Financial Insecurity Common Among Frontline Healthcare Workers During COVID-19

Many frontline healthcare workers in the United States experienced food insecurity and other significant financial challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to a recent study led by UNC Greensboro (UNCG) researcher Mathieu Despard and published in Compensation & Benefits Review.

Despard said he and his collaborators – Dr. Haotian Zheng and Dr. Sophia Fox-Dichter at Washington University in St. Louis – were surprised by their findings, especially their discovery that a higher salary did not necessarily shield a healthcare worker from struggling to make ends meet.

“You can be a frontline healthcare worker with a college degree and making decent money within healthcare, but that does not mean that you’re not going to have problems like trouble paying your rent,” Despard said.

Among 2,321 frontline healthcare workers, whose incomes ranged from less than $25k to more than $75k, one-third experienced food insecurity, one-fifth had difficulty paying their bills and medical care hardship, and one-quarter experienced housing hardship.

Despard said multi-pronged pressures contribute to healthcare workers’ financial difficulties across salary ranges. “Income only tells part of the story,” he says. “We’re talking about people who may be struggling with student debt, childcare, and unaffordable housing.”

The researchers also investigated an often-overlooked factor in assessments of financial wellbeing: workers’ access to benefits.

“When we have this conversation about a living wage, we tend to think in terms of pay,” Despard says. “We tend not to think in terms of the number and quality of benefits, yet benefits are 31% of total compensation.”

The researchers examined whether access to a variety of benefits – including health and dental insurance, paid time off, and retirement – were related to nine different measures of financial insecurity.

Their results indicate that frontline healthcare workers’ access to benefits is strongly related to financial insecurity, with workers with less access to benefits having higher levels of financial insecurity, even when controlling for income.

The relationship between benefits and financial insecurity was strongest among healthcare workers without a college degree who work in private duty settings, such as home health aides.

Despard said these findings have key applications for both employers and employees. By providing ample benefits, employers can help mitigate healthcare workers’ financial insecurity. Healthcare workers on the job market can also heed these findings by closely considering not only a job’s salary but also the benefits available.

“The takeaway is workers need to pay attention to benefits, not just pay,” Despard said. “But employers need to do a much, much better job of making all of that information more transparent and easier to understand.”

Source: UNC Greensboro