Summer was once considered a predictable season for ambulatory surgery centers. Today, many ASCs are seeing the opposite. Higher patient demand, condensed vacation schedules, staffing shortages, and increased case complexity are creating operational pressure that can quickly disrupt throughput and staff morale.
At the same time, outpatient migration continues accelerating. More procedures are moving into ASCs, while workforce shortages across nursing, anesthesia, and perioperative support roles remain persistent industry challenges.
The problem is not simply “having enough people.” It is having the right staffing strategy in place before schedules tighten, PTO peaks, and burnout starts compounding.
The ASCs that navigate summer successfully are not relying on reactive staffing fixes. They are building flexible workforce models designed to absorb volume swings without sacrificing care quality or exhausting their teams.
Summer surge planning is difficult because several operational stressors hit at the same time:
ASC leaders across the industry continue identifying staffing as one of the biggest barriers to growth and operational consistency.
And while volume growth is positive, it can become financially counterproductive if staffing instability creates canceled cases, delayed starts, turnover delays, or retention problems.
One of the biggest mistakes ASCs make is waiting until schedules are already strained to secure additional support.
By the time coverage gaps appear, the candidate market is tighter, internal staff are frustrated, and administrators are forced into expensive last-minute decisions.
Instead, high-performing ASCs are creating “flex capacity” well in advance through:
Industry leaders are increasingly emphasizing operational elasticity, meaning the ability to scale staffing up or down based on real-time demand.
The goal is not overstaffing. It is creating controlled flexibility.
Anesthesia shortages continue to create major operational bottlenecks for ASCs nationwide. Multiple industry reports identify anesthesia coverage as one of the defining constraints on ASC growth heading into 2026.
Summer intensifies that pressure.
When anesthesia staffing becomes unstable, the impact spreads quickly:
Forward-looking ASCs are addressing this proactively by:
The centers performing best operationally are treating anesthesia planning as a core business strategy, not simply a scheduling function.
Temporary staffing may help cover schedules, but retention is what protects long-term stability.
Healthcare workers across multiple specialties continue citing exhaustion, inconsistent scheduling, and chronic understaffing as major contributors to burnout.
Summer often magnifies those issues because the same dependable team members repeatedly absorb additional responsibilities.
ASCs that retain staff successfully during high-volume periods tend to focus on:
Retention is operational strategy, not just HR strategy.
Replacing experienced perioperative staff is expensive, disruptive, and time-consuming. Keeping your existing team engaged is almost always more cost-effective than recovering from turnover later.
Cross-training can improve flexibility, but only when implemented strategically.
The strongest ASC teams are not asking everyone to do everything. They are identifying critical workflow vulnerabilities and training selectively around them.
Examples include:
The purpose of cross-training is operational resilience, not role overload.
When done correctly, it reduces schedule fragility. When done poorly, it accelerates burnout and confusion.
Monthly staffing projections are often too slow during summer surge periods.
Successful ASC leaders are reviewing the following weekly:
That level of visibility allows leadership teams to make smaller adjustments earlier instead of scrambling during operational crises.
Many ASC operators are increasingly turning toward centralized workforce visibility and data-driven staffing decisions to reduce disruption and improve efficiency.
There is no perfect staffing model for every ASC.
But the organizations handling summer volume most effectively tend to share the same mindset:
Summer surge pressure is not temporary anymore. For many ASCs, sustained high demand has become the new operating environment.
The question is no longer whether volume will increase.
It is whether your staffing strategy is built to hold up when it does.