The number of healthcare jobs in Pennsylvania has grown in the last 20 years, driven by an increase in jobs in the ambulatory surgery and outpatient settings, according to a Times-Tribune report.
Since 1990, the number of jobs at hospitals in the region has fallen about 12.5 percent, even as the number of overall jobs in the healthcare industry has grown more than 36 percent. According to the report, the number of jobs in outpatient settings and surgery centers has increased as hospital jobs decline.
Ten years ago, there were around 60 surgery centers in Pennsylvania, according to the report. By 2010, there were more than 260. A spokeswoman from Geisinger Community Medical Center said advances in medicine are moving more procedures into the outpatient setting, naturally creating the need for more workers.
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Since 1990, the number of jobs at hospitals in the region has fallen about 12.5 percent, even as the number of overall jobs in the healthcare industry has grown more than 36 percent. According to the report, the number of jobs in outpatient settings and surgery centers has increased as hospital jobs decline.
Ten years ago, there were around 60 surgery centers in Pennsylvania, according to the report. By 2010, there were more than 260. A spokeswoman from Geisinger Community Medical Center said advances in medicine are moving more procedures into the outpatient setting, naturally creating the need for more workers.
Related Articles on Surgery Centers:
5 Ways to Make Surgery Centers Better
20 New Statistics on Surgery Center Staffing Costs
How to Turn Around an ASC Through Internal and External Physician Recruitment