For years, headlines have focused on how expensive healthcare is in the United States. But a recent analysis in JAMA Internal Medicine reveals something even more troubling: the financial strain of healthcare isn’t just a one-time shock for a few unlucky families it’s a long-term burden that most Americans are likely to face at some point in their lives.
For international nurses exploring U.S. nursing jobs or employers recruiting globally, this has big implications. Rising healthcare costs, delayed care, and worsening health outcomes all intersect with one central issue: the need for a stronger, more stable nursing workforce.
At NurseContact a digital marketplace that matches international nurses with U.S. healthcare employers and simplifies the hiring and immigration process we closely follow trends that shape the U.S. healthcare system. Understanding these trends can help both nurses and employers make smarter, more strategic decisions.
Researchers from Harvard Medical School, Hunter College (CUNY), and Public Citizen’s Health Research Group analyzed data from the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey between 2018 and 2022. They followed 12,645 U.S. adults and looked at several indicators of financial strain caused by healthcare.
They focused on three key measures:
If an individual experienced any one of these high costs, catastrophic expenses, or skipping care they were considered to have encountered financial strain from healthcare.
Over a four-year period, 26.7% of adults reported either a significant cost burden or having to skip care because of cost. That’s more than one in four adults.
Certain groups were at higher risk, including people who:
One especially striking finding: among the 2.3% of participants who died during the study, more than half (53.2%) had experienced financial strain from healthcare in the one to four years before their death.
Dr. Adam Gaffney, a critical care physician and assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, summarized it clearly: healthcare affordability isn’t a single event it’s a chronic condition that builds over time and eventually touches many Americans.
The study underscores a vicious cycle that nurses see every day at the bedside:
As Dr. Gaffney noted, “High medical costs don’t just devastate finances, they force people to skip care which often further worsens their health.”
For nurses working in the U.S. and for international nurses considering U.S. hospital jobs this reality shapes clinical practice, discharge planning, and patient education. Nurses are the ones reassuring worried families, helping patients choose affordable options, and recognizing when cost fears are causing non-adherence to treatment.
The financial strain facing patients is only one side of the story. The other side is how the system responds. When patients are sicker and more complex by the time they reach care, the demand for skilled nursing increases.
This is happening in a workforce context where U.S. hospitals, long-term care facilities, and community health centers are already grappling with:
Internationally educated nurses are playing a crucial role in closing these gaps. Many U.S. employers are actively seeking:
This is where NurseContact comes in.
NurseContact is a digital marketplace designed specifically to match international nurses with U.S. healthcare employers that need their skills.
We focus on:
For international nurses, this means:
For U.S. employers, this means:
You might be wondering: what does patient financial stress have to do with international nurse recruitment?
They’re more connected than they appear.
As patients skip preventive care and show up sicker, healthcare delivery requires:
Nurses are central to:
This increased demand strains the existing U.S. nursing workforce especially in units that care for medically complex, multi-morbid patients. As a result, many employers are turning to international nurse recruitment platforms like NurseContact to stabilize staffing and maintain quality of care.
The authors of the study were transparent about some limitations, including:
Despite these limitations, the research adds to a growing body of evidence: healthcare costs in the U.S. are not only high they’re persistently undermining both financial security and health outcomes.
As this pressure continues, the need for a resilient, well-staffed nursing workforce will only grow. That includes not only domestic RNs but also international nurses who bring diverse experience, cultural competence, and a strong commitment to patient care.
Whether you’re an international nurse or a U.S. healthcare employer, this environment presents both challenges and opportunities.
If you’re an international nurse:
If you’re a U.S. employer:
The new analysis on healthcare financial strain is a reminder that U.S. patients are under intense pressure financially and medically. As people delay care due to cost, the system needs more nurses, not fewer.
NurseContact is committed to bridging this gap by:
If you’re an international nurse looking for U.S. opportunities, or a U.S. employer seeking to strengthen your staffing with global talent, NurseContact is here to help.
Learn more about how NurseContact connects international nurses with U.S. employers and streamlines the hiring process.
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