- PDS Health opens practices in California, Virginia
- OHSU opens $650M cancer pavilion
- Lakeland Regional Health plans 2 freestanding EDs
- Supreme Court backs challenge to Colorado conversion therapy ban
- Virginia behavioral health hospital names president
- After Man’s Death Following Insurance Denials, West Virginia Tackles Prior Authorization
- FTC: Evidence too strong to toss USAP antitrust case
- Average tuition for 12 best dental schools in the US
- Lifepoint Health to acquire 8 ScionHealth hospitals
- The Hospitals Winning on LOS Have Better Technology – and They Know How to Use It.
- New York medical society demands physician privileges be protected in Maimonides merger
- 4 hospital, health system layoffs in March
- Texas to lead ibogaine research after pharma proposals fall short
- Advocate plans largest drone delivery network and 2 more supply chain updates
- AI scribes linked to time savings at 5 health systems
- New Hampshire ASC 1st in US to earn new accreditation
- Amgen drug under FDA review in wake of 8 deaths
- Hennepin Healthcare warns of closure without legislative funding
- Hennepin Healthcare warns of closure without legislative funding
- Visa renewal delays sideline physicians at US hospitals
- BayCare residency program size doubles on Match Day gains
- Ohio GI practice acquired
- Health systems rethink innovation
- 8 revenue cycle headlines to know from March
- Prisma Health plans ASC in Tennessee
- Bill takes aim at ASC, HOPD payment gap
- Ensemble, Cohere building first RCM-native LLM
- Honey Almond Cream Cheese, Sold at Einstein Bros. Bagels, Recalled Due To Undeclared Nuts
- Trump Supports Surgeon General Pick Despite Senate Concerns
- Tennessee orthopedic practice closes abruptly
- 4 health systems back in the black in 2025
- ‘Our stockholders are the members of our community’: Inside Carilion Clinic’s mission-driven margin strategy
- Lilly answers Novo's GLP-1 pill with highly anticipated FDA nod for Foundayo
- Supreme Court Blocks Colorado Limits on Therapy for LGBTQ Minors
- Antidepressant Might Help Long COVID Fatigue, Study Says
- Home-Delivered Groceries Boost Heart Health In Food Deserts, Study Says
- Nicotine E-Cigarettes Help Smokers Quit, Review Concludes
- Kinesio Taping’s Benefits in Doubt, Major Evidence Review Finds
- High Sodium Intake May Trigger New Heart Failure
- Study Shows BMI Often Gets Your Weight Category Wrong
- Clinicians are burnt out. Peer support can help
- Novo's Wegovy nets cardio nod from UK cost gatekeeper, adding 1M+ eligible patients
- Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act Darkens Outlook for Government-Backed Clinics
- Readers Sound Off on Wage Garnishment, Work Requirements, and More
- CVS Health opens pharmacy-only locations as it rightsizes store footprint
- How Rural Health Systems Are Advancing Cardiac Imaging
- How Rural Health Systems Are Advancing Cardiac Imaging
- Beyond Reimbursement: Why Market Access is MedTech’s Strategic North Star
- Beyond Reimbursement: Why Market Access is MedTech’s Strategic North Star
- Evotec hires exec with AI experience to lead rebooted commercial team
- The Human Side of AI Medical Devices: Why Safety Depends on Design, Not Just Algorithms
- The Human Side of AI Medical Devices: Why Safety Depends on Design, Not Just Algorithms
- Whoop raises $575M series G, Abbott comes on board amid hiring spree
- True ROI of health tech, according to finance leaders
- ‘There isn't as much meat left to cut’: Biopharma layoffs maintain slowdown in Q1
- Where 6 specialty DSOs stand in 2026
- 16 new ASCs in March
- Intermountain joins national trauma, grief network
- Practice closures, new dental schools, DLRs & more: 6 dental updates in New York
- Workforce, patient care, private equity & more: 5 statistics scaring dentists
- American Society of Addiction Medicine updates youth treatment standards
- The shifting oral surgery landscape
- Moody’s upgrades UK King’s Daughters’ credit rating
- Private equity in dentistry has gotten smarter
- 7 DSO leadership changes to know
- University Hospitals swings from loss to 2.6% margin in 2025
- Mark Cuban backs bill to break up vertically integrated insurers
- Lawmakers introduce child suicide prevention bill
- Bipartisan bill introduced to stabilize physicians' year-to-year pay changes
- Dental lab group receives private equity investment
- Dental Care Alliance appoints chief revenue officer
- UnitedHealthcare launches Avery, a generative AI companion for members
- 14 behavioral health executive moves to know
- Missouri agencies warn of rising nitazene threat
- Only 44% of SUD treatment facilities accept older patients on Medicare: HHS report
- 7 state behavioral health policy updates
- Republicans eye further healthcare cuts: Report
- Uninsured patients drive nearly 40% of healthcare collections: Cedar survey
- FDA flags serious liver injury cases, 8 deaths with ‘reasonable’ link to Amgen's Tavneos
- Novo Nordisk cuts 400 roles at troubled Bloomington site
- Former U.S. Surgeon General Challenges Trump Nominee
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- HHS urges hospitals to align patient menus with updated dietary guidance
- Hartford HealthCare, K Health launch PatientGPT, new AI tool to help patients find health information
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- Biogen, eyeing swift commercial tailwind, ponies up $5.6B for Apellis and its 2 approved meds
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From the Michigan Health Council 2025 Workforce Index:
"Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs) are the “unhealthiest” Medical Technician profession. They have the highest turnover rate among Technician occupations at 42 percent and the lowest Wage rank with only 19.5 percent growth from 2013 to 2023. EMTs are the only type of Medical Technician that makes less than Michigan’s median hourly wage ($17.34 vs. $22.57), and Paramedics, despite having the highest Wage rank of the Medical Technician occupations, barely earn more than Michigan’s median hourly wage ($22.98 vs. $22.57)."
The resultant Emergency Medical Services (EMS) shortages are most acute in rural areas of Michigan:
https://www.mhc.org/_files/ugd/24abcc_06a02541eebb4735b526ea5d9af2e294.pdf
Providers face ‘extreme shortage’ of paramedics, EMTs in rural Michigan
By Eli Newman - March 27, 2026
- Michigan’s EMS agencies face a staffing crisis driven by low wages, high burnout and a training pipeline that can’t keep pace with vacancies
- Industry experts estimate more than 500 vacancies in the state
- Investment in training programs varies with economic conditions, an expert says
Paramedics and emergency medical technicians, or EMTs, face a harsh reality in Michigan — shrinking revenue has left emergency medical service agencies grappling with multiple financial issues at once, with staffing being their top expense.
Despite the state investing millions of dollars in grants to train workers, staff shortages that began at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic continue to strain EMS agencies, especially in rural communities.
“The fact that they exist is only due to the need and the willingness of people to get involved in this line of work,” said state Rep. Dave Prestin, R-Cedar River, who volunteers as a paramedic on a rescue squad that covers 1,000 square miles of the Upper Peninsula.
EMS is not considered an “essential” service in Michigan, just like most of the country, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Without the designation, funding becomes discretionary — local governments have the option whether or not they want to fund their ambulances.
The state has more than 29,000 EMS providers working across nearly 800 life support agencies statewide, according to the Michigan Association of Ambulance Services. Industry experts say there are more than 500 vacancies for paramedics and EMTs.
Low wages, high turnover
The field is notorious for burnout. Paramedics and EMTs regularly handle the state’s worst medical traumas and receive wages similar to fast-food workers.
EMTs are considered to be in the “unhealthiest” medical technician profession in the state, by the Michigan Health Council, a health care research nonprofit — below dental hygienists, surgical technologists and occupational therapy assistants. The ranking reflects the profession’s low wages and high turnover rate.
The health council said paramedics, who receive more advanced training than EMTs and are ranked as the most paid medical technician, “barely” earn more than Michigan’s median hourly wage.
Stress is cited as a primary reason for leaving the profession for both EMTs and paramedics. First responders are at higher risk than the general population for suicide.
Time and energy
The training of EMTs and paramedics is tied to the boom and bust cycle of the economy, according to Angela Madden, executive director of the Michigan Association of Ambulance Services.
Investment in education goes up when the “economy tumbles,” she said, but in a boon, people are more likely to take an hourly job with decent pay that forgoes the extra effort — factory and restaurant workers can begin working immediately without spending “money and time and energy” training to be a first responder.
EMS agency leaders describe a steady attrition rate of paramedics and EMTs quitting for better pay, pursuing careers in nursing or as other health care professionals, if not leaving the field altogether.
The state had roughly 4,700 employed EMTs and 3,250 employed paramedics in 2024, according to a Michigan Health Council workforce index.
Going to work
Tri-Hospital EMS in St. Clair County has worked to address a lack of first responders in its communities by integrating its own in-house training through the support of state grants and local millages. The scholarship program covers tuition and provides a wage for enrollees to come to class.
Without outside support, those seeking careers in EMS are on their own to fund their education and find jobs.
EMTs require several weeks of training. Paramedics can take anywhere from 10 to 14 months to get licensed and state lawmakers have recently worked to lower the cost for accreditation exams. Courses can cost thousands of dollars.
Cummings said he learned that people are not willing to go through that first responder training “just for the sake of going to school” — they want clear outcomes.
“If you take one of our programs, you’re pretty much in line to be hired by us and work in the field and actually earn an income,” he said.
While Tri-Hospital EMS has developed a sustainable model of recruitment and retention in St. Clair County, Cummings said other agencies elsewhere in the state are still reeling from the ongoing staff vacancies that began in the years after the pandemic.
“There’s still a pretty extreme shortage of paramedics across the state of Michigan, in particular in the rural areas,” he said. “Those areas lack sufficient training programs in which to produce those paramedics. That’s one of the reasons why there’s such a shortage in the rural market.”
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