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What
are the Benefits of Travel Nursing?
Travel nursing presents nothing but opportunity
to those interested. Combining both the medical profession
and the people profession, travel nursing can bring unlimited
accolades and perks.
For starters, travel nursing provides a
sense of adventure, relocating from hospital to hospital across
the country fulfilling staff needs. Health care facilities
across the country are scrambling to find qualified nurses
to cover for missing staff, making travel nurses a hot commodity.
Because of their versatility in being able to relocate, travel
nurses are in high demand. The benefits of becoming a travel
nurse are numerous: personal and professional growth, revitalizing
a career, excellent financial benefits, and improving family
life. Let's discuss these four areas in depth.
For starters, travel nursing boosts up the
resume. Nursing practices are honed by immersing yourself
into a new hospital or clinic environment. The field is versatile
- with assignments ranging from working in large-scale hospital
centers where multiple nursing areas are practiced; to small
clinics. The diversification travel nursing brings is a character
builder. Different health care facilities bring new ideas
to the table. A four-story hospital in New York City might
introduce you to an entirely new way of applying pressure
to wounds. In Hawaii, you can present this method to rookie
nurses, bringing knowledge to the table.
Another benefit of travel nursing is what
it does for your career. A perk of travel nursing is that
assignments can be chosen by the nurse, so you decide where
your next destination will be. Choose from working in a large-scale
medical facility where new technology is paving the way, or
learn from smaller hospitals that emphasize more one-on-one
interaction with patients. In whichever direction you'd like
to go, travel nursing provides the versatility in defining
your career path.
A third benefit of travel nursing is its
top-of-the-line salary pay. To begin, travel nurses enjoy
better wages and benefit packages than their stationary counterparts.
The standard pay rate is up to $40 an hour, attributed to
the high demand for nurses in short-staffed clinics and hospitals.
Signing bonuses are very common, with some up in the $6,000
range after successful completion of the program.
As a travel nurse, you are automatically
eligible for outstanding bonuses after assignment completion,
for referring other nurses, and more. Bonuses are plentiful,
with many travel nurses being awarded extra incentives for
staying holidays and opportunity for overtime hours. Also
included is medical and dental insurance along with a 401
(k), possible free rent (along with furnished homes), travel
stipends, other forms of insurance (i.e. disability) and money
towards advanced education.
The fourth benefit of travel nursing is
its outstanding flexibility. Travel nurse recruiters are adept
at mixing and matching options for their clients, finding
appropriate housing to suit a travel nurse's family. In addition,
travel nurses with small children can grow personally, becoming
better-rounded by going across the country. If you'd rather
have your children stay in one place, assignments can be asked
for that would relocate you no more than 200 miles away.
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