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Key State Characteristics

Total number of personal care aides, home health aides, and nursing assistants
156,830
Number of Direct Care Workers, 2022
Projected new jobs that will be created by rising demand for direct care workers
22,540
Direct Care Workforce Growth, 2022 - 2032
Projected direct care job openings due to both new jobs and job separations
221,100
Direct Care Workforce Total Job Openings, 2022 - 2032
Direct care workers who are women
89%
Women, 2022
Direct care workers who identify as Black/African American, Hispanic or Latino (any race), Asian/Pacific Islander, or another race (other than white)
58%
People of Color, 2022
Direct care workers who are U.S. citizens by naturalization and those who are not U.S. citizens
21%
Immigrants, 2022

Direct Care Workforce State Index Ranking

Illinois

13/51 Tier 2: 14-25

Worker Supportive Policies Index

11/51

Direct Care Workforce Policies

State policies that improve direct care worker compensation, training, and access to employment (via matching service registries).

  • Score Year Compare
  • Personal Care Aide Training Standards Key Provisions 6.67/10 2024

    Notes:

    Note: The key provisions used in this indicator include training regulation characteristics and the consistency of training requirements across payers and programs. For the full list of personal care aide training provisions, see the methodological notes.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Home Health Aide Training Standards Exceed Federal Minimum Yes 2016

    Notes:

    Note: Federal regulations require home health aides employed by Medicare or Medicaid-certified home health agencies to complete 75 hours of training and 12 hours of continuing education, but states can set their own higher standards.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Nursing Assistant Training Standards Exceed Federal Minimum Yes 2016

    Notes:

    Note: Federal regulations require nursing assistants employed by Medicaid or Medicare-certified nursing homes to complete 75 hours of training and 12 hours of continuing education, but states can set their own higher standards.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Dollar-Amount Wage-Pass Through Policy (Current) Yes 2024

    Notes:

    Note: A dollar-amount wage pass-through is defined as a state policy that requires Medicaid-funded employers in long-term care to pay direct care workers a specified base wage or increase direct care worker wages by a specified dollar amount. This indicator includes current (not past) pass-throughs only.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Percentage Wage-Pass Through Policy (Current) No 2024

    Notes:

    Note: A percentage wage pass-through is defined as a state policy that requires employers in long-term care to spend a specified proportion of Medicaid reimbursements on direct care worker wages and/or other compensation. This indicator includes current (not past) pass-throughs only.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • State-Funded Matching Service Registry No 2024

    Notes:

    Note: Matching service registries are online platforms that facilitate matching between self-directing home care consumers (and other employers, in some cases) and direct care workers. This indicator includes registries that are funded by states and available statewide only.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology

Universal Labor Policies

State policies that support all workers ability to access health insurance, take paid time off, collectively bargain, achieve greater economic stability, and access/maintain employment without discrimination.

  • Score Year Compare
  • Minimum Wage Exceed Federal Minimum Wage Yes 2024

    Notes:

    Note: The federal minimum hourly wage is currently $7.25.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Medicaid Expansion Yes 2023

    Notes:

    Note: Under the Affordable Care Act, states have the option to access additional federal funding to expand Medicaid eligibility for all adults to 138 percent of the federal poverty level.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Paid Sick Leave No 2024

    Notes:

    Note: Paid sick leave policies allow workers to accrue a specificed number of paid hours off to address their own or a family members health (and for certain other reasons, in some cases).

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Paid Family and Medical Leave No 2024

    Notes:

    Note: Paid family and medical leave laws guarantee that workers who meet certain requirements can take extended paid time off for their own medical needs, to bond with a new child, to care for a family member, or (in some cases) for other covered reasons.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Union-Supportive Legal Environments Yes 2023

    Notes:

    Note: So-called right to work" laws create barriers to unionization by prohibiting unions from collecting dues from non-members who are covered by a union contract in those states. Conversely, states that have not enacted such barriers offer more supportive environments for unionization. For this indicator in the State Index, states were scored positively on whether they do NOT have a law weakening unions, and therefore have a more union-supportive legal environment.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Refundable State Earned Income Tax Credit Yes 2023

    Notes:

    Note: States Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) programs reduce the tax burden for low- to middle- income taxpayers. When the EITC is refundable, taxpayers may receive a refund if their credit exceeds their state income tax bill.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Non-Refundable State Earned Income Tax Credit No 2023

    Notes:

    Note: States Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) programs reduce the tax burden for low- to middle- income taxpayers. When the EITC is nonrefundable, the credit cannot exceed the taxpayers state income tax bill.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Protections for LGBTQ+ Workers Yes 2023

    Notes:

    Note: State-level protections for LGBTQ+ workers prohibit employment discrimination based on workers sexual orientation and/or gender identity.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology

Direct Care Workforce Economic Index

29/51
  • Score Year Compare
  • Median Wage $16.09 2022

    Notes:

    Note: The median wage for all direct care workers is calculated as a weighted average of the median wages for personal care aides, home health aides, and nursing assistants.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Wage Competitiveness -$2.82 2022

    Notes:

    Note: These values reflects the difference between direct care worker median wages versus wages for occupations with similar or lower entry-level requirements. See the methodological notes for additional detail.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Median Personal Earnings $23,687 2022

    Notes:

    Note: This value reflects the median annual personal earnings for personal care aides, home health aides, and nursing assistants working across long-term care industries.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Low-Income Household 35% 2022

    Notes:

    Note: Direct care workers living in low-income households are defined as those living below 200 percent of the federal poverty level.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Housing Cost-Burdened 35% 2022

    Notes:

    Note: Housing cost burden is defined by housing costs that exceed 30 percent of a households total income.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology
  • Uninsured 11% 2022

    Notes:

    Note: This is the percentage of direct care workers who do not have any form of health insurance, including through their own or a family members employer or union; through Medicare, Medicaid, or another public program; or through the health insurance marketplace.

    Suggested Citation: PHI. Direct Care Workforce State Index. Last modified 07/30/2024. https://www.phinational.org/state-index-tool/

    FAQ & Methodology

About This Tool

This index was made possible by generous funding from the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

Created and led by PHI—the nation’s leading expert on direct care workers—the Direct Care Workforce State Index offers a data-driven picture of how states’ public policies support direct care workers and how these workers fare financially. This online interactive tool enables users to rank and compare states based on two composite measures: the range of policies states have enacted to support these and other low-income workers, and the economic status of direct care workers.

For more detailed information on this tool, email us at info@phinational.org.