Every caregiver remembers their first week at a new agency, endless forms, new portals, and those same training videos they’ve already watched before. For employers, this costs money. They pay for the same caregiver compliance training material many times and lose days of work to it.
This happens in a job that is already hard, and it’s more than just annoying; it can’t last.
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics says the need for direct care workers will jump 22% by 2032. That means over 800,000 new jobs. But the business sees about 60% to 80% of its workers leave every year. So, it’s stuck hiring, training, and rehiring all the time.
If every new person has to start over, retaking courses on things like infection control, safety, privacy, and patient rights that they’ve already done, it makes sense that they burn out fast.
At Learn2Care, we think caregiver compliance training should not mean doing the same things over. Instead, it should build on what people already know. That way, we can make the direct care workforce stronger and get better, quicker results for patients.
Study by the Center for American Progress suggests that replacing an employee earning less than $30,000 annually costs approximately 16% of their annual salary.
Applying this to a caregiver earning $16,300 per year, the replacement cost would be about $2,600. About a quarter of that is from training, start delays, and classes that don’t teach anything new.
Here’s a breakdown:
Every hour of training that is repeated pushes back the time when caregivers can start helping patients. That hurts consistent care, staffing, and how happy patients are.
Most states require caregivers to have certain training hours to work there. But often, agencies can’t share training records, even if the caregiver courses are the same.
A caregiver might take a class on infection control online. Then, weeks later, they must take the same class again because their new job doesn’t know they already did it.
This happens because:
Because of this, agencies waste time, caregivers lose interest, and the business loses time that could go to improving care.
You can look at national numbers to see how much shared training records could change things.
Source: PHI National. (2022). The direct care workforce: National data on staffing, turnover, and training efficiency.
Even if caregiver training records could only be shared a little bit, it could cut caregiver onboarding time by 40–50% and help keep caregivers on the job. That’s really important in an industry where people leave quickly and there are rules to follow.
Why Training Matters to Caregivers
Teaming Up with Learn2Care for Better Caregiver Training
At Learn2Care, we think technology should help caregivers, not make things harder.
All these things together build home care training efficiency and better safety.
Sharing training records fits into how the U.S. workforce is changing. The National Governors Association and the U.S. Department of Labor want people in jobs that are in demand to be able to move between jobs easily.
For direct care, this will likely include:
Learn2Care wants to make that future happen. Give Your Caregivers the Training They Deserve. Request a Demo and see how smarter training can transform your agency.
Why do caregivers have to repeat training?
Agencies must keep records of all training for inspections. Because training records are kept separate, new employers can’t always check records. That’s why many caregivers repeat training when they start at a new agency.
How can agencies make caregiver onboarding better?
Even without shared records, agencies can use tools to make caregiver onboarding quicker, such as dashboards, digital certificates, and reminders. Learn2Care’s online caregiver certification training course is made for quick caregiver compliance onboarding and easy tracking.
What are the benefits of training records to be shared?
Training caregivers would not have to repeat, agencies would save money, and caregivers could start working sooner.
How does Learn2Care help with following the rules?
Learn2Care offers progress tracking, certificates, and reports for tracking purposes.
Related Blog Posts-
Building a Successful Caregiver Onboarding Process
Securing Stability: Proven Strategies for Caregiver Retention
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