The US Healthcare Workforce: Roles, Shortages, and Trends

The US healthcare workforce is one of the largest employment sectors in the country — and one of the most strained. Shortages in primary care, nursing, and behavioral health are reshaping how and where Americans receive treatment. This page maps the major roles within that workforce, the mechanisms driving shortfalls, and the structural decisions that determine who provides care in which settings.

Definition and scope

The US healthcare workforce encompasses every licensed, certified, or credentialed professional involved in delivering, coordinating, or supporting clinical care. That includes physicians (roughly 1 million active in the US, per the Association of American Medical Colleges), registered nurses (the single largest clinical occupation at approximately 3.1 million, per the Bureau of Labor Statistics), and a broad spectrum of allied health professionals — physical therapists, radiologic technologists, respiratory therapists, medical laboratory scientists, and more.

Beyond clinical roles, the workforce includes pharmacists, dentists, optometrists, mental health counselors, social workers, and community health workers who operate at the intersection of clinical and social care. Administrative and health information staff are also counted in broader workforce analyses, though the acute shortage crisis centers on direct-care providers.

The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) maintains the federal framework for tracking and designating Health Professional Shortage Areas (HPSAs), which are geographic, population, or facility-based designations indicating insufficient provider supply relative to need. As of 2024, HRSA reported over 7,200 primary care HPSAs across the United States — a number that puts the scale of maldistribution into sharp relief. It's not simply that there aren't enough clinicians; it's that the clinicians who exist are concentrated in ways that leave rural and low-income communities structurally underserved. For more on that geographic dimension, rural healthcare challenges and healthcare access and equity detail the downstream consequences.

How it works

Healthcare workforce supply flows through a pipeline that begins with professional education, passes through licensure, and ends in practice settings shaped by employer demand, geography, and payment incentives.

Medical education in the US runs on a federally subsidized residency system — Medicare funds graduate medical education (GME) at a statutory cap of approximately 120,000 residency positions, a ceiling that has not been substantially raised since the Balanced Budget Act of 1997 (CMS Graduate Medical Education). That cap functions as a chokepoint: medical schools have expanded enrollment, but the number of residency slots available has not kept pace, meaning some US medical graduates compete unsuccessfully for positions each year.

Nursing pipelines operate differently. Registered nurses enter practice with either an Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN, typically 2 years) or a Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN, 4 years). The two pathways produce nurses with similar entry-level licensure but different long-term career trajectories. The American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) has documented persistent nursing school faculty shortages as a primary bottleneck — nursing programs turned away over 91,000 qualified applicants in 2021 not for lack of demand, but for lack of faculty and clinical training sites.

Allied health professionals follow occupation-specific accreditation and licensure pathways, most regulated at the state level, creating a patchwork of interstate practice restrictions that slows workforce mobility.

Common scenarios

The shortage plays out differently across care settings:

  1. Rural primary care gaps — A physician retiring from a small-town practice often leaves a panel of 2,000+ patients without a replacement. Nurse practitioners and physician assistants increasingly fill these roles under collaborative practice agreements, though state scope-of-practice laws vary significantly in how much independent authority they grant.

  2. Hospital nursing ratios — Acute care hospitals routinely operate with nurse-to-patient ratios above evidence-based recommendations during peak demand. California is the only state with a statutory minimum nurse-to-patient ratio law (1:5 in medical-surgical units), a contrast that has become a reference point in national policy debates.

  3. Behavioral health deserts — The National Council for Mental Wellbeing found that 150 million Americans live in mental health professional shortage areas — a number that sits alongside the broader coverage gaps described in mental health services overview.

  4. Telehealth as a partial bridgeTelehealth and virtual care expanded significantly during and after the COVID-19 public health emergency, offering some mitigation for geographic maldistribution, particularly in behavioral health. It doesn't resolve the underlying supply problem, but it does extend the effective reach of available providers.

Decision boundaries

Not every provider can practice everywhere, and not every role is interchangeable. The key boundaries:

Understanding the workforce requires understanding the system that employs it. The home page provides an orientation to how these workforce dynamics connect to broader questions of coverage, cost, and care delivery.

References