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Preparing For Your Career as a Travel Nurse

Friday, April 20th, 2012

So you had an amazing interview and received an offer for a great travel nursing opportunity. That means that hard part is over. Right? Wrong.  In order to complete the process you need to go through the following seven steps.

Step 1: Give me some credit

Though it may seem silly to have to prove you graduated from an accredited nursing school when you have an RN license in your hand, it is still necessary to provide documentation. It seems obvious that you must graduate from nursing school in order to get a license, but your agency may have to “prove” this. Agencies must do either primary or secondary source verification of your education. To make life easier and the process to go faster you should obtain an official copy of your transcript to fax or email to your agency. Many schools have closed, so find out what repository holds your schools records and give this information to your agency if needed.

Step 2: References? Who Needs References?

While I am sure that everyone you have worked with loved you, it is still necessary for your travel agency to do a reference check.  This can be a very challenging and difficult step in the process.

Here are a few tried and true suggestions that traveling nurses say work best:

  • Find out if your current or past Charge Nurse/Director/CNO will be able to provide an actual reference for you.
  •  Make sure the people you list as potential references know that you have listed them as such.  It’s always best to ask them for a reference and explain what type of work you are looking for.
  • Make sure you have current phone numbers for them and correct names. Also, make sure your agency knows what your last name was when you worked at the place they are calling.
  • Get written letters of reference that can be verified.  Sometimes the game of phone tag can create delay.  Written reference letters can save a lot of time and can help alleviate the stress of reference checks.
  • Provide information on the units where the charge nurse providing your reference works.  This background information will help speed up the process.

Step 3: How hard can it be to get a license?

Some states make getting a license a snap but some make you jump through a few more hoops. If you follow these guidelines, you might get a relatively pain-free license.

  • Read the instructions carefully. Filling out an application in red ink will get it returned to you. Always use black or dark blue ink.
  • Making out a money order incorrectly can delay getting your license.
  • Make sure you give the board an address where someone will physically available so that they can forward the license to you. The post office is supposed to return correspondence from the board (much like credit card or banking information) and will NOT forward this to you.
  • Check your license status to see if it is “Compact”. If it is, you just opened the door to a lot of new destinations without needing an additional license. States like Arizona, Texas, North Carolina and Virginia are just a few of the 24 Compact states.

Step 4: ACLS – Don’t leave home without it

When it comes to certifications, you have to be very organized. It is a requirement that your ACLS, BLS, PALS or any other certification be carried on your person at all times. Make sure you have the actual cards issued by the instructor and that they are signed by both you and the instructor. If you only have a copy, save yourself a headache and renew the certification if you can’t get the instructor to send you a new card. Also, don’t take for granted that just any certification fits the bill. For example, ACLS provided by the American Heart Association is the most widely accepted and many facilities will not take any other variety.

Step 5: Do you have your health records?

Remember when you were processed as a staff nurse at your current hospital? They likely drew titers, performed a physical, renewed your TB, etc. Ask for copies of these records. As caregivers you bear the burden of proving you are immune to many diseases. To avoid delays and added expense, obtain these records from each employer as they renew them and keep them with you so that you can produce them “on demand.”

Smart Traveler Tip: Load all your documents on a flash drive and make copies. Keep one in a safe place (safe deposit box, Mom’s house, etc) and another in your vehicle at all times. You will then have a permanent record that can be updated as needed.

Step 6: Do you have skeletons in your closet?

Every travel assignment you do will require a new background check. The general rule of thumb is that screens cover the last 7-10 years for all cities/states where you have lived and worked. Credit checks are less likely although sometimes a landlord will require one even though your agency is the actual leaseholder and responsible for your housing. It is best to give your agency any information that pertains to a potential background issue no matter how insignificant it may appear. Having an assignment cancelled by the facility for something that shows up on your background screen, after you have completed all the other steps to get ready for the assignment, is really frustrating. Don’t be surprised!

Step 7: Drug tests?

Just like background checks, you will be doing lots and lots of drug screens. The most common is a pre-employment screen for every new assignment. Your agency arranges the screens for you and pays for them. You may also have one during your first week at the facility and others as requested by the facility. And contrary to popular belief, these screens are not just looking for illegal drugs. If you are taking any drugs at all, make certain you have a current and valid prescription. Drug screens are board reportable and failing one, refusing to take one, etc. could lead you down an unhappy path with your board of nursing.

 

Want help with some of the many questions associated with travel nursing, download this free guide – The RN Travel Guide.

In the challenging world of travel nursing, many weary nurses find a home with TaleMed.  As the healthcare sector and specifically nurses continues to see the greatest demand of all employment sectors in the USA, this has caused great demand for top travel nurses.

No one has seen this better than Elizabeth Tracy, CEO of TaleMed.  “Travel nursing can be a challenging profession when you try to do it alone and, sometimes, even when you work with some travel nursing agencies.  That’s why at TaleMed our nurses  are treated as family.”

TaleMed has won the prestigious Highway Hypodermics Top Ten Travel Nursing award for an amazing five years in a row.  There are three important aspects to qualify for this award:

  • Companies’ benefits for employees,
  • On-Site Client interviews
  • RN evaluations

To win the award  once shows that you are good, to win it five times in a row shows that you are the best.  Highway Hypodermics has helped TaleMed take our ideas about what  the “right thing to do” and turn them into measureable, demonstrable actions.  These actions and benefits have helped us recruit — and retain — hundreds of the best and the brightest nurses.  Nurses who represent the best talent in their area of expertise.  Nurses who make TaleMed the Number One Nurse Travel Company,” – Elizabeth Tracy, TaleMed’s Chief Executive Officer.

“When you join TaleMed you become part of the family.  TaleMed’s staff is always there for you and each and every one of them also makes you feel as if you are part of their family.  They truly do care about you,” said TaleMed travel nurse S. Morris, RN.

TaleMed treats their nurses on a first-name basis.  As a nurse and as their employee, travel nurses are their number one priority.  Travel nurses have access to the TaleMed team’s personal cell phone numbers and they have a “hotline” of somebody on call each night.  It is critical to TaleMed that travel nurses who work with them know that they are available at all times.

At TaleMed, they understand that traveling to the leading hospitals and exciting locations is a big attraction to the job.  They recognize that the new challenges and new opportunities to grow in your profession are just as important.  They listened first and then  they built a company that works hard for you and your dreams.

At TaleMed, you don’t work for them; they work for you.  TaleMed is built on experience and knowledge in the medical field.  With over 75 years of experience supporting their goal of exceptional  service, they make you their number one priority right from the start.

 

About Highway Hypodermics

The mission of Highway Hypodermics is to provide quality and up to date information to travel nurses around the world to assist them in finding the adventure of a lifetime.  Epstein LaRue, RN, BS created Highway Hypodermics: The Website as a precursor to the book, “Highway Hypodermics: Your Road Map to Travel Nursing.”  Features of this website include city guides, destination locations, travel company profiles, and travel nursing articles.

With eight years of recognizing excellence in Travel Nursing Companies, the annual presentation of the Highway Hypodermics Seal of Excellence is a staple in the Nurse Travel Industry.  The annual Highway Hypodermics awards have been held since 2004.

Highway Hypodermics can be found at www.highwayhypodermics.com.

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Is Travel Nursing the Right Career for You?

Friday, February 3rd, 2012

The thought of becoming a travel nurse can be very challenging.  While there are many great reasons to become a travel nurse, there are several  things to consider before deciding if it is the correct career path for you.  Everyone’s choice is different and you need to make your own choice.  The following article covers a few of the pros and cons of becoming a travel nurse.

Pros for Becoming Travel Nurse

  • The Experience
    You get to work in a variety of the best hospitals around the country.  This helps you to broaden  your skills, learn different methods of care, meet fellow nurses and doctors, and enhance your resume.  Want to work at the next children’s hospital in the country?  You can do it.  Want to work at the top cancer centers?  You can do it.  Anything you want to do is available to you because of the seasonal need for nurses.  Whether you’re relatively new to the healthcare profession or  a veteran, travel healthcare will open your eyes to a wealth of new experiences.  You will  see how different facilities are managed.  You will have the opportunity to work in a variety of fields, if you choose.  And, you will  learn some amazing things from all the different practitioners you have the opportunity to work with.
  • Travel
    You get to visit cities you otherwise would probably not get to experience.  Sure, you may visit, but living there and visiting are two different things.  As a travel nurse, you can choose to travel all over the country or if you prefer to stay near your hometown, you can select   an assignment in your local area.  Some nurses prefer to travel every few months, while others rather stay in one area so they can experience all the seasons of the area.  As a travel nurse, you’ll get to see and stay in places that you’ve always wanted to.  You can work with your recruiter to build a wish list and spend time in some of our nation’s top destinations.
  • The Pay
    Since the travel nurse company usually pays for your housing and other smaller expenses, you actually make more money than when at home.  In your home city you still have to pay rent, mortgage, light, water, etc.  While traveling, these should be taken care of by the travel nurse company.  This leaves you with food, fun, and car expenses.  Traveling nurses are usually provided with an apartment near the medical facility where they will be working including furniture and other amenities, competitive salaries of up to $40 per hour, bonuses, a comprehensive medical, dental, life insurance and retirement plans and other health benefits.  The travel company also reimburses the expenses that the traveling nurses would incur while traveling, tax-free.  Let’s face it, many healthcare professionals get into travel because of the pay.  Many traveling jobs pay excellent wages and offer housing allowances.  This allows you rake in an outstanding salary in a short amount of time!
  • Hospital Politics
    The typical travel assignment is for 13 weeks.  Therefore, it is very difficult to be sucked into the politics that tend to unfortunately creep into many nursing units.  There is probably not an experienced nurse anywhere that doesn’t understand the frustrations associated with the negative dynamics or “politics” that can take place between fellow nurses, managers, administration, and physicians.  Travel nurses have no obligation to stick around and deal with these dynamics.

Cons for Becoming Travel Nurse

  • Advancement
    Travel nursing careers tend to be more bedside, hands on clinical nursing.  It is difficult to move up the corporate ladder as a travel nurse.  If nursing management is your career goal, then that will be difficult to find as a travel nurse.  However, travel nursing can provide a great skill set to help make nurses better managers.  This often means getting the experience as a travel nurse and then settling down into management role afterwards.
  • Loneliness
    With constant travel, it can be a challenge to establish roots and build personal relationships.  It’s important to know this going in, so that you can plan appropriately and ensure that the travel doesn’t put a strain on your personal life.  Travel nurses that go it alone can become lonely or homesick.  Many travel nurses bring their family or pet along with them to keep them company.
  • Cross Training
    Travel nurses tend to work in their current area of specialty only.  Nurses that wish to travel under a specialty that is different from their experience will be sorely disappointed, since most facilities are looking for nurses with 2+ years’ experience in their specialty.  Hospitals expect travel nurses to be able to hit the floor running with minimal orientation and will not invest several weeks of orientation into a travel nurse with a desire to try a new clinical specialty.
  • Temporary Position
    Since travel nursing can been seen by some as a temporary job within a facility, travel nursing itself can be viewed as temporary career move.  Being on a temporary contract can bring along with it some level of uncertainty.  Therefore, it’s important to work closely with your recruiter/travel agency to line up your next assignment well in advance.

Like any career choice, the decision to become a traveling nurse should be a decision made with care and consideration.  The truth is that there are many great things that a travel nursing career offers.  However, travel nursing does have a downside and is important that nurses know both the downsides and upsides before committing to an assignment.

Want help with some of the many questions associated with travel nursing, download this free guide – The RN Travel Guide.

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Categories : Travel Nursing