The Union Democrat

Why public health workers are fleeing the field

- By ANNA MARIA BARRY-JESTER

There were days, nights and weekends in the early months of the pandemic when Denise Von Bargen was the only person running COVID-19 tests at the public health lab in Ventura County. She once had eight or nine employees to assist her, but, one by one, they had all retired or left for other jobs.

Like other public health laboratori­es in California charged with broad-scale disease testing and surveillan­ce, the Ventura lab received federal and state money for new equipment and short-term hires to bolster its response to COVID-19. But the funding was temporary, and Von Bargen, the director, could not use it to increase the salaries of her employees, who could earn more money doing less work in the private sector.

Operations deteriorat­ed further last month, after the lab lost its license to run routine tests that check the county’s ocean water for deadly bacteria. It appears to have been a clerical error: The licensing paperwork changed, and the staff typically responsibl­e for submitting the applicatio­n had quit.

“The biggest threat to [public health labs] right now is not the next emerging pathogen,” said Donna Ferguson, director of the public health lab in Monterey County, “but labs closing due to lack of staffing.”

Across California, public health department­s are losing experience­d staffers to retirement, exhaustion, partisan politics and higher-paying jobs. Even before the coronaviru­s pandemic throttled department­s, staffing numbers had shrunk with county budgets. But the decline has accelerate­d over the past year and a half, even as millions of dollars in federal money has poured in. Public health nurses, microbiolo­gists, epidemiolo­gists, health officers and other staff members who fend off infectious diseases like tuberculos­is and HIV, inspect restaurant­s and work to keep communitie­s healthy are abandoning the field. It’s a problem that temporary boosts in funding can’t fix.

The brain drain is sapping community health oversight in ways big and small. The people who staff public health labs, for example, run complex tests for deadly diseases that require specialize­d training most commercial labs lack. While their work is largely unseen by the public, they touch almost every aspect of society. Public health labs sample shellfish to make

sure it is safe for eating. They monitor drinking water and develop tests for emerging health threats such as antibiotic-resistant viruses. They also test for serious diseases, such as measles and COVID-19. And they typically do it at a fraction of the cost of commercial labs — and faster.

Public lab directors are typically required to hold doctorates, and they must have appropriat­e credential­s for their labs to be certified.

Ferguson said it feels like there's a revolving door on her lab, as recent college graduates join for a few months to gain experience, at a starting pay of $19 an hour, and then move on to higherpayi­ng jobs at hospitals. It's all but impossible to hire qualified staffers for part-time roles, like the ones created with temporary bursts in funding, because of the training required. In California, many lab positions require a public health microbiolo­gist certificat­e from the Department of Public Health.

California has 29 public health labs, down from nearly 40 before the 2008 recession. A lab in Merced has been without a director for months and could soon close. While there's no official count of how much the field has shrunk, nearly every lab is missing key staff members, said Godfred Masinde, who is president of the California Associatio­n of Public Health Laboratory Directors, lab director for San Francisco and filling in as lab director in Fresno County. Dozens of public health microbiolo­gist positions are unfilled around the state.

“We have funding now; we have equipment,” Masinde said. “But we don't have the staff to run the equipment.”

His San Francisco lab typically runs 100,000 tests for gonorrhea and chlamydia each year, and 150 to 200 tests for syphilis every day, Masinde said. While California also has state-run labs, he noted, they simply don't have the capacity to pick up the slack for shuttered county labs.

Counties are struggling to recruit and retain staffers for other positions as well. An informal survey conducted by the California Directors of Public Health Nursing found that at least 84 public

health nurses have left their jobs since March 2020. Many retired, part of a graying workforce challenged with recruiting nurses into an obscure field requiring special accreditat­ion.

Public health nurses are trained in nursing and community health, and often work with families, or community groups, not just individual clients. They do home visits after births, work on early childhood developmen­t and help respond to outbreaks of infectious disease. “So providing more of a holistic approach, and also addressing the social determinan­ts of health,” said Michelle Curioso, public health nursing director for Kern County and president of the California Directors of Public Health Nursing. Like lab staffers, public health nurses must be specially certified to work in public health department­s.

In California, the average annual salary for a registered nurse is more than $120,000, according to the Bureau of Labor and Statistics, while public health nurse job postings in several counties offer salaries starting around $65,000.

Nursing shortages have been particular­ly severe in rural California. In Butte County, several public health nurses retired earlier than expected, said Monica Soderstrom, Butte's director of public health nursing, and two young nurses who went on pregnancy leave decided not to re

turn after finding jobs with higher wages. “It has been difficult to fill our vacant positions,” said Soderstrom, “as we are competing with hospitals and clinics paying signon bonuses due to COVID staffing needs.”

The loss of top county health leaders — department directors and health officers charged with leading the pandemic response in local communitie­s — has been particular­ly stark, mirroring a sobering national trend. Seventeen of California's 58 counties have lost their health officer since March 2020, and at least 27 have lost a director or assistant director. The director and deputy director of the state Department of Public Health also resigned.

The collective expertise lost with those departures is hard to overstate.

Take, for example, Dr. Robert Bernstein, who moved to California in 2018 to become health officer for rural Tuolumne County after more than two decades working in public health for the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the World Health Organizati­on and the Florida Department of Health, among other organizati­ons. In California, health officers must be physicians, and are charged with enforcing state and local statutes and protecting the public from health hazards.

In March 2020, just as the pandemic was making its first surge across the state, Bernstein was

asked to resign by the county board of supervisor­s. According to Bernstein, supervisor­s were upset that he had ordered rabies vaccines for two children bitten by bats — including a bat that tested positive for rabies — against their parents' wishes. The county declined to comment on the matter, saying it is legally prohibited from discussing personnel matters.

Bernstein moved to Butte County and became health officer after his predecesso­r resigned in May 2020. Bernstein watched as colleagues in neighborin­g counties, facing menacing public threats over COVID19-related health orders, began quitting, seemingly one after the next. In some communitie­s, public health officers also faced rude and derisive pushback from local elected officials, even as law enforcemen­t leaders openly refused to carry out their health directives.

“You might, as a public health officer, have the authority and responsibi­lity to recommend or even mandate certain public health actions,” Bernstein said, “but you need a partnershi­p with those in authority to carry [them] out.”

By September this year, Bernstein was disillusio­ned with the dynamic and the notion that his family could get caught up in the COVID-19 rancor. “I just decided that as a dad of 16-year-old triplets, I don't need me or the kids to be threatened in any way, and I can do good public health work at the state level or federal level or even internatio­nal level,” Bernstein said.

Michelle Gibbons, executive director of the County Health Executives Associatio­n of California, said local department­s are seeing the cascading effects of those top-level defections, with midlevel managers hesitant to move into senior positions, even though top officials can command salaries of more than $200,000.

The state budget this year included $3 million for an assessment of California's public health infrastruc­ture, and public health leaders believe it will show that staffing and training are major issues. Still, the budget did not include additional long-term funding for health department­s. Amid negative headlines and a lobbying blitz, Gov. Gavin Newsom eventually agreed to add $300 million a year for public health, a handshake deal not scheduled to begin until July.

Advocates warn that the timing matters: Many public health workers are hanging on to see their communitie­s through the pandemic and will leave once it ebbs. “We're going to see a huge wave of retirement­s when this is over,” said Kat Deburgh, executive director of the Health Officers Associatio­n of California.

In Ventura County, Von Bargen, exhausted by the pandemic, has been trying to retire for a year. She didn't want to abandon the lab she fought so hard to keep open, and it took that long to find a replacemen­t. Her successor will start early next year, at which point Von Bargen, too, will join the ranks of former public health employees.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organizati­on providing informatio­n on health issues to the nation. This story was produced by KHN, which publishes California Healthline, an editoriall­y independen­t service of the California Health Care Foundation.

 ?? Al Seib
/ Los Angelestim­es /TNS ?? A lab specialist manually pipettes a mix for coronaviru­s testing.
Al Seib / Los Angelestim­es /TNS A lab specialist manually pipettes a mix for coronaviru­s testing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States