By The Gypsy Nurse

March 24, 2019

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Ask A Travel Nurse: Pay for Certification Renewals

travel nurse pay for certification renewal

Does the agency or the travel nurse pay for certification renewal? The Gypsy Nurse strives to be your #1 source for Travel Nursing Answers. For new and experienced travelers alike. CHECK HERE to see if your travel nurse question has already been answered.

Does the agency or the travel nurse pay for certification renewal?

Travel Nurse certification renewals are generally the responsibility of the travel nurse. Unfortunately, as a travel nurse; you will generally be responsible for maintaining all of your certifications.  Occasionally, you will find a staffing agency that will assist with these costs but it isn’t the norm in the industry. ADDITIONAL TRAVEL NURSE PAY RESOURCES

Does the Agency or travel Nurse Pay for Certification Renewal?

Renewing certifications while on contract can be challenging.  If you don’t negotiate this expense into your contract, you will need to make arrangements. Additionally, it’s important to keep track of all of your renewals, nursing licenses and certifications.

  • Find/locate the classes needed.
  • Registration
  • Plan for the financial costs (many of these certifications can be costly)
  • Arrange appropriate time off work to attend the classes.

Negotiate travel nurse pay for certification renewals

It’s important to remember that everything the company provides comes directly from the bill rate. If you take money in one place it comes out of another. Some travel nurse contracts will provide a re-imbursement or offer to cover these costs. Make sure to address this as well as any other pay questions or issues in your travel nurse contract negotiations.


Are you Looking for a Great Travel Nurse Contract?

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By The Gypsy Nurse

March 3, 2019

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Travel Nurse Housing: Where am I going to Live? Part III

3 Travel Nurse Housing Options

There are 3 travel nurse housing options to consider when asking the question Where am I going to live?

  1. Agency Provided Travel Nurse Housing
  2. Securing your own travel nurse housing with a ‘stipend’
  3. RV Travel Nurse housing

PART III: Travel Nurse Housing in RV

Overview

We’ve discussed company provided travel nurse housing. If you haven’t read this, I suggest that you take a look at it and read over the tax implications. In addition, we’ve also discussed Securing your own travel nurse housing with a ‘stipend’. In this article we are going to touch on Travel nurse housing in an RV.

The third option that many travel nurses choose, is to carry their home with them in the form of an RV. Using an RV Travel Nurse housing as an alternative has many advantages.

I’ll be brief on this because I’m not as well educated on RV living as I am with the previous two options. There are a lot of travel nurses that choose to take their homes with them and there are some distinct advantages to doing so.

Advantages

  • If you have a tax-home and are eligible for the tax-free perks, your travel nurse housing stipend can actually make both your lot rent payments as well as your RV payments. I have spoken to several travel nurses that have done that very thing.
  • You only have to go through the riggers of packing once. To many, this in itself is reason enough to go through the trials of RV ownership.
  • When you choose RV travel nurse housing and living in an RV park there are no outside chores to do. No lawn to cut. If the wind should blow down a tree or tree limb the park cleans up the mess. Oops a dog got into the trash…park managers job. Essentially the only upkeep you must maintain is the home itself.
  • If you get tired of living in one spot or you just don’t like the neighbors you just crank up and move on.
  • Many of your RV expenses can be deducted on taxes.

Resources for RV living

If your planning to explore this option, I would advise you to reach out to the RV communities both in your local area as well as online and do as much research as possible beforehand. There are a multitude of resources for RV living.

Travel Nurse Housing Options

READ PART I: Agency Provided Travel Nurse Housing

READ PART II: Securing your own travel nurse housing with a ‘stipend’


Looking for Travel Nurse Housing?
CLICK HERE for the most up to date Travel Nurse housing resources.


By The Gypsy Nurse

January 12, 2019

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Ask A Travel Nurse: Do I need to have Savings?

Gypsy,

I’m looking at getting into travel nursing in August but I have very little savings and I am mostly concerned about not having a steady paycheck! Do I need to have a savings before I start? Do you find it difficult to keep your assignments back to back? Have you had a contract cancelled last minute and been stuck “jobless”?

Thank you,
Michelle

Thank you for reading The Gypsy Nurse. You have taken the first step on your journey to become A Gypsy Nurse.

Let’s first address the savings. I always recommend that you have enough in savings to at the very minimum get you back home!! Contracts DO get cancelled (I’ve had it happen) and there can also be issues with ‘pay’. (Know your companies reputation well!). Many of us have traveled without a significant financial buffer but it’s not something that I recommend.

As for a steady paycheck….travel positions are abundant right now, especially if you are flexible on the location. You shouldn’t have any trouble staying employed. (It’s just those unexpected cancellations that you should be prepared for). I’ve personally been traveling for nearly 9 years and by being flexible on location, I’ve never been without a position when I wanted one.

You may want to read through these articles on Contracts.

I love hearing the opinions of my readers.  Your opinion could be the perfect solution for someone.  Please share your thoughts below in the comments.

By The Gypsy Nurse

January 10, 2019

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Travel Nurses with Unsupportive Friends and Family: How to Deal with It

When I first started to travel for a living, people asked me what I was running away from, wondered why I didn’t get a real job, and would mostly tell me I was crazy or weird. As a travel nurse, it seems there are a lot of unsupportive friends and family.

Suffice it to say, I didn’t get a lot of encouragement and support in the beginning.

Sometimes your friends and family, the people you want most to be supportive of your new career, aren’t as enthusiastic as you’d like them to be, they are actually unsupportive. They don’t understand and try to talk you out of going. It can be deflating and saddening. You’re so excited about this adventure and here they are, raining on your parade.

Readers reach out to me about this topic frequently. I can feel the angst in their emails and the confusion at not knowing to how deal with the situation.

“How do I not let them get me down? What did you do? What do I say?” These are the questions I hear from Travel Nurses that I meet.  It’s apparent that I’m not the only who has faced such negativity, and, luckily, I’m also not the only who ignored it.

So what do you do or say when your support system is so unsupportive. Below are some common criticisms future travelers hear and examples of how I’ve turned similar criticism around when I’ve been faced with it myself:

“It’s so unsafe there! You shouldn’t go.” 

I hear this one a lot, not only from people via email, but also from people in my own life. News organizations paint the world to be a scary, scary place with criminals lurking around every corner. News shows love to highlight the dangers of life. Crime happens everywhere. It occurs in NYC, Chicago, San Francisco, and every small town and medium city in between. You can walk out of your house and be mugged or hit by a bus. Just like you can travel the world and never have anything happen to you. There is no place in the world that is 100% safe. Once you put it into this perspective for people, it usually ends the subject.

“You are just running away.  

People seem to assume that if you are traveling long-term, you must be running away from something. When people say this to me, I tell them that yes, I am running away.  I’m running away from their version of life and to my version of life. Remind people that what they do in their life may make them happy, but that you have different goals. This experience is what makes you happy right now. Most people will admit you have a point and drop the subject because, at the end of the day, we all want our friends to realize their dreams and be happy. True friends will let you go after yours and be supportive along the way.

“Why don’t you get a real job?” 

When people tell me that I should get a ‘real’ job, I respond that if I’m going to be working well into my old age, I’d rather spend my healthy years exploring the world instead of stuck in one place.  Life as a travel nurse is a working vacation.

“I wish I could do that. You’re so lucky. It must be nice to not have any responsibility.” 

This statement is one that nearly angers me. This is jealousy, pure and simple. I tell people, “You can travel too.” There’s nothing special about me and my decision. I’m not ‘lucky’, I’ve worked very hard to be able to live a life as a Travel Nurse and there is a lot that I give up to be able to do so. While there are always circumstances that really keep people from traveling, for the most part the only things holding anyone back are the restrictions they put on themselves. People of all ages and circumstances can find a way to turn travel into a reality.

“It’s unsafe to travel alone.” 

I typically respond to anyone who offers this argument by asking them why they believe this, and they will usually begin to spout stories they “learned” from the news about people who traveled alone and ended up in a bad situation. They might rattle off worst-case scenarios: “you could get sick, injured, robbed, or worse, and no one would be around to help.” That may be true, but if I went hiking in the woods by myself, the same thing could happen. Hell, I could fall in my apartment and no one might notice for days. As a solo traveler, you have to be a little more vigilant. Besides, I’m really rarely alone for long due to the variety of people I meet and friends I make along the way.

“Don’t you care about settling down and finding someone?” 

The undertone of this question is that you won’t be happy if you don’t have someone. My response is typically that I will settle down when I find the right person to settle down with, and that person could be found anywhere in the world. I do want to find someone I’m crazy about, but I won’t settle for just anyone. Besides, perhaps my ‘someone’ will be found while traveling.

“Why would you want to go there?” 

People ask this question with the undertone that by wanting to go to some remote small town in Nebraska, you’re weird, as if certain places in the world are inconsequential and not worthy of exploration. My answer to this question is “because it exists.” I’ve found that some of the least desirable places have some of my best memories. There is something good about everywhere that I’ve been. Why should I limit myself? Why should you, either?

There will always be haters. And while we can always tell ourselves “I don’t care what people think,” the truth is we do care what our friends and family have to say because we value their opinions.

If a stranger tells me I am running away, I don’t care. But when all my friends do, I become discouraged that they don’t support my decision. And I get enough emails from readers to know that all that negativity does make would-be travelers question their decision to travel and wonder if they are making a mistake.

(You’re not!)

Use these responses to deflect their criticism and help them understand why you want to travel. And if they still remain unsupportive, there is a wonderful network of travelers all over the web who can act as your support system and source of encouragement.

Use us to lean on. 

Keep dreaming. Don’t let people get you down. There’s nothing wrong with wanting to take the alternative path and travel for a living. Let them try to dissuade you. Let them call you crazy.

“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.” -Mark Twain

We hope you found this article on how to deal with unsupportive family and friends helpful. We hope these tips help you. Did you encounter unsupportive family and/or friends? How did you handle those that were unsupportive? Did you find ways other than those mentioned in this article? If you would like to share those tips comment them below.

By Marnie Miller

January 9, 2019

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Travel Nursing in a Correctional Facility

You asked, we listened. Below is a guest post from one of our gypsies, Marnie Miller, who is a travel nurse that is sharing her experiences as not only a travel nurse but a correctional nurse, in hopes to help answer some questions we’ve seen from other gypsies who may want to make the same career change in the future.

It was time to pursue a new way of nursing. Bad, crappy assignments, are why I now rotate between hospitals and corrections. When I couldn’t take the assignment I was on, and quit my first contract, a friend of mine suggested I try corrections. Best job change yet. It’s like taking a mental and back break. Never thought about working in a prison before. Or that it was even a job in nursing. All I knew was about working in a hospital, nursing home or doctors office. Little nervous at first. But that feeling didn’t last long.

Once you walk behind those gates, it’s just like any other job. Working to help your ‘patient’. Except these patients are not free to leave AMA. Typical day usually includes medication administration, vitals, sick calls, BS.., glucose checks, MD visits, inmate faking a seizure, fight that nobody saw, paperwork, intake of new people, lab draw, making rounds in segregated area, avoiding looking at what an inmate is trying to ‘flash‘ at you and listening to ‘why I need a medication, that I had before I got here that I have no record of taking’. Correctional facilities. Jails. Detention centers. Prisons. All house people, who also need medical care and treatments. No matter what crime they may have or may have not committed.

We nurses and other medical professionals, walk in and work, just like we do at hospitals and other medical facilities. Just have to be mindful that we have to be a little more cautious, where safety is concerned, don’t fall for some con games, and be consistent. Then go home.

Do you have different tips or POV you want to share with us on travel nursing in a correctional facility that you’d like to share? Comment below or email us at content@thegypsynurse.com!


Looking for a travel nurse job in Corrections?

Check out these correctional nursing jobs!


By The Gypsy Nurse

December 23, 2018

17302 Views

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Ask A Travel Nurse: Friends Travel Together?

We encourage readers of The Gypsy Nurse to ask us your Travel Nurse questions. 

Gypsy,

I have a best friend that is a Nurse.

Is it possible for travel nurse friends to travel together?

Thank you,

Sonji RN

ANSWER:

Sure! Obviously, the needs of the hospital and the skill set of yourself and your friend dictate whether this will work. I’ve seen travel nurse friends traveling together in a variety of ways:

  • working with the same company at the same hospital on the same/different units (dependent on individual specialties).
  • traveling with Different companies at the same hospital.
  • different companies at different hospitals.
  • Traveling and working at hospitals in nearby cities and living together.

Additionally, I have seen lots of cases where husband and wife teams take assignments together. This provides an opportunity to travel to new and interesting places they may have never dreamed of living and working.

There are many ways to manage traveling together. Some things to consider when traveling with a friend (or travel nurse spouse):

  • It can sometimes mean taking a contract in a location that wasn’t your first choice.
  • Finding a hospital that needs two travelers with the specific skills/specialties that you and your friend have can be a challenge. Be Flexible!
  • Communicate your needs to your recruiter.
  • Housing and tax issues can be complicated when traveling with another traveler. Make sure to educate yourself on the tax implication.

Most importantly, flexibility and patience are key!

Ultimately, travel nurse friends traveling together can be a wonderful way to see the country and explore your new city.


Looking for Jobs where you and a travel nurse friend can travel together? Try searching our job listings to find your next contract!


By The Gypsy Nurse

December 13, 2018

20300 Views

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Ask A Travel Nurse: Will my Age effect my Ability to work as a Travel Nurse?

Gypsy,
I’m interested in travel nursing but I’m afraid no one will want me because I’m a 29 year seasoned med-surg nurse without a BSN.  Is there a chance in H##L someone will hire me?

Thank you, Laura, RN

Will My Education or Age effect travel nurse job prospects?

This is a fabulous question. Education and age does not have any effect on the job prospects for travel nurses. Unfortunately, this also means that you will not get compensated differently due to your experience or degree.

Travel Nurse education and age has never been a deterrent to travel nursing. Having worked as a travel nurse myself as an ASN, I never once had anyone question my ASN vs BSN degree.

Travel Nurse Ages

A survey in 2015 by Onward Healthcare stated that “the majority of travel nurses are age 40-50 (34.7%). 26.9% are in the 30-40 age range, and 21.3% are over the age of 50. Only 17.1% fall within the 25-30 age range.” via Guide to Travel Nursing, Onward OGH, LLC Survey

The Gypsy Nurse conducted an online poll on our Travel Nurse Network Group in December 2018 and results showed that ages of travel nurses is spread throughout all age groups, the largest being the ‘Millennial’ group. A sharp decline was noted in ‘Baby Boomers’ compared to the 2015 results. This isn’t unexpected as the baby boomers begin to leave the industry for retirement.

December 2018 Poll Results

According to the December 2018 poll (1796 responses) the majority of travel nurses are the Millennial generation.

Age effect travel nurse job prospects

55% Millennial (Age 22-37)
32% Generation X (Age 38-53)
12% Baby Boomers (Age 53+)

The easy answer remains, you can be a travel nurse at any age! If you are interested in starting a career as a travel nurse, check out our Travel Nurse Guide.

Please share your thoughts below in the comments.

By The Gypsy Nurse

December 12, 2018

7852 Views

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Ask A Travel Nurse: Travel With a Pet?

Gypsy,

As a travel nurse can I bring my pet?

Thank you,
Maricella RN

Thank you for reading The Gypsy Nurse. You have taken the first step on your journey to becoming A Gypsy Nurse.

Maricella,
YES!  I personally traveled with my little Jack Russel Terrier for nearly 8 years, even taking her all the way to Germany to work for a year.

There are added expenses that come with traveling with a pet. Not the least of those is pet-deposits.

Ensure your recruiter understands that you are traveling with a pet and provides pet-friendly housing for you.  You might want to check out my article “Can I bring ‘fluffy’ or ‘fido’ with me?”  for additional information.

I hope that this helps to answer your questions.

I love hearing the opinions of my readers.  Your opinion could be the perfect solution for someone.  Please share your thoughts below in the comments.

We hope you found these tips for travel with a pet helpful. Do you have any tips for travel with pets? Comment them below.

If you are a new travel nurse or looking into becoming a travel nurse:

Travel Nurse Guide: Step-by-Step (now offered in a PDF Downloadable version!)

By The Gypsy Nurse

December 9, 2018

14910 Views

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Ask A Travel Nurse: Travel Nurse Contract Extension

Gypsy,

If I like my travel nursing contract can I ask for an extension?

Thank you,
Marty RN

Thank you for reading The Gypsy Nurse. You have taken the first step on your journey to become A Gypsy Nurse.

Marty,

The ability to extend a travel nurse assignment is variable.  It really depends on the assignment. I’ve worked as a travel nurse for nearly 9 years, and most of my contracts have offered an extension.  There are times when the hospital will not need an extension because they have hired travelers for a specific reason; EMR conversions are a good example of this.

If you like the hospital and location and would like to extend, simply ask your recruiter about extending.  The recruiter should be able to easily arrange a travel nurse contract extension for you.  This is a huge benefit for a staffing company as their out-of-pocket expenses are lowered by an extension vs a new traveler.

Don’t forget to leverage your negotiating abilities for an extension.  The staffing agency will be saving some monies that would go to bringing in a new traveler so use those savings to your benefit by asking for a little something extra.  This could be a ‘completion bonus’, a small hourly increase or a multitude of other options.

Finished the travel nursing guide and are ready to look for an assignment?

Check out our travel nurse jobs!