In Florida's hospitals, more than 25% of workers are immigrants
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Florida has one of the highest populations of immigrants working in hospitals, according to census data analyzed by KFF.
Why it matters: The health care industry is facing a double challenge — a White House immigration crackdown that could translate to worker shortages, and the "big, beautiful bill," which pulls back federal health care spending.
- Meanwhile, an aging population will require more care.
The big picture: The nation's hospitals rely heavily on an immigrant workforce — in some states, more than a quarter of hospital workers are either naturalized citizens or noncitizen immigrants, data show.
Zoom in: In Florida, nearly 27% of hospital workers are immigrants — only behind California (32%), New York (29%) and New Jersey (29%).
- Nationwide, 16% of hospital workers are immigrants — roughly in line with the share of the workforce that's foreign-born.
Between the lines: There are already shortages of doctors in certain areas and within certain specialities, as well as an overall workforce shortage. Reducing the number of immigrants in the U.S. could make that worse.
- And it's not just physicians. Immigrants account for a high share of the cleaning and maintenance staff in hospitals — close to 30%.
- "If there aren't enough workers, hospitals may need to limit services," says Scott Hulver, a policy analyst at KFF.
State of play: Hospitals are one of the big losers from the new spending bill, taking a major hit from Medicaid cuts and changes to the Affordable Care Act, report Axios' Peter Sullivan and Victoria Knight. Millions are likely to lose their health insurance.
- This will mean more uninsured people and more uncompensated care.
The bottom line: Since the passage of the ACA in 2010, more people have had access to health care and the industry exploded, hiring surged and more workers were in demand.
- Now momentum is moving in the opposite direction.

