Nurses and healthcare workers at Clark Regional Medical Center in Winchester, Kentucky, are reeling after LifePoint Health, the hospital’s parent company, announced deep cuts to incentive pay. Staff learned this week that they’re losing critical care pay (a $5-per-hour reduction) and weekend incentives (which added up to $8 per hour). The result? A lot of frustration, some tears, and inevitable staff shortages.
“Pure greed,” one commenter wrote bluntly over on Reddit, where the story was shared.
Unsurprisingly, the news has left hospital staff feeling undervalued, with many already considering leaving. Lex18 news reports that ICU nurse Emileigh Wallace, who has been at Clark Regional since January 2024, says she and her colleagues are doing their best to keep morale up, but it’s hard when management can’t even give them a clear reason for the cuts.
“There were a lot of tears shed and no answers as to why,” Wallace said. “Our management is distraught; they were so upset telling us all of this, knowing what the response would be.”
Meanwhile, Reddit users weren’t shy about predicting what comes next.
“They will lose staff and have to hire travelers. Which cost more. Eventually, they up staff wages so they can get rid of travelers. Same stupid story over and over,” one person wrote.
Another was more direct: “Here’s my notice.”
And for those who don’t quit immediately? The outlook isn’t great. “Or… just run short and overtax their staff and guilt them into staying with horrible patient ratios…,” a user added.
The Same Story, Different Hospital
Clark Regional isn’t the only hospital cutting wages for nurses and frontline workers—just the latest. One Redditor claimed UK Healthcare is doing the same: “They no longer pay for training you do for work.” Others pointed out that hospitals across Kentucky are trying to roll back the premium pay increases that were introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Every hospital in Kentucky wants to do what LifePoint did: scale back the premium pay they established during COVID to keep nurses,” one comment read. “Now that Clark has done it, more will follow suit.”
And yet, while hospitals argue these cuts are necessary for financial stability, management pay seems to be doing just fine. “I’m sure this only affects hourly care providers and by no means would they mess around with management pay structure. I’d imagine this new pay structure benefits the shareholders,” one user speculated.
Some nurses are already looking beyond Kentucky for better pay. One commenter shared that their son left the state and now makes “3-4 times more per hour” out West—plus, he’s in a union. Others weren’t as optimistic, pointing out that even if nurses leave for better-paying hospitals, the same cuts are coming everywhere.
“Start looking at base rates and benefits instead of ‘potential to earn’ gimmicks,” one Redditor warned. “If you currently get a premium, bank that money, don’t depend on it paycheck to paycheck.”
LifePoint Health has defended the cuts, calling them part of an effort to “standardize pay and benefits” across hospitals. But staff at Clark Regional aren’t buying it—and based on the online reaction, neither is anyone else.