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Health Care Sees Job Gains Despite Losses Elsewhere

Hospitals and physician offices have added 47,100 workers in 2009. In February alone, preliminary seasonally adjusted data show that hospitals added about 6,800 workers.

  • March 11, 2009
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Health care continued to add jobs in February while the rest of the American job market remained in a free fall.

The overall unemployment rate hit its highest level in nearly three decades, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported, as a rise in the rate of job losses so far this year sent the national unemployment rate to 8.1 percent. The last time such a deep recession hit was in 1982, when unemployment peaked at 10.8 percent.

As has been true since the current recession began, health care was a rare source of good news. Hospitals and physician offices have added 47,100 workers in 2009. In February alone, preliminary seasonally adjusted data show that hospitals added about 6,800 workers, a one-month increase of 0.1 percent, bringing total hospital employment to about 4.7 million. For the one-year period that ended in February, hospitals added 131,800 workers, a 2.9 percent increase. That compares with a 2.7 percent increase in the year-ago period.

Physician offices added 6,300 workers last month, a 0.3 percent boost that left total employment at 2.3 million people.

Filed by Joe Carlson of Modern Healthcare, a sister publication of Workforce Management. To comment, e-mail editors@workforce.com.

Workforce Management’s online news feed is now available via Twitter.

 

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