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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

The State of the US Governmental Public Health Workforce, 2014–2017

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TLDR
Five major thematic areas are explored: workforce diversity in a changing demographic environment; challenges of an aging workforce, including impending retirements and the need for succession planning; workers' salaries and challenges of recruiting new staff; the growth of undergraduate public health education and what this means for the future public health workforce; and workers' awareness and perceptions of national trends in the field.
Abstract
Public health workforce development efforts during the past 50 years have evolved from a focus on enumerating workers to comprehensive strategies that address workforce size and composition, training, recruitment and retention, effectiveness, and expected competencies in public health practice. We provide new perspectives on the public health workforce, using data from the Public Health Workforce Interests and Needs Survey, the largest nationally representative survey of the governmental public health workforce in the United States. Five major thematic areas are explored: workforce diversity in a changing demographic environment; challenges of an aging workforce, including impending retirements and the need for succession planning; workers' salaries and challenges of recruiting new staff; the growth of undergraduate public health education and what this means for the future public health workforce; and workers' awareness and perceptions of national trends in the field. We discussed implications for policy and practice.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Global Health Workforce Labor Market Projections for 2030

TL;DR: In many low-income countries, demand may stay below projected supply, leading to the paradoxical phenomenon of unemployed (“surplus”) health workers in those countries facing acute “needs-based” shortages.
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Public Health 3.0: A Call to Action for Public Health to Meet the Challenges of the 21st Century.

TL;DR: The key findings from listening sessions and recommendations to achieve Public Health 3.0 are summarized.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Public Health Workforce Interests and Needs Survey: The First National Survey of State Health Agency Employees.

TL;DR: This article describes a nationally representative survey of central office employees at state health agencies to characterize key components of the public health workforce.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterizing the growth of the undergraduate public health major: U.S., 1992-2012.

TL;DR: Prior to 2014, ASPPH intermittently collected undergraduate data from its CEPH-accredited member institutions and only recently added undergraduate data to its annual data collection, to improve the understanding of trends in public health undergraduate training during the past two decades.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enumeration of the Governmental Public Health Workforce, 2014

TL;DR: Improvement of data sources and development of a standardized study methodology is needed for continuous monitoring of public health workforce size and composition and using multiple data sources potentially improves accuracy of estimates but also adds methodologic complexity.
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