Ask Travel Nursing Central: Contract Questions

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Reading your travel nursing contract can sometimes leave you with more questions than answers. It’s important to know what you’re signing up for when you agree to a travel assignment.

Your contract is arguably your most important tool to help you navigate the sometimes uncharted waters of your travel nursing career. It can also be the most confusing. Fortunately, Travel Nursing Central is here to help you map out your professional path. We posted some of your frequently asked questions about travel nursing contracts and our answers here. Please keep in mind that our website should not be substituted for legal counsel. Rather, we hope this information helps you become a better advocate for yourself. As always, we recommend that you speak with your recruiter before you sign or break your contract.

Question: “I am on my first assignment in Kentucky. I agreed to this job because the agency and the hospital both made it sound so much better than it actually is. I took a night shift job, which was a huge mistake. I’m not sleeping well, I’m sick 24/7, and I feel depressed and yuck. On top of that, my contract is extremely vague, and things don’t make any sense to me now. I missed a shift, and now they’re taking money away from me. I want out — I’m going through so much and frustrated. Help!”

Answer: “I’m so sorry your first traveling assignment hasn’t been a fun experience. Even though this trip wasn’t everything you’d hoped it would be, you still have options.

In your case, I recommend that you let your recruiter know how you’re feeling about this assignment so far. If your recruiter has your best interests at heart, she or he should be able to reassure you and offer advice on what to do next. Maybe this current assignment is almost done, and you can soon relocate to another hospital with better hours. After all, that’s the positive side of traveling nursing—most assignments are short.

If your assignment is truly unbearable, you can quit, but make sure you read your contract thoroughly so that you understand the consequences. Some contracts have monetary penalties for travelers who end an assignment early. Again, you can always ask your recruiter to go over your contract with you to explain anything that seems vague to you.

For future traveling assignments, I would also suggest thoroughly reviewing any new contract with your recruiter before you sign anything. It’s not always a joy to read all that legal jargon, but, if you do, you won’t ever again be surprised with any unexpected charges or fees. I hope you start feeling better, and enjoy future trips as a traveling nurse soon.”

Question: “I have been at my current travel assignment for almost a year. I have never done travel nursing before this. My travel agency and facility would both like me to renew, but I have heard from different people that you aren’t considered a contract nurse after a year at one facility. My travel agency says this isn’t a problem. What is your understanding of this? I would like to stay at this facility, but I don’t want any surprises if I decide to stay!”

Answer: “You can work at your current facility as long as you like. However, if you decide to stay, you will no longer be eligible to receive a housing stipend or a Per Diem allowance. If you work in the same location for a year, the IRS considers that location as your new permanent tax home. In the eyes of the IRS, you are no longer away from home, so you can’t receive the tax-free money. Whatever you decide, I hope this information helps you in your travel nursing career. Good luck!”

Question: “I am currently fulfilling a contract in California. I was told by my agency that the company I am working for is going to decrease my rate mid-contract. I found out that it was not affecting all travelers on my unit. When I called my agency upset about this rate change, they told me that I could either accept the rate change or my contract would be cancelled.  Can they do this?”

Answer: First of all, I’m sorry to hear that this assignment has been stressful for you. I would highly recommend asking your recruiter about your contract. I’m not a legal expert, but they should not be able to change the terms of your contract without consent on both sides and without proper notice. However, there could be provisions in your contract which would allow your agency to the cancel the assignment if you don’t agree. Without reading the specifics of your contract, I believe you have two choices in your current situation. You can accept the change and complete the assignment, or you decline the change and start looking for another position with another agency. Again, I would speak with your recruiter first to fully understand your options before you make any decisions in your current assignment. Thanks for writing and good luck!

For more FAQs regarding travel nursing contracts, please click here

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How Does Travel Nursing Help Close the Healthcare Gap?

Travel nurses help close the healthcare gap by traveling nationwide to provide patient care wherever it is most needed.

In this great infographic titled “Can Shift Work Close the Healthcare Job Gap?” travel nursing is identified as one means for helping the healthcare industry keep pace with accelerated demand.

Check out this infographic from CompHealth.com

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Happy Holidays from Travel Nursing Central!

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Happy Holidays, travel nurses!

Travel Nursing Central wishes you very Happy Holidays!

You may be far from home, or maybe you’re home for the holidays. Wherever you are, you are in our hearts.

We look forward to continuing to bring you the best in travel nursing news, resources, reviews, blogs, and so much more in 2016 and beyond.

Thanks so much for all of your hard work as a travel nurse. You truly make the world a better place!

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Travelers Conference 2015

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Learn, network, and play at the Travelers Conference 2015!

The countdown is on for Travelers Conference 2015. Just 96 days, 20 hours, 46 minutes, and 33 seconds left to go as of this posting!

Traveler Conference 2015 will be September 14-15 in gorgeous Las Vegas. This year’s event, the 8th annual Travelers Conference, will be held at The Rio All-Suite Hotel & Casino which is offering a $99 per night group rate.

According to its website, the Travelers Conference is an “annual event that provides Traveling Healthcare Professionals an opportunity to network with other travelers and top industry insiders” in a “relaxed, low-pressure setting.” There are experts, veterans, and reps from travel nurse companies available to share info, make connections, and just plain kick back with. While the majority of attendees are travel nurses and CEUs can be earned, the event welcomes traveling nurses, physical therapists, respiratory therapists, occupational therapists, nursing students, and those curious about exploring the possibilities of traveling as a healthcare professional.

The Travelers Conference 2015 keynote speaker is Jeff Solheim, MSN RN-BC CEN CFRN FAEN, who has worked as an RN for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and now works as a consultant, speaker, and founder of Project Helping Hands which places short-term medical teams in areas lacking access to basic services.

Other Travelers Conference 2015 speaker include: Joseph Smith of Travel Tax; Tracy Singh, RN, JD; Candy Treft, RN of The Gypsy Nurse; Kay “Epstein LaRue” Slane, RN, BS of Highway Hypodermics, and several other industry leaders and experts.

There will also be a Newbie Boot Camp held on Sunday, September 13th from 12:30-5 p.m., breakout sessions, social and networking events, and much more on the schedule.

All in all it’s a great opportunity for those in the industry to network, learn, and play!

Click here to learn more about Travelers Conference 2015, to register, and to keep an eye on that ever-changing countdown clock.

Have you attended Travelers Conference in the past? Share your experiences in the comments.

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2015 Gypsy Florence Nightingale Contest

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Florence Nightingale is the inspiration for the 2015 Gypsy Florence Nightingale Contest.

National Nurses Week runs each year from May 6-12 — ending on iconic nurse Florence Nightingale’s birthday. Nightingale, often referred to as the mother of modern nursing, remains a huge inspiration to nurses everywhere.

This year The Gypsy Nurse is hosting the Third Annual “Gypsy Florence Nightingale” Contest, in celebration of Nurses Week and Florence Nightingale’s birthday. The prize is valued at more than $600.

“As a Travel Nurse, we have met and interacted with many nurses across the U.S. We all have at least one fellow travel nurse that has inspired us, aided us, or has represented Travel Nursing in a way that makes us want to be a better nurse,” she writes on her website.

Click here to make your nomination for the 2015 Gypsy Florence Nightingale contest!

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Travel Nursing Blog Roundup

With the kids going back to school and what’s usually the busiest travel nursing season approaching, we thought it was a good time to see what some of our favorite travel nursing blogs are buzzing about.

Read below for Travel Nursing Central’s travel nursing blog roundup.

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Save the Date: Travel Nurses Day 2014

This post reminds travel nurses to save the date for the upcoming second annual Travel Nurses Day, Friday, October 10, 2014.

 

TheGypsyNurse 86 6001 - Travel Nursing Blog RoundupGypsy Nurse Blog — Guest Post by Sarah Owens RN

Preparing Our Family for Travel

Sarah’s post discusses how she, her husband, and their three children plan ahead for life as a traveling family. From hauling their belongings to education, this is a great blog for any travel nurses working and traveling with a family in tow.

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Top 10 Cities for Travel Nurses to Spend (a short) Time In

The author runs down a list of picks for nurses to consider assignments in, including: Burbank, Denver, San Diego, Seattle, San Francisco, and more.

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How NOT To Travel Nursing Videos

Announcement of a new travel nursing video/resource series — with a comical twist. Short videos show what not to do as a traveler, in a humorous light, then articles provide information on how to manage the same situation the right way.

TNAA - Travel Nursing Blog RoundupTravel Nurse Across America

Four Apps for Staying Social While on the Road

Post detailing Vine, Google Hangout, Timehop, and Find My Friends — all apps through which travel nurses can better stay in touch with family and friends while they are on assignment.

Please share any blog hosts in the comments that we should consider for future a Travel Nursing Blog Roundup!

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2014 Travelers Conference

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The 2014 Travelers Conference is coming this September!

September 23-24 are going to be the dates for the 2014 Travelers Conference!

The annual conference will once again be held at the Flamingo Hotel and Casino, located on the Las Vegas strip. The 2014 Travelers Conference is hosted by PanTravelers, and according to its website, it has grown into the largest single gathering of healthcare travelers in the U.S.

“Organized by volunteers who are themselves current or former travelers, the purpose of this event is to provide a relaxed setting that gives travelers an opportunity to network with other travelers and top industry insiders,” reads the Travelers Conference site.

You can still nab the early registration discounted price of $89 (for both days) prior to August 1st. Standard registration is $99, from August 1st-September 1st. And, if the event is not yet sold out (as it was last year by this time) the last minute registration fee is $115. PanTravelers contributing members are entitled to a 15% discount on the cost of conference registration.

This year there will also be a Newbie Boot Camp, Monday, September 22, from 1-5 p.m. This will allow new travelers the chance to learn from experienced travelers and staff. It is completely free, with your paid 2014 Travelers Conference registration.

As of this posting, the 2013 information was still posted under schedule and speakers — to give an idea of what attendees can expect. But, there is information about the 2014 Welcome Receptions and Gypsy Nurse Luncheon, and the full roster and schedule will be posted as they develop.

Click here to learn more about the 2014 Travelers Conference. If you have any further questions, you can contact the organizers through that link.

Have you ever been to a Travelers Conference in the past, and, do you plan to attend the 2014 Travelers Conference? Let us know in the comments.

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Travel Nurse Staffing Saves Lives

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Your work as a travel nurse provides safer staffing and saves lives!

Most nurses are inspired to do what they do for altruistic reasons. The idea and practice of helping others in need is a huge motivator for those within or thinking about joining the nursing profession.

Because of this drive to help others, many nurses struggle with improper staffing levels, knowing they are giving their all but sometimes unable to deliver the best patient care possible when assigned too many patients or put into an unsafe situation on the job.

This is why travel nursing is such a crucially important career path!

Travel nurses go where they are most needed, to provide care to patients and much-needed relief to overworked perm staff.

Many surveys have indicated that nurse staffing levels are quite often unsafe and more nurses may be needed to provide proper patient care within hospitals. Yet another recent survey, commissioned by the Massachusetts Nurses Association/National Nurses United, indicated that nurses reported that understaffing led to patient injury (46%), longer hospital stays (51%), and medication errors (57%).

Travel nursing is a way to sort of double down on helping others. You can help patients, hospitals, and other nurses — all while taking the opportunity to travel and explore new locations!

If you’re thinking about getting into travel nursing but don’t know where to begin, Travel Nursing Central can be an excellent resource for you. This site offers advice, checklists, information on housing, updates on current events and news relevant to the industry, and information and rankings on hospitals and travel nursing companies.

One of our most popular site features is our annual ranking of travel nurse companies. Click here to see the list for 2014.

With an important understanding for how travel nurse staffing saves lives, we are happy to help you get on the road to helping others through travel nursing. Click around and let us know if you have any questions!

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3 Ways Travel Nursing Improves Your Career

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Thumbs up for building an awesome career through travel nursing!

Travel nursing isn’t just a great way to see the country (although it definitely is that!). It’s also a really great chance for nurses to build their careers and advance professionally in the long run.

Here are 3 ways travel nursing improves your career by helping in your professional development:

Practicing Flexibility  

All nurses must learn to roll with the punches, as hospital work bring often brings surprises and demands that you think on your feet. But travel nurses really learn and get to practice adaptability and flexibility, which is awesome for your professional growth and makes you even more marketable wherever you go in the future.

Getting a Variety of Experience         

Travel nurses get exposure to a lot of different colleagues, diverse patient demographics, and facilities (and their various different ways of doing things). In each of these areas this variety of experience will make you stronger professionally and a better nurse.

The strengthening of your base of experience is also a great confidence booster. After a few assignments travel nursing you’ll have seen a lot, and that experience shows yourself and others that you can handle anything! Experiencing new ways of doing things and being in contact with a greater variety of people, personalities, and patient situations also does a lot to enrich you as a person.

Growing Professionally (And Personally)

Having travel nursing on your resume will follow you forever — in a good way! When hospital administrators see travel nursing in your file it automatically tells them that you are dependable, flexible, highly skilled, experienced in a number of hospital environments, and extremely dedicated to patient care. A July 2012 study by Nursing Management reflected that travel nurses grew professionally (and personally) while working on assignment. travel nursing increases your technical skill set and teaches you new things on and off the job.

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How Travel Nurses are Like Olympians

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Travel Nurses Go For The Gold Every Day!

The 2014 Olympics in Sochi are coming to a close this weekend. Maybe if you’re lucky enough to have worked the evening or night shift you got to catch some of my personal favorite winter sport, Curling — which was on at exclusively odd hours this time around!

Seems so many of us have the Olympics on the brain, and I just came across a great blog this week on allnurses.com called Nurses Train Like Olympians. The posts’ intro reads:

“Before an athlete can enter into the Olympic ring, they must do years of extensive training. The same is true for nurses. They take rigorous prerequisites, nursing courses and clinicals, before they can enter the nursing field. Nurses train to go into many environments. Just like [sic] Olympians take their talents to the slopes, nurses train to take their skills and knowledge into many different arenas. For both there are tears, laughter, joy and few hours of sleep. But they know in the end it will all be worth it because they are following their dream!

I thought this blog made some really fantastic comparisons. The post goes on to compare nurses and Olympians in terms of:

  • Physical Strength
  • Mental Toughness
  • Uniforms
  • Nursing Also Having Fans
  • Ability to Keep an Eye on a Goal

Agreed, on all counts! But, it got me thinking about how travel nurses specifically are like Olympians. Here are a couple more I’d add that are specific to travel nurses and how travel nurses are like Olympians:

Performing Like a Champ on an Unfamiliar “Course”

There was some talk this year about difficulty of certain courses in Sochi. Shaun White may have lost some fans over his inability to deal with a tricky course. On the other hand, American Kelly Clark called the halfpipe course “challenging” but told USA Today, “I know I can’t control what the pipe conditions are. It has the potential to be variable, and I’m going to make the most of this opportunity.”

Clark’s sentiments are pretty much what every good travel nurse must believe when jumping into things at a new facility. Travel nurses can’t control or know what the dynamic will be like, but they jump right in and make the most of it.

Sense of Adventure

Watching terrifically talented athletes conquer adventurous courses and dominate the landscape in all the way across the globe totally reminded me Olympians travel for adventure and to succeed in their fields — just like travel nurses.

I hope you enjoy the conclusion of the Sochi Olympics, and that all you travel nurse Olympians keep going for the gold every day on the job!

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