Posts Tagged ‘Travel Nursing’

Expedient Medstaff Blog Named to Top 20

Friday, June 18th, 2010

Expedient Medstaff is pleased to announce our blog has been selected into the top 20 blogs in the Travel Nursing catagory by On-Line Nursing Programs. To view the top 20, click on Travel Nursing with Expedient Medstaff.

Share This Post

Travel Nursing - Per Diem Nursing - Local Contract Nursing

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

When hospitals & health systems seek supplemental nursing help, they typically ask for help in 1 of 3 ways. This article will highlight the 3 traditional forms of healthcare staffing. (1) Travel Nursing. Travel nursing jobs are usually 13 weeks in duration but can be as short as 4 weeks and as long as the hospital has a need…often up to a year. Most travel nurses prefer not to stay in the same location for more than 39 weeks because they no longer qualify for tax free travel reimbursements after 39 weeks…Tax Advantage for those in the industry. Most hospitals consider a nurse to be a traveler if they live 50 miles or more away from the hospital’s physical address. Travel nurses come from around North America…not just the USA. Canadian nurses often enjoy travel nursing assignments in the USA. Travel nursing assignments usually offer nurses housing, furniture, utilties, housewares, travel to and from the assignment, and other reimbursements that are part of traveling to an assignment. Travel nursing jobs offer adventure, new experiences and the ability to work where you vacation. Expedient Medstaff offers travel nursing. Please contact us at 877-367-8770 to learn more about travel nursing and if it is the right career choice for you. (2) Per Diem Nursing. Per diem nursing jobs offer casual, low committment working opportunities. Per diem nursing job schedules are typically done on a weekly to monthly basis. Per diem nurses jobs can be as short as 1 day in duration and as long as up to about 4 weeks. Per diem nursing is offered in the nurse’s local market, where the nurse will work at a hospital or health system in the geographical area that the nurse lives. Per diem nursing jobs offer extra income to working nurses or a way for nurses to keep their skills that are fortunate enough not to have to work full time hours to support themselves or their family. Per diem nursing job wages are typically higher paying than hospital staff jobs and also higher than travel nursing jobs because housing is not required. Per diem nursing jobs offer flexibility and high wages. It is a great career path for nurses looking to have that work / life balance. Expedient Medstaff offers Per Diem Nursing Jobs in Michigan and Ohio. Please call us at 877-367-8770 to learn more about per diem nursing jobs. (3) Local Contract Nursing. Local contract nursing jobs are a hybrid between per diem nursing jobs and the duration of travel nursing jobs. Local contracts are available to nurses that live in the general area of the hospital. Local contracts typically go from as short as 2 weeks to as long as 13 weeks in duration. Local contract nurses fall in line with the hospital staffing schedule. Local contract nurses make the same dollars as a per diem nurse but have the schedule security of future work. Local contract work 24- 40 hours per week. Expedient Medstaff has several local nursing contracts. Please call us at 877-367-8770 to learn more about a career with Expedient Medstaff.

Share This Post

Floating & Cross Polinating Specialties

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2010

A new trend is developing in travel nursing jobs that all travel nurses should educate themselves about. The trend is working multiple specialties. The recession has created some restlessness in hospitals. Hospitals hold concern over committing to a traveler for only one unit or one specialty. The recession has validated their concern with census fluctuations. So, to protect against committing to a traveler for 13 weeks for a need that may dissipate, hospitals are now requesting travel nurses to be willing to float to more than specialty. For example, “Nurse must be willing to work ER and float to Med-Surg”. This shouldn’t come to much as a surprise. During travel nuring’s peek, hospitals often requested the willingness of travelers to float to “like units”. With the recession, it has morphed into secondary specialties. Some hospitals even require travelers to be willing to float to another hospital in their system…up to 25 miles away. Travel nursing remains a great career choice but the demands of flexibility and skill set and professional certifications has increased accordingly. To learn more about travel nursing, please contact an experienced Expedient Medstaff career consultant. We will be happy to discuss our travel nursing jobs with you and give honest answers and advice on current trends in travel nursing. Feel free to contact us toll free at 877-367-8770

Share This Post

Nursing on the Rebound

Wednesday, March 17th, 2010

The Great Recession has caused many nurses to re-think their career path. Many “hunkered down” and took a job they viewed as secure vs. a job they truly desired during these tough economic times. Now, economic indicators show the economy is on the mend. Travel nursing jobs are starting to gain in volume and frequency. Per Diem nursing jobs are opening back up. There will certainly be some shifting in healthcare as registered nurses leave jobs to find opportunities that are more personally rewarding. Many travel nurses that put their desire to travel on hold will be getting back into the market. Hospital census will begin to pick up as the job market improves. Trauma season will certainly fill some hospital beds. The bottom line is that we have made it through the worst part of a bad economy and things will continue to get better. It is a great time to venture out and look at what career options are available. Registering with Expedient Medstaff takes less than 5 minutes and you will also receive weekly email updates showing the jobs that are available. Try travel nursing…it’s a job that comes with a vacation!

Share This Post

Expedient Medstaff Travel Nursing Blog Makes Top 15

Monday, March 15th, 2010

Expedient Medstaff is pleased to have our blog recognized as one of the top 15 most engaging travel nursing blogs by travel nursing blogs.com.

Share This Post

Travel Nursing….Regaining Its Strength!

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

Travel Nursing has regained it’s pulse. While it is still weak and thready…there is a pulse. There is no doubt the recession has hurt travel nursing. However, travel nursing is regaining its strength. The darkest hours were back in April and new life is starting to show as we approach the holiday season. Now is the perfect time to jump into travel nursing. Whether you prefer sunshine or ski slopes….Expedient Medstaff has positions. Apply on line…it takes less than 5 minutes!

Share This Post

Travel Nursing Jobs On The Rise

Thursday, September 17th, 2009

Travel nursing jobs are on the rise. To put it into perspective, the travel nursing jobs available today are likely three times those available in April 2009. However, jobs still tend to get filled quickly…it is like the proverbial dogs fighting over a single bone scenerio. Nurses that have a desire to practice their profession in travel nursing have to be ready to go as the jobs are released. Success is going to the nurses that are qualified and have a predetermined acknowledgement of what jobs they will work. Expedient Medstaff understands that travel nurses are now registering with several travel companies in order to “cast a wider net” and increase their odds of landing a travel nursing assignment. In the interest of making registration easier for travel nurses and per diem nurses alike, Expedient Medstaff has totally revamped our application / registration process. It now only takes a few minutes of time to register with us. Once travel nurses register, Expedient Medstaff will create an up to date resume / travel nurse profile and market this to open jobs that are of interest to travel nurses. We are confident that our easier registration process and the professional profile we create for each nurse will increase the chances of travel nurses finding their dream assignments. Try our registration process…let us know what you think!

Share This Post

Travel Nursing Jobs –In a downed economy

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

What Many People Believe?

There are many folks that believe that the healthcare industry is recession proof. After all, nearly all healthcare jobs have to be performed in the USA and can’t be shipped overseas to a lower cost supplier. Additionally, people can’t fully control sickness. Nobody wants to get sick, injured or ill…it just happens. While all of this is true, it is also true that healthcare does echo the effects of the economy. What can slow healthcare in a down economy? Well, first people put off receiving healthcare services because they might not be able to afford their insurance deductable. They stay at home sick or postpone elective surgeries. Secondly, job loss is a by product of a downed economy. Job loss often means no healthcare insurance benefits to protect people during times of sickness or injury. Thirdly, a depressed stock market impacts investment revenue that many hospitals depend on. This lost revenue causes hospitals to layoff employees, implement hiring freezes, and often increases the work load of those remaining employed…doing more with less so to speak. Hospitals also acquire bad debt as more patients tend to put off paying their deductibles during economic hardship.

So When Will the Healthcare Staffing Market Improve?

While none of us claim to have a crystal ball, there are some indicators that we can look at to gauge a comeback. First we have to understand a couple of key points. Number one, people can only put off sickness so long before it exacerbates into a situation so bad that healthcare services are sought regardless of cost or consequences. Number two, healthcare staffing leads into an economic recession and always leads out. So, in staffing, when jobs contract or are not available over a length of time….staffing is leading into a recession. As the economy begins to bounce back, staffing jobs will open back up…leading out. Number three, hospitals typically gain patient admission through four vectors. (1) Direct admission from their doctor’s office (2) The patient is born there (OB/GYN) (3) The patient has surgery there (OR) (4) The patient is sick or injured and is admitted by the attending physician (ER).

What We Are Seeing:

*Nationally, we have seen travel nursing jobs decrease in some states as much as 90%. (This is clearly a sign of staffing leading into a recession and happened in the fourth quarter of 2008).

*Nationally we are starting to see OR positions opening up. (This has started to occur in mid January 2009. As the OR is one of the vectors that supplies patients to hospitals, we expect admissions to rise and additional specialty travel nurse positions to open up in 8-12 weeks as a result of this.)

*Nationally we are starting to see ER positions open up. (This tells us that patients are starting to visit the hospitals again…volume is up. The ER also is one of the vectors that supplies patients to the hospital. We expect to see admissions rise and more travel nursing jobs created in about 8-12 weeks)
*Nationally we are starting to see travel nursing jobs rise. (This might be a sign of staffing starting to pull out of a recession….we need to see continued job openings for a few more weeks before it has our full confidence)

*Nationally we are getting notified that hospitals have planned expansions set for spring and summer of 2009. (This will clearly create more travel nursing opportunities)

What We Predict: Based on the data that is before us today, we believe that travel nursing jobs will be slowly trending upward in the first quarter of 2009 and start to gain momentum around the end of March through the end of April 2009. This momentum will continue until around October 2009 and then seasonally adjust.

Share This Post