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Is
Travel Nursing a Short-Term Thing or can I do it for Several
Years?
As we all know, travel nursing is an extremely
versatile profession. Choosing from dozens of specialties,
getting work assignments all over the country, and a generous
benefits package can all be had by pursuing the right education
and working with a recruiter. Why not pursue this profession?
Large numbers of travel nurses are flocking to travel agencies
in search of readily available work.
As a professional, one of your first thoughts
is "will travel nursing be a short term thing or can
I do it for several years long-term?" To start, it is
important to know that travel nurses work for temporary help
agencies, also known as nursing agencies. Nursing agencies
provide both short term and long term assignments to travel
nurses in large-scale hospitals and small time clinics. Short
term staffing means arranging for the travel professional
to work at a health care facility 2-3 times a week; usually
supplemented with another job.
Long-term staffing is the realm we dub "travel
nursing." Travel nursing assignments normally range from
3 months or more. Many assignments are shorter and others
reach close to a year. Cancellation policies for long-term
travel nursing assignments are much more strict than short-term.
Basically, you are guaranteed a position
as long as your contract is active. Hospitals and clinics
need not worry if a travel nurse is leaving or not. Guaranteed
hours are put in place and poor work performance is strongly
avoided. It is truly a win-win agreement between the health
care facility and the travel nurse.
Travel nursing can be done short-term and
long-term in alternation. Contracts end and travel nurses
always have the choice of pursuing alternative opportunities
or sticking to their current assignment if the employer allows.
It is very common for health care providers to extend contracts
to travel nurses, partially due to the needs of each.
Travel nurses may revel in the personal
development opportunities a clinic has provided them, persuading
them to stay. In addition, educational opportunities are endless.
Travel nurses may encounter new pieces of equipment they'd
like to continuing learning to use, like dialysis machines
in a midtown Manhattan hospital coming from a small clinic
in Arkansas. In addition, they might build bonds with patients
that would convince them to stay.
Remember, travel nurses sign contracts
to work at a facility for three months or more. After the
contract is up, only you can decide whether to continue or
whether to pursue other ventures. Entire, satisfying careers
have been made out of traveling from place to place
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