a growing need for home care aides,
registered nurses, physician assistants, nurse practitioners,
physical therapists, nontraditional health aides, and physicians.
Not to mention all of the technical and administrative jobs
that are in high demand as hospitals focus their energies
on efficient management and profitability.
Trends
Cost Tensions
There are some major tensions in the industry between forces
that want to lower costs and forces that have the effect
of raising costs. On the one hand, payers (primarily insurance
companies, HMOs, and the government) have reduced their
reimbursements for various medical services, and health
care providers have become much more careful about disbursing
services. On the other hand, there are new drugs and new
procedures that can help patients like never before, political
pressures to treat patients better via better medical care
and patient privacy, and a tremendous labor shortage (primarily
of nurses and medical technicians), which health care organizations
are trying to address—all of which costs money. In addition,
an aging Baby Boomer population is making for greater demand
than ever for quality medical care. Managing these tensions
is a key issue for the industry these days.
Cardiac
Care
One of the areas of the industry with the most impressive
advances in recent years has been cardiac care. Advances
in products like defibrillators and artificial hearts have
made cardiac care more effective than ever before. Companies
like ZOLL Medical, Cardiac Science, ABIOMED, and World Heart
are among those that focus on making these kinds of devices.
How
It Breaks Down
Hospitals
Despite the increased outsourcing of medical records, housekeeping,
lab testing, and clinical services like orthopedics and
radiology, hospitals are still the biggest employers in
the health care industry. The huge networks such as HCA
and Tenet need a steady supply of doctors, nurses, administrators,
medical technicians, therapists, and other support staff.
In areas where competition from HMOs is mounting and cost
cutting is a priority, former staff may move outside the
immediate confines of a hospital. However, close and important
links remain—particularly for any type of surgery or specialized
treatment like chemotherapy.
HMOs
and PPOs
Health maintenance organizations and preferred provider
organizations are hybrids between a hospital and an insurance
company. Each type of managed care plan covers primary care
visits, preventative services, and copayments for prescription
drugs, while only PPOs allow the enrollee to choose his
or her physician (HMOs maintain a list of plan-approved
doctors). Some of the largest organizations actually have
their own medical staffs and facilities at which they treat
patients; smaller ones may just access networks of private
providers and hospitals. Competition is fierce in this arena—mergers,
acquisitions, and internal strife often destabilize the
job market. Coventry, Humana, Harvard Pilgrim Health Care,
Group Health Cooperative, and Pacificare (one of the leading
Medicare HMOs) are a few of the better-known players.
Specialty Providers
As hospitals have attempted to cut costs, they have turned
to firms that can provide specialized services at rock-bottom
prices. These include everything from nursing homes (Beverly
Enterprises) to home infusion therapy providers (Apria Healthcare)
to diabetes treatment providers (American Healthways). Clinics
that focus on special treatments such as chemotherapy, MRIs,
and other scanning techniques, and physical therapy for
the handicapped are also proliferating. Most are small and
locally run, but Gambro and Fresenius Medical Care are two
enormous service companies that focus on this type of care;
more will undoubtedly emerge as their popularity increases.
Home Care
Advances in technology have done much to improve efficiency
and reduce costs for both patients and home care staff.
Today, home care nurses and aides can administer complex
treatments, previously only available in hospitals or clinics,
to the elderly and severely disabled in their own homes.
And because almost all hospitals and HMOs now release patients
before they are self-sufficient, home care is often the
most viable choice. Most jobs in this sector don't require
much training (they are closely supervised by an RN, NP,
or physician), just deep reserves of patience and kindness.
But the pay is low—often under $10 an hour—and the work
is arduous. The rewards? Hours are extremely flexible, and
there is plenty of personal contact with clients.
Job
Prospects
There are several types of health care professionals
requiring varying levels of education and training. Registered
nurses (RNs) are trained at the undergraduate level, while
nurse practitioners (NPs) have gone on to specialize at
the master's level within the nursing field. Physician assistants
(PAs) are licensed to practice medicine with physician supervision.
Doctors of osteopathy and medical doctors both complete
four years of post-graduate work to earn the titles of DO
and MD, respectively, as well as the right to prescribe
medicine and perform surgery.
Some of the biggest growth opportunities are expected for
personal and home care aides, home health aides and nurses,
and physical therapists and their assistants. To qualify
for some positions (including doctor, nurse, tech, and others),
you need technical training, and to land a job you often
need a strong network in a given area and practical experience
in the industry.
Vacancy rates for RNs, pharmacists, and radiological technicians
continue to rise, and employers are looking at ways to attract
people to these in-demand professions by offering signing
bonuses, tuition reimbursement or loan repayment, flexible
scheduling, and incentives for voluntary overtime shifts.
But even with these improvements, it takes considerable
time to train and educate new nurses, so if you’re looking
for a job now, you have some serious leverage.
The HMO segment offers jobs in management as well as medicine—particularly
if you understand IT and data system development. As a job
seeker, you should know that HMOs have been the catalyst
for many of the efficient business practices imposed on
all aspects of health care in recent years, and technical
and administrative support are in high demand as the health
care industry evolves in a competitive market. Health care
IT is a steadily growing sector, due to the industry's relative
lack of IT investment thus far.