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Kansas

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Background

State Statistics
(see below for key to abbreviations)



PC/HC Aide = Personal Care/Home Care Aide
HHA = Home Health Aide
CNA = Certified Nursing Assistant -- These charts include numbers for the BLS occupational group "nursing aides, orderlies and attendants."
Avg DCW = Average direct-care worker wages -- calculated as a weighted median
United States and state abbreviations are used (ex: VT = Vermont)

In 2000 356,229 (13.3%) of Kansas' 2,688,418 citizens were aged 65 or older, a 4% increase since 1990. The US Census estimates that by 2030 Kansas' elder population will increase by 66.5%. By that year the traditional caregiving workforce (women aged 25 to 44) will decrease by 9.2%.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that in 2004 36,250 nursing assistants, home health aides, and personal care/home care aides worked in Kansas earning an average of $9.17 an hour. These numbers do not include many direct-care workers who are self-employed.

According to a survey by the American Healthcare Association (AHCA) in 2002 the statewide vacancy rate for Kansas CNAs was 7.8% and the turnover rate was 95.6%. According to the Kansas Association of Homes and Services for the Aging (KAHSA) the turonover rate in 2002 for nurse aides was over 90%. KAHSA members have repeatedly cited nurse aide turnover as a the most significant threat to quality care. It is anticipated that the state's already high rates of direct-care worker vacancies and turnover will get worse as the population continues to age, and the 'care gap' between those needing care and those available to care for them continues to widen.

Sources:

1) The 65 years and over population: 2000, Census 2000 Brief
2)American Health Care Association, 2003 Results of the 2002 AHCA survey of nursing staff vacancy and turnover in nursing homes
3) Kansas Association of Homes and Services for the Aging and Kansas Health Care Association, 2002 Wage and Salary Survey Report for the Kansas Nursing Facility Industry.
4)Institute for the Future of Aging Services (IFAS)and Kansas Association of Homes and Services for the Aging (KAHSA), 2003 Keeping Frontline workers in long-term care: Research results of an intervention



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