COLUMBIA − MU Health Care held its inaugural Tomorrow’s Health Care Expert’s (T.H.E.) Expo on Friday. More than 30 booths highlighting various health care professions, including nursing, therapy services, social work and nutrition and dining services were featured.
Roughly 400 area high school students attended the expo with the intention of learning about possible future career paths within the industry.
“I’ve talked to a lot of youth. And we know that when they think about careers in health care, they think of doctors and nurses,” said Nikki Carter, an MU Health Care employee who organized the expo. “And we need plenty more of them. But there are plenty of other opportunities that I don’t feel many are aware of.”
Organizers say introducing youth to these careers has never been more important.
“There is a health care shortage, not only in Missouri but around the world,” Carter said. “There is a shortage of getting folks to come into healthcare and see the value of exploring a career here.”
The 2023 Missouri Hospital Association Workforce report found a nearly 15% vacancy and over a 20% turnover rate across health care professions in the state.
MU Health Care CEO Ric Ransom added that inspiring future employees is necessary for the future of health care.
“For us to provide exemplary care and continue to save and improve lives, we have to attract the next generation’s best and brightest,” Ransom said.
Columbia Mayor Barbara Buffaloe emphasized the need for future health care professionals when she gave a proclamation Friday declaring Oct. 13 as Tomorrow’s Health Care Expert’s Expo Day in Columbia.
“It is important to expose young people to the different careers in health care to help with these shortages and turnover issues because health care experts are essential,” Buffaloe said.
Paramedic Dan Ebner helped show students around an ambulance at the expo and spoke about what it’s like to work for emergency medical services.
“It’s really cool to tell them about what we do,” Ebner said. “We can also help introduce them into a path, into the health care field.”
One Hickman High School student said the expo did just that.
“It was cool,” junior Zarian Simpson said. “I learned some stuff I didn’t know at first, like opportunity wise. Things I can do that I didn’t know I could do.”
Simpson says he is interested in mechanical engineering, and the expo showed him there was future in health care within that field.
Another Hickman student, Solomon Wanyonyi, said the event helped him decide he wanted to become a physical therapist.
“It really did help inspire me,” Wanyonyi said. “I see the impact that it has on people, and this really helped me decide what I want to do.”
Carter says that is what she hoped the expo would do.
“Being able to explore and share all of the different opportunities in health care is the reason that this came to be,” Carter said.