By Ben Hartwig

January 20, 2020

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Top Challenges in Travel Nursing: How to Control the Situation

Travel nursing is an excellent way to hone your clinical skills and advance your career while getting paid to see the country.

Taking the leap from staff nurse to gypsy nurse is difficult, but once you’ve taken the first step, nothing can stop you! The chance to see and experience the entire country while doing what you love is one heck of a reward. However, if this is your first assignment, know that the road you’re on has its own set of challenges and perils. The key to overcoming any issue is to understand what it is firsthand and take control of the situation as it arises.

Here are some of the challenges in travel nursing both on and off the hospital floor.

Challenges in Travel Nursing


You’re Going to Miss Home

As the name implies, you’ll be traveling a lot as a travel nurse. Every working assignment is in a different location, and you’ll be away from home all the time. It can be a wee bit lonely in the beginning, but you’ll overcome it soon enough when you start working. You’ll be seeing a lot of new faces and will get to experience many different cultures when traveling. These two reasons alone will take your mind off home, so make the most of it and explore your new surroundings!

Being a travel nurse is also a chance to form lasting friendships with the people you meet along the way. Having a friend or two in a different city or state sounds like a wonderful trade-off for being far from home. If you’re having a hard time meeting people, try your colleagues and neighbors.

Choosing Where to Live

Since you won’t be living in any one location for long, finding an ideal place to call home can be a challenge. There are plenty of things to consider, such as how far are you willing to travel to work and how much transportation costs will be. Most agencies provide housing for travel nurses that rotate in and out of an area. However, you can always take the housing stipend so you can have more control over where to stay.

You can overcome the housing situation by avoiding Craigslist scams that sound too good to be true. Join travel nursing housing forums and ask around. If you go for a co-living space, make advanced background checks on the people you’ll be sharing a space with. Do the same to a landlord if you find a short-term rental. Try HomeAway or Airbnb if you can’t find anything. If your finances can handle it, extended hotel stays are a great option.

Your First Few Assignments

In time, you’ll learn everything about being a travel nurse, and you’ll have the credentials to choose where to go and what to do. If you’re starting, however, things won’t always go your way, and the environment can be very competitive. Remember, you’re there to help a short-staffed hospital. You need to keep an open mind on unpredictable schedules and different work assignments.

Expect More Work

Travel nurses are often expected to handle a heavier workload because of their higher pay. More work and extended hours will lead to burnout, so you need to avoid places with a low nurse to patient ratio. Gather as much information you can about a potential assignment before you commit.

Floating

Floating isn’t fun, and since you’re the new travel nurse on the block, you’re the most likely candidate to get “floated” to another unit. Before you freak out, look at floating as an opportunity that can benefit your career. Floating opens you up to different experiences and can teach you new skills that can make you a better nurse. If you were a part of a crew that had daily drama issues, floating is an excellent chance to get away from all that.

Working with New People

As a travel nurse, you’ll be working with different sets of colleagues for each new assignment. There will be a lot of personalities, attitudes, and customs at play, so you must learn how to adapt to your new surroundings quickly. Learning how your new co-workers do things, and the culture of the workplace can help your integration run a lot smoother.

In some cases, however, you should expect a little jealousy from other staff nurses. Issues about higher pay and more desirable shifts are the usual sources of workplace jealousy aimed at travel nurses. Since you’re a traveling nurse, your salary will be a little higher, and you’re not subject to seniority when it comes to shifting assignments.

In a Nutshell

There are plenty of perks to being a travel nurse, but the job has its fair share of challenges as well. What can make or break your career is how you deal with the issues that come your way.

We hope these tips help with the challenges in travel nursing you may come across in your travel nurse adventures.

Our travel nurse guide is a great resource for new travel nurses and those who have been traveling.

By The Gypsy Nurse

November 29, 2018

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Travel Nursing: Experiences of Nurses Around the World

Travel nursing is a career that offers both flexibility and adventure. The job requires nurses to experience working around the world, and after a few weeks or months, they move to another place. The main reason this concept was initiated was due to the lack of ample nurses in different regions.

It looks exciting, for sure. However, there are both advantages and disadvantages to choosing this career.

The advantages:

Travel Nursing: Experiences of Nurses Around the World
  • High income: Travel nurses are among the highest paid healthcare personnel. They also receive tax-free stipends, healthcare and retirement benefits, bonuses and generous reimbursements.
  • Career growth: Through encountering different facilities, travel nurses learn to be more flexible.
  • Adventure: Since travel nursing involves a lot of travelling, you will find yourself in new and unusual places with each posting.
  • Exposure to new cultures: The world is a hub for different cultures. A career in travel nursing exposes you to some of these cultures.
  • Freedom and flexibility: As a travel nurse you get to choose where you want to work and when. Therefore, you choose the time you spend with friends and family.

The disadvantages:

  • Temporary employment: In most cases, travel nursing employment is contract-based. You end up jobless when a deal comes to an end.
  • No paid time off Most companies doesn’t offer time off to travel nurses.
  • Low or no insurance benefits: They get low insurance benefits because they are based on taxable wages, which are also low.
  • Difficult to maintain personal relationships: Time spent traveling often means long-distance relationships.

Travel nurses share their personal experiences:
 Dr. Helen Rook

I moved to New Zealand in 2001 because I wanted to visit a new place and explore a different culture. I started working at Wellington Hospital in the intensive care department.

Later I got married to Andrew, and we now have two beautiful children, Conor and Aidan. In 2017 I received a PhD in nursing, and I’m a full-time academic at Victoria University of Wellington researching on nursing values. At the moment here in New Zealand, nurses are complaining about the low pay, lousy working conditions and low staffing.

Sharon Steeves

I work at DeSalaberry District Health Center in southern Manitoba, Canada. I love my nursing career because this is what I have always wanted to do, since I was four years old.

The theme of International Nurses Day for this year motivated me to join a group of other protesters to agitate about the ongoing cuts to our health services. I like how as nurses we come together to ask for justice and human rights.

Laura Byrne

Travel Nursing: Experiences of Nurses Around the World

I’m currently working as a volunteer in a community clinic in Cape Town, South Africa. The clinic mostly deals with refugees from DRC, Zimbabwe and Central African Republic.

The nursing experience for me has been very challenging here because it is different from what I’m used to in Ireland. The patients here are vulnerable, and diseases like HIV, malnutrition and TB are prevalent compared to Ireland.

The Irish nursing degree has helped me work in different environments. For instance, I had the opportunity to work in Australia as an agency nurse for a year. I have also worked for Princess Cruises for a year, and I loved it there.

Michelle Roche

I left Ireland five years ago, and since then I have been working in Victoria, Australia. Emigrating is the best decision I have ever made; working full time in Ireland I was never able to pay my bills.

Here in Australia, I have a good life; I am well compensated for the hard work. I am now a unit manager and there are numerous opportunities available to me.

Kerr Janer

I am a paediatric nurse from Limerick, Dublin where I used to work earlier in a children’s hospital. Currently, I work at King Faisal Specialist Hospital in Riyadh City. Emigrating has grown my career and also led to personal development. I now work in a big specialist hospital with people from different cultures. There is better pay here with free accommodation and 54 days paid annual leave.

Without a doubt, travel nursing is one of the best things that happened to the nursing community. From the experiences shared above by several nurses, it’s clear that emigrating has been very beneficial. Most of them now work with flexible schedules and receive high incomes. By working in different environments, they have gained personal and professional growth.

Though it comes with some disadvantages like being away from family and difficulties in adapting to a new environment, it is still one of the best careers. It is important that nurses are opting to move away from low-paid jobs and lousy working conditions. Nurses do great work so they should be respected and paid well. There are various organisations around the world that have come up to help nurses fight for their rights and also help them get better job deals around the world.

Sandy Gretzky

Sandy Getzky is the executive coordinating editor at The Global Nail Fungus Organization, a group committed to helping the 100+ million people suffering from finger and toenail fungus. Sandy is also a registered Herbalist and member of the American Herbalist’s Guild.

 
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By Andrew Ferguson

February 10, 2018

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Adventures in Travel Nursing

 I like to quote famous people in my writings. For this article, I’d like to cite a famous author, Hunter S Thompson, who once said, “Buy the ticket, take the ride”. Which, if you think about it, is exactly what travel nurses do. They take the chance of adventures that a lot of people can’t bring themselves to take. The rewards are off the hook, but even so, it takes some bravery, and a lot of gumption to step into the arena.

An assignment can fly by quickly, or it can seem like a lifetime. This can depend on how you feel about your latest job, but a lot of it has to do with how much you like the new town you find yourself calling home. So, therein lies the rub.

How do you handle a dud assignment, when all you want is to earn a living and get your adventures on?

If it’s a situation at work, that’s probably a case for you and your recruiter to handle, or you need advice from a fellow travel nurse. I’ve seen my wife come home in tears, so I know how bad things can get, but I’m going to stick to my area of expertise for this article, and stay out of the hallowed halls of the hospital.

So, the town your working in rolls up its sidewalks at 7:30, and everyone’s over sixty, or under twenty, depending on which demographic you choose to hang with (or in this case, not hang with). It can be rough when you don’t enjoy your temporary hometown. You can’t enjoy your off days, it makes it hard to get anything done, and you feel like you made a huge mistake.

We are a travel nurse family, and that can be a different animal then the single travel nurse, or a family without young children, but some of the following suggestions can be used by anybody that finds themselves in this situation.

1.) Never underestimate how much time you can kill improving yourself.

I’m not implying anyone reading this article needs an exceptional amount of betterment, but I also don’t think anyone doing this kind of work is afraid of a little personal growth. As a matter of fact, I’d say that it’s one of the reasons most of you are doing it. Take advantage of a bad situation, by reading, listening to lectures, or working on a new skill.

2.) You know you’ve always wanted to learn a new language.

You’re a traveler after all. Maybe you’ve always been interested in taking your nursing career in a new direction or starting an exercise program. You could try meditation, take up yoga, or learn to bake. A boring town gives you just the excuse you’ve been waiting for to investigate these opportunities. I would encourage anyone who is, or is with a travel nurse, to start taking pictures and writing down all the cool stuff you’ve seen and done. Sites like the Gypsy Nurse are always looking for new contributors, and if you’ve ever read anything by me, you know they’ll publish anybody!

3.) Remember too, that anonymity is your friend on the road.

Sometimes we’re held back from trying something new or taking adventures by how we think our friends, or family will react to it. Nobody likes feeling judged or being embarrassed, but it helps when the people doing the judging are ones you’re likely to never see again. Try it, and if you succeed, brag. If you fail, learn from it, and move on. Be fearless, and you’ll never be bored.