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AMN and Cross Country: Nurse staffing demand moderates as permanent clinicians work more overtime

Healthcare Staffing Report

AMN and Cross Country: Nurse staffing demand moderates as permanent clinicians work more overtime

Amy Chang
| August 3, 2018
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AMN Healthcare (NYSE: AMN) reported Q2 2018 nurse and allied volume grew 4% over prior year, excluding strike staffing. Volume growth was experienced in both the travel nurse and travel allied businesses, offset by double-digit declines in per diem nursing. New travel nurse orders trended flat with prior year levels, driven by existing staff at hospitals working more overtime hours and increased permanent clinician hires.

According to Carolina Araya, senior VP Client Management of AMN Healthcare, “While we aren’t seeing the demand growth that we saw in 2015 and 2016, demand patterns are holding steady year-over-year for us. We have orders in all 50 states, and the new orders we are receiving are coming primarily from a combination of MSP clients and clients where we maintain a strong direct relationship. The MSP orders are historically high performing in terms of fill rate. The macro elements of our business are solid and healthy. It’s normal to see some swings in demand from our client base; I’ve experienced it multiple times in my 17-plus year career.”

Despite robust Q2 2018 travel allied revenue growth of 16% over prior year, Cross Country Healthcare (NASDAQ: CCRN) reported organic volume declines in its travel nurse business. In the first half of 2018, CCRN experienced a decline of $30 million in gross spend under management across its top five MSP clients. Among medium-sized MSPs, there was a mix of growth and declines. Overall, the pull back in client demand was driven by cost savings initiatives, more overtime worked by permanent staff, and a continued shift in patient care to non-acute settings.

AMN also commented on the impact of more overtime hours worked. “The overtime and extra hours worked are not particularly sustainable. Most nurses complain about burnout and working too many hours. And if they are being pushed or forced to pick up extra hours and shifts, that is likely to translate into even higher attrition, even though we’re already at historical highs and frustration by their nurses,” said Susan Salka, CEO of AMN Healthcare, during the company’s Q2 earnings call.

According to previous healthcare industry studies, attrition can be costly at more than $60,000 per nurse. Temporary staffing can be cost-effective in alleviating high usage of overtime, as noted in a recent U.S. Hospital Nursing Labor Costs Study, which found that the hourly, all-in cost for a full-time permanent nurse including overtime pay exceeds the average hourly cost for a travel nurse.

Despite the subdued demand trends in nurse staffing, AMN remained bullish about its long-term growth potential and continued momentum of MSP wins, representing $113 million in gross spend during the first half of 2018. Across its top 20 MSP clients, 16 had year-over-year net revenue growth in Q2. AMN projects modest year-over-year growth in Q3 travel nurse volumes, driven mainly by its MSP client base. Over time, the company believes it can increase its MSP direct fill rates of 70% by another 5 percentage points.

Overall, CCRN remained optimistic about Q4 and 2019 based on its projected full-year 2018 MSP contract wins representing $70 million in gross spend, continued expansion into non-acute facilities, and anticipated growth in the travel allied, advance practice, education, and search businesses.

Said Bill Grubbs, CEO of Cross Country Healthcare, during the company’s Q2 2018 earnings call, “Although we are experiencing some changes, the market remains strong and we have initiatives to adjust our business to take advantage of the changes and the areas of growth that exist. We believe the market is strong enough for us to grow as we adjust for the market changes, and with the increase we are seeing in demand this quarter, we expect to show improvement in our financial performance in the fourth quarter, setting us up for a more positive 2019.”