We cut our RN turnover by 31% in one enrollment cycle.
Maureen Kowalczyk
Director of Human Resources
Lakeland Regional Health · 420 beds
Advocate sits across the table from hospital CFOs and benefits directors, translating dense plan documents into strategies that actually retain your clinical staff.
$61,110
avg cost per RN turnover
83 days
avg time to recruit an RN
16.4%
national RN turnover rate
One nurse. Three coverage gaps
nobody told her about.
Before we talk about your system, meet the person your benefits plan is supposed to protect.
Desiree Fontaine
Labor & Delivery, RN
7pm – 7am · 12-yr tenure
Retention risk: High
Considering offer from 60mi away
Coverage gaps in her current plan
Night-Shift Premium
Critical gapHer plan excludes shift-differential income from disability calculations — if she's injured at 2am, her benefit is 40% lower than a day-shift colleague.
Dependent Coverage
High impactHer 19-year-old is no longer on her plan but not yet employed. A $4,200 gap in coverage that took three weeks and four phone calls to discover.
In-Network Access
ModerateHer specialist is 47 miles away. The nearest in-network option is in a city she can't reach during a 7pm–7am shift.
Desiree isn't alone in this.
On her unit, 4 of 11 RNs are actively considering leaving. The aggregate picture is where the institutional cost becomes impossible to ignore.
See the team dataHer unit has 4 of 11 nurses
actively considering leaving.
When one nurse has a coverage gap, it's a support issue. When four do, it's a retention crisis — and it costs your system an average of $61,110 per departure.
L&D Unit · 11 RNs
2024 national RN turnover by specialty
Source: NSI National Health Care Retention Report 2024
If 4 nurses leave this year:
At $61,110 per RN departure (2024 national average), this unit faces $244,440 in replacement costs — before accounting for agency coverage during the 83-day average recruitment gap.
$244K
one unit · one year
Now multiply that by every unit in your building.
Emergency care runs 19.1% turnover. Behavioral health hits 22.8%. The department view is where the full picture emerges.
See the department pictureFour departments. 26 nurses at risk.
One benefits plan that's failing all of them.
The same structural gaps that put Desiree at risk are playing out across every unit — just with different specialty-specific consequences.
| Department | Staff | At Risk | Turnover | Annual Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Labor & Delivery Desiree's unit | 11 | 4 | 13.3%Rising | $244K |
Emergency Department 5-yr cumulative: 112.9% | 28 | 9 | 19.1%Critical | $550K |
Critical Care / ICU Intensivists watching benefits | 19 | 5 | 18.3%Rising | $306K |
Medical / Surgical Largest unit by headcount | 34 | 8 | 18%Stable | $489K |
Total exposure | 26 | $1.59M |
What HR directors tell us is breaking first:
Open enrollment confusion
HR director managing 4 carrier portals, 3 plan tiers, and 2 open enrollment windows — while down three recruiters.
Carrier escalation bottleneck
When a nurse's claim is denied, she calls the carrier. Forty-five minutes on hold. Then a second denial. Advocate eliminates that call entirely.
Dependent coverage gaps
The #1 driver of intensivists leaving: a competing system offers better family coverage. Not salary — benefits.
Rural network access
In-network specialists can be 60+ miles from a rural campus. Advocate negotiates network carve-outs for critical rural access points.
The department picture is where CFOs start paying attention.
At the system level, the math becomes an argument for restructuring — not just patching.
See the system-wide viewOne nurse. One unit.
One system that finally
has its people's back.
The ripple is real. When Desiree's coverage gaps close, her unit stabilizes. When the unit stabilizes, the department budget holds. When the department holds, the system retains the intensivists your CFO is worried about losing.
$1.6M
Average annual turnover cost for a 400-bed health system
Based on 26 at-risk RNs × $61,110
83 days
Average vacancy window per RN departure
NSI 2024
25.1%
of health systems have no measurable retention goal
NSI 2024
31%
Reduction achieved by Lakeland Regional in one enrollment cycle
Advocate client, 2024
How Advocate works
We read the plan documents you haven't had time to read.
Advocate reviews your carrier contracts, SPDs, and renewal history — identifying coverage gaps, billing errors, and structural misalignments that erode retention.
We build a retention-first benefits architecture.
Night-shift differentials in disability calculations. Rural network carve-outs. Dependent coverage continuity. Every change is tied to a specific retention outcome.
We run enrollment so your HR team can focus on hiring.
Advocate manages carrier communications, employee questions, and escalations directly — eliminating the 45-minute hold-time calls that erode trust in HR.
We track the numbers that matter to your CFO.
Turnover rate by specialty. Cost per departure. Vacancy days. We deliver a quarterly benchmarking report against peer systems your size.
Our ER had 19% turnover two years running. After Advocate restructured our shift-differential benefits, we're at 11%. The ED director stopped asking about agency staffing.
David Okafor
CFO · River Valley Health System · 380 beds
I was managing four carrier portals and fielding 30 calls a week from nurses about denied claims. Advocate took all of that. I didn't realize how much time I was losing until it was gone.
Sarah Lindqvist
HR Director · Pineridge Community Hospital · 210 beds
Free · No commitment · 48-hour turnaround
Find out where your benefits plan is leaking.
Five questions. A personalized benchmarking report delivered within 48 hours. No sales call required to receive it.
Used by HR directors at 40+ regional health systems