By Nomad Health

September 9, 2023

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Frontline Feedback: What Traveling Nurses Can Tell Us About Career Satisfaction

Nomad Health provided this article.

By Valerie Gale, RN, BSN, MOAM, vice president of clinical excellence, Nomad Health

A nursing shortage that began in 2012 continues and, in fact, has gotten much worse. The National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) has reported that 100,000 registered nurses (RN) have left the field since 2020, and roughly 900,000 will follow suit by 2027. A pandemic, stress, and burnout have taken a toll, so much so the Biden-Harris Administration has just committed $100 million to training more nurses and growing the workforce. 

Our company wanted to see what could be done to turn the tide, so we reached out to our traveling clinicians to understand what keeps them in the profession. Foremost, we found more than three quarters were satisfied with their most recent travel job, while only half could say the same about their last permanent staff assignment post. That’s the start of frontline feedback providing insight into the attraction of travel assignments and what motivates RNs.

traveling nurses

A means to motivate

For staff clinicians, issues with patient-to-nurse ratios, long shifts, and hospital politics were not only a recipe for burnout; they were a catalyst for exploring traveling opportunities. Still, more than 80% of respondents note higher pay and being able to attain financial goals as the top motivators for pursuing travel positions.

Drilling down further, additional reasons in order of significance include freedom and flexibility, adventure, better work-life balance, and the ability to focus on patients versus hospital politics. Clearly, having more control over their own journeys – including their personal lives, careers, and workplaces – are key to higher satisfaction.

What’s more, after experiencing the freedom and flexibility that comes with a traveling position, more than 40% of respondents ruled out ever returning to a permanent staff role. And while some clinicians did opt to return to staff positions, the decisions were usually driven by family obligations and a need for increased stability.

Criteria for compensation

When it came to actually choosing a travel assignment, pay was the primary motivator from respondents at 26%, whereas the location of a particular assignment came in a close second at 20%. Rounding out the top five motivators were the way an entity structures shifts, the facility itself, and contract length, all hovering around 10%.

We also asked our traveling clinicians to rank the perks and benefits they find most important in a compensation package. Among the many options, the top 10 they consider most are:

  1. Pay rate guarantee: 18%
  2. Housing stipend: 14%
  3. Travel reimbursement: 12%
  4. Paid time off (between assignments): 8%
  5. Licensing and certification reimbursement: 7%
  6. Affordable healthcare plan: 7%
  7. Retirement contributions, 401k matching: 5%
  8. On-assignment support: 5%
  9. Access to retirement contributions/401k: 5%
  10. Scrubs reimbursement: 4%

Safe and supported

traveling nurses

When considering a specific position at a facility, flexibility in scheduling (14%) and patient-to-staff ratios (13%) were what traveling clinicians cared about most.

While these factors are critical to practitioners, others associated with feeling safe and supported also influence their assignment choices. In order of importance, these include Facility reputation, floating frequency, charting systems, a chance for overtime, time off, onboarding, parking, floating parameters, number of clinicians, and lunch breaks.

A healthy sample of allied health professionals participated in our survey, too, encompassing a range of diagnostic, therapeutic, and support positions. The most important factors for these professionals were thorough onboarding and the number of clinicians assigned to a unit. In general, this group is newer to traveling roles, so it makes sense they place greater emphasis on a facility’s onboarding and staffing ratios when evaluating offers.

Upon completion of their first assignment, and across all respondents, money dropped 8% as a motivator, though it remained foremost. At the same time, greater work-life balance and being able to focus more on patients (and not politics) saw an uptick in importance.

Satisfaction in staying

The majority of nurses saw workloads increase during the pandemic. They were left emotionally drained and physically exhausted, and many were left questioning their careers. The current shortage of RNs is now being exacerbated by the aging of Baby Boomers and their growing need for health care. And the fact that nursing schools in the U.S. are struggling to expand capacity makes the situation even more unsettling.

These factors make recruitment and retention top priorities and essential to warding off a health crisis. To get to the heart of why RNs are leaving the profession, it is important to consider frontline feedback that highlights the reasons why they are staying as well.

For additional data, please visit the Nomad Health Job Satisfaction Index.

Our job board is a great place to search for your next travel nurse assignment. We have you covered with our housing page if housing is an issue. You can search for what you are looking for.

Valerie Gale, RN, BSN, MAOM, is vice president of clinical excellence at Nomad Health. In this role, she leads the clinical excellence team, which is charged with educating and coaching travel clinicians through their assignments to ensure they are delivering the highest quality patient care at health systems across the country. Valerie holds a Bachelor of Nursing degree from the University of Calgary and a master’s degree in Organizational Management from Dallas Baptist University.

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 Jogan Health

June 28, 2023

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Nursing Shortage Woes: How Will Current Staffing Trends Affect You as a Travel Nurse?

Jogan Health provided this article.

2023 has been a year full of twists and turns for the healthcare industry. One of the most pressing issues – as evidenced by the massive amount of media coverage – is the current nursing shortage. As a travel nurse, you might be wondering how this is going to affect your career. To assuage any anxiety you might be feeling, we want to remind our readers at TGN of the opportunities this provides.

That’s right; we said opportunities! Because even though this trend represents an obstacle for many sections of our industry, if you are a healthcare provider looking for short-term contracts and temporary placement, the staffing shortage can be a boon to your career. How is this possible? Read on to find out.

nursing shortage

Staffing Shortage Balanced Out by New Nursing Programs

First, a bit of good news. Though the staffing shortage is critical and pressing for medical organizations, it is being actively curtailed by a series of new nursing programs and an influx of nursing students. It seems that despite the shortage – or perhaps because of it – demand for nurses has risen considerably in 2023. This year alone, schools in Oklahoma, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Pennsylvania, and California have opened up new programs, expanded nursing opportunities, and even witnessed growth in their number of applications. In the next few years, the industry should see an uptick in nurses and an improvement in care stemming from a more comprehensive pool of nursing participants.

One HP’s Obstacle is Another HP’s Opportunity

Though the staffing shortage is causing major gaps in the rosters of medical organizations, hospitals, and other facilities, it can create a perfect slot for your skills and talents. After all, hospitals and organizations are finding more and more holes, and demand is higher than ever!

However, this opportunity won’t last forever. According to the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, The RN workforce is expected to grow from 3.1 million in 2021 to 3.3 million in 2031, for an increase of 195,400 nurses. It seems the programs we mentioned are working, but this could also mean that now is the best time to press the advantage.

Travel nurses are the perfect stopgap measure for many of these facilities, who are waiting in the wings for crucial roles to be filled. Below, you can find four tips to stake your claim before the market floods again.

4 Tips to Benefit from the Current Healthcare Shortage

nursing shortage
  1. Get in Touch with Staffing and Recruiting Services: Contact one of the many staffing companies out there to ensure you have a direct line to the organizations that most need your help!
  2. Update Your Resume to Show Off Adaptability: The myth that accruing experience as a travel nurse is difficult is just that – a myth. In fact, as a travel nurse, you can accumulate a host of different roles and responsibilities due to the variety of environments you have worked in. Keep your resume updated at all times and ensure that it reflects your flexibility and adaptability.
  3. Remain Close with New Teams Through Social Media: One of the greatest advantages of being a travel nurse is the nationwide web of acquaintances, references, and teams you encounter. The best way to make this feature work for you is to keep fostering these connections, even when you have moved to your next assignment. Social platforms like LinkedIn are the perfect way to ensure continual support from these new co-workers.
  4. Make Your Name Known: Networking is key to ensuring you become a mainstay in your industry. Make sure to expand your skill set. Write an article for a nursing platform! Attend conventions to bolster your nursing toolbox! If these ideas sound too overwhelming, something as simple as reading and sharing nursing-adjacent articles with your connections can help increase your authority and thought leadership.

The Bottom Line: Nursing Isn’t Going Away. It’s Just Changing

The first known documents that mention nursing as a profession were written in 300 AD, during the rise of the Roman Empire. You can draw a line from these ancient times straight to the mother of modern nursing, Florence Nightingale, and out the other end, to the advent of travel nursing.

Our point is: nursing isn’t going away. It’s just changing! The best way to ensure you are prepared as a travel nurse is to evolve with it. We hope these tips helped! For more information on the trends explained in this article, or if you need help with placement as a travel nurse, visit Jogan Health’s website today.

Our job board is a great place to search for your next travel nurse assignment. We have you covered with our housing page if housing is an issue. You can search for what you are looking for.

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

August 5, 2016

12037 Views

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The Nursing Workforce: Is There Still a Nursing Shortage?

It’s glaringly apparent that there is still an on-going nursing shortage in select areas in the US.  Every two years the NCSBN (National Council of State Boards of Nursing) works with The National Forum of State Nursing Workforce Centers to perform a study on the nursing workforce.

It’s interesting to note that over 50% of the participants in this study are over the age of 50. This would indicate that a large amount of our nursing workforce is approaching or at retirement.

Source: NCSBN

What’s Being Done to Alleviate the Nursing Shortage?

Interestingly, it was actually quite difficult to determine what steps the various states are taking in an effort to manage and work through these shortages. In fact, most of the reports that I sought out were well over 2 years old in most cases and some as much as 10 or more years since the last reporting. Here are some of the more recent reports.

  • The American Association of Colleges of Nursing | Nursing Shortage’s latest reporting is from 2014 
  • According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Employment Projections 2012-2022 released in December 2013:

Registered Nursing (RN) is listed among the top occupations in terms of job growth through 2022. The RN workforce is expected to grow from 2.71 million in 2012 to 3.24 million in 2022, an increase of 526,800 or 19%. The Bureau also projects the need for 525,000 replacements nurses in the workforce bringing the total number of job openings for nurses due to growth and replacements to 1.05 million by 2022.  (source: Bureau of Labor Statistics http://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecopro.t08.htm)

Who Is Taking Charge?

It’s unfortunate, but from the research that I’ve been able to find, it appears that states are ignoring this potential healthcare disaster.

How Florida Is Taking Charge

Florida, is taking charge of the situation. Not only has Florida opted to join the Nurse Compact, but they have also completed a comprehensive report, which includes strategies to address this looming crisis. According to the Florida Center for Nursing (reported in June 2015):

“Baseline forecasts show that Florida will face a shortage of RNs by 2025 that is capable of crippling our healthcare system and reducing access to care for Floridians…”

Unlike many other states, Florida realizes that it has a dire need to address this issue and has set up a series of strategies to address it.  Florida has identified four areas that they have addressed in the strategies report linked above.

  • Education
  • Work environment
  • Research
  • Policy

You can read more  from the Florida Center for Nursing and their Forecasts & Strategies for the shortage as well as their Strategies to Successfully Provide Floridians an Adequate, Qualified Nurse Workforce

What Does the Shortage Mean for the Travel Medical Staffing Industry?

The Affordable Care Act or “Obamacare” was implemented in 2014.  According to CDC.Gov data;

The current enrollment numbers (as of February 2016) are roughly: 12.7 million in the marketplace, and very roughly 20 million total between the ACA between the Marketplace, Medicaid expansion, young adults staying on their parents plan, and other coverage provisions. The uninsured rate remains at an all time low with 9.1% of under 65 uninsured as of 4th quarter 2015.

What this means is an all time high in the number of insured American’s. Where are these now ensured going for their healthcare needs? What are the hospitals, clinics and states doing to make sure that there is adequate nursing coverage? Here are some key perspectives:

  • According to a Forbes report from October 2015 (Hospitals are beginning to reach out to the ‘contract’ labor market. More specifically, the Travel Nurse Market.

A window into this trend opened this week at the nation’s largest hospital company, HCA Holdings, which said increased patient volume from the health law and an improved economy forced its hospitals to hire more nurses from “contract labor” firms given the need for hundreds of these health professionals at its more than 100 hospitals across the country. (See full Forbes.com full report here)

  • In a 2014 report on the affect of ACA on the Healthcare Workforce

Health care workers are facing mounting stress and instability as the Affordable Care Act forces industry changes that overburden health professionals, leading to increased dissatisfaction, burnout, and the loss of care providers.” See full report Heritage.org report here.

  • A 2015 report by Beckers Hospital Review stated that “almost 50 percent of healthcare employers have plans to hire temporary or contract workers this year.” See full Beckers Hospital Review Report here.
  • According to Staffing Industry Analysts 2016 US Staffing Industry Forecast: “the healthcare segment of the US temporary staffing market is projected to grow a robust 14% in 2016, following a 20% surge in 2015.”

What Does This Critical Shortage Mean for Travel Nurses?

Combining the fact that the states are not addressing these issues and the multitude of agreements that there is a significant increase of ‘contingent’ staffing for temporary shortages, the travel nurse market will continue to grow and thrive.  A quick search for “temporary nursing” nets over 12,000 results on Indeed.com and the new Job Listings feature launched just over a month ago on TheGypsyNurse.com/joblistings (link) currently has over 80,000 temporary jobs listed and is growing daily.

Finding contingent staff is a hurdle for the hospitals but for the travel medical professional the supply versus demand equation is currently in our favor. If you are seeking your next travel position, check out the available jobs via thegypsynurse.com/joblistings (link) and if you are new to traveling read over our “Step by Step” travel nurse plan (link to thegypsynurse.com/plan) to get started.

Stay tuned on more information on how to leverage this current nursing shortage in your favor as a travel nurse.

What is your home state doing to address nursing shortage? If you have information related to the state’s reactions and strategies on the nursing shortage, please post in the comments and let us know.