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Nurse ****TRAVEL
NURSE****

A Traveling
Nurse has always had it
all; great pay,
career enhancement, travel, and the
flexibility to choose from hundreds of
exciting travel nursing jobs throughout the
country, and now the
world.
With highest
industry pay rates climbing to over $2,800 per
week, the option to choose how long and where you
work, and the freedom to
meet individual life goals, an
increasing number of nurses are taking their skills
"on the road".
There are estimated to be
over 20,000 U.S. "traveling
nurses" who
move from hospital to hospital on assignments
typically lasting 13 weeks. Travel nurses
help hospitals fill workforce gaps and. Some
hospitals would have difficulty staying open
if not for the
"travelers".
One "traveler" has been working in
such places as Hawaii, Alaska, New York and
California. In her six years on the road
she's made 25% more than if she'd stayed at
home in Ohio, she estimates; and she's the
envy of many of her stay at home friends.
She has, after all, seen the country on
someone else's dime. "It's a great life," she
says.
The travel-nurse
industry is on the rebound. Thousands of jobs are
open, staffing companies say. Demand for travel
nurses is up
over 50%.
Several trends point to long-term
growth, says Barry Asin, with research
firm Staffing Industry Analysts. Baby boomers
are aging, requiring more health
care.
Schools aren't graduating nurses
fast enough. California recently
mandated a 1-to-5 nurse-patient ratio for the
bulk of hospital beds, up from 1-to-6. More
states, including Florida, are considering
ratios to improve patient
care.
The U.S. government expects the
national nurse shortage to hit 800,000 by
2020.
California, where the nursing shortage is
especially acute, has 14,000 open nursing
jobs. "In many cases, hospitals fill
those jobs with travelers,"
says Jan Emerson, spokeswoman for
the California Hospital
Association.
Nationwide, travelers staff about 1% of nursing
jobs, says Joseph Boshart, CEO of Cross
Country.
But
staffing companies say the largest market is
California, which has fewer nurses per capita than
every state except Nevada.
While Staffing Industry Analysts estimates
15,000 to 20,000 travelers work in U.S. hospitals
daily, industry executives estimate there are twice
that many who have traveled before and may
again.
Travel nurses are usually
employed by staffing companies. Salaries vary
by experience, location and specialty, but
generally run $22 to $35 an hour. That means
a nurse working 40-hour weeks 50 weeks a year
would make $44,000 to $70,000. A travel nurse
in California may push $100,000 a year, with
overtime, Access CEO Braynin
says.
Most staffing companies also offer medical
and 401(k) benefits. They typically pay travel
costs and provide housing and food stipends for
nurses while they're on the job. The nurses tend to
be younger or empty nesters with a yearning for
travel and better pay, says Ralph Friedmann, CEO of
staffing firm InteliStaf
Healthcare.
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