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New numbers highlight the shortage of school-based mental health professionals in New Mexico. The University of New Mexico鈥檚 Project ECHO has launched a program seeking to target these gaps by mentoring those working directly with kids.
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A new executive director for Healthcare Services has taken the reins at the Bernalillo County Metropolitan Detention Center, and she鈥檒l be taking on huge budget overages when it comes to inmate health care. Using traveling nurses to cover inmates' needs is costing the jail millions of dollars.
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New Mexico has been facing a shortage of thousands of health care workers for years, and during a presentation to lawmakers last week, the Legislative Finance Committee said it will be even worse five years from now.
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Touro University, a New York based non-profit, brought its dental training program to New Mexico this year, making it the first in the state. It is now opening a clinic aimed at alleviating the state鈥檚 professional shortage while providing affordable care.
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Waiting months for health care appointments is a common experience for New Mexicans, in part because of a lacking health care workforce. On this week鈥檚 Let鈥檚 Talk New Mexico, we鈥檒l discuss plans to recruit and retain workers to boost access to quality healthcare.
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New Mexico鈥檚 health care staffing shortage continues to worsen, with a recent report noting nearly all counties say this is their top occupational need. During a recent hearing of the Legislative Health and Humans Services Committee, an official with Presbyterian Medical Services spoke about the impacts of these shortages and offered recommendations to lawmakers to recruit and retain more workers.
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The United States has the highest rate of maternal mortality among wealthy nations. And New Mexico has nearly double the national rate of pregnancy-related mortality. Experts told lawmakers this week that this is an urgent issue.
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New Mexico is experiencing a statewide doctor shortage, losing about 30% of our primary care physicians in the last four years. Resident physicians at the University of New Mexico represented by the Committee of Interns and Residents (CIRSEIU) are seeing the impact and will be holding a 鈥渦nity break鈥 event Wednesday to demand better pay and benefits after five months of negotiations that have gone nowhere.
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While the national nursing shortage may be easing, vacancies still haven鈥檛 returned to pre-pandemic numbers, according to a study from Nursing Solutions Inc. In New Mexico, the most recent data showed 9,000 RN job postings in the state as of last summer. The University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center has announced it鈥檚 set to receive millions in federal funds to address the gap, particularly in rural areas.
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New Mexico has a long history of health disparities, particularly in rural areas and among communities of color. Doulas have helped fill those gaps by providing physical and emotional support during pregnancy, childbirth and the postpartum period. But with New Mexico hospitals declaring crisis standards of care due to an uptick in COVID-19 cases, giving birth has gotten more complicated. That鈥檚 according to Melissa Lopez, executive director of the Doula Association of Las Cruces.