Recent Federal and State Legislative Action Targeting Health Care Staffing Agencies


Nurse and health care professional staffing shortages during the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a significant increase in the use of temporary health care professional staffing. Lawmakers and health care providers have urged the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the White House COVID-19 Response Team to open investigations into allegations of price gouging and potential anti-competitive activity by nurse staffing agencies.

Additionally, the House and Senate introduced companion bills titled the “Travel Nursing Agency Transparency Study Act,” which would require the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to conduct a study and issue a report to Congress on the business and payment practices of nurse staffing agencies and the impact of hiring travel nurses across the health care field during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study would investigate the following:

The increase in the use of travel nurses has also caused state lawmakers to prioritize regulation of health care staffing agencies. States generally define health care staffing agencies to include any entity who contracts with health care facilities to provide temporary health care personnel. Below is an overview of recently enacted and proposed state legislation requiring licensure or registration of health care staffing companies and/or nursing pools.

Enacted Legislation

Subsequent legislation that was passed effective June 21, 2022 makes the provisions restricting agencies from including or enforcing non-compete clauses and requiring liquidated damages only effective for contracts entered into on or after January 1, 2019. Additionally, the law requires health care employment agencies that place health care staff at Medicare or Medicaid participating health care entities to submit quarterly reports to DIA outlining the average amount charged to the entity and the average amount paid to the health care staff.

The law as amended requires nurse-staffing agencies to submit new health care facility contracts, including a full disclosure of the charges to the health care facility and compensation to agency employees, to the Illinois Department of Labor (IDOL) within five business days of their effective date. Agencies must as well as quarterly reports listing average amounts charged to health care facilities, average amounts paid to agency employees, and average amount of labor-related costs. The amended law further requires the agency to pay wages to nurses and CNAs that match the wages listed in the agency contract submitted to IDOL, or face penalties.

Notably, the law also requires that the Oregon Health Authority put together a report that describes the process by which the Health Authority will establish maximum rates that a temporary staffing agency may charge an entity for services provided by its employees.

Proposed Legislation

We will continue to monitor and report on state legislative efforts to regulate health care staffing agencies.


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National Law Review, Volume XII, Number 278