New FTI Consulting Survey Reveals Mounting Challenges Continue for U.S. Hospitals

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FTI Consulting, Inc.
FTI Consulting, Inc.

WASHINGTON, May 15, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- FTI Consulting, Inc. (NYSE: FCN) today announced findings from its annual Hospital Operations Outlook Survey of more than 200 senior executives across all types of hospitals. The survey found rising costs, patient wait times, workforce challenges and persistent cybersecurity threats are among the top issues highlighted by hospital leaders.

These issues — bundled with an increasingly complex operating environment shaped by regulatory changes, such as potential Medicaid cuts from the federal government, inflationary pressures and growing patient demand — make adaptability and nimbleness in an organization’s ability to quickly respond to these challenges critical. Moreover, clear and strategic communications to stakeholders about the mounting pressures and plans to address them are more important than ever to maintain support inside and outside the hospital.

To protect their reputation and fulfill their mission, hospital leaders must stay closely connected with stakeholders while embracing value-based care, digital innovation, workforce investment and proactive cybersecurity risk mitigation as part of a broader strategic plan.

“Healthcare leaders are at a crossroads, juggling financial pressures with the need to deliver high-quality care, support hospital staff and improve patient outcomes,” said Lauren Crawford Shaver, Head of Healthcare & Life Sciences for the Americas within the Strategic Communications segment at FTI Consulting. “At the same time, adaptation to the digital era demands investment in modern infrastructure, robust cybersecurity and AI-driven efficiencies. And with the regulatory landscape in constant flux, staying ahead requires more than strategy and vision. It takes agility to lead in a world that won’t stand still.”

Key findings from the survey:

  • Workforce management costs dominate financial concerns, with 34% of respondents citing recruitment, retention and agency staffing expenses as critical stressors.

  • Cybersecurity threats remain top of mind, identified by half of respondents (50%) as their top digital concern, driven primarily by the concern for potential data breaches and operational disruptions.

  • Workforce shortages persist, with 48% of executives feeling their hospitals are unprepared for current patient volumes, particularly in specialist (49%) and nursing roles (46%).

  • Hospitals continue shifting toward value-based care, with hospitals reporting 42% of patient populations now participate in value-based care models due to better care coordination and improved patient outcomes as reported by 91% of respondents.