Archive for November, 2010

Contemplating a Career Boost in the form of an ICU Travel Nurse Job?

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

Find Out How It Measures Up Against a Staff ICU Position

Embarking on a travel nurse career means you’re adventurous and ambitious, eager for the 20% hike in salary ICU Travel nursing jobs have to offer, not to mention job placement in America’s best hospitals—a given at 50 States Staffing, where the client base includes over 80% of top ranking hospitals in U.S. News & World Report.

If that isn’t enough, it may behoove the R.N. to know that, although ICU nurse employers can appreciate your loyalty after working at the same hospital for years, many prefer the well-rounded, patient-care perspective of a traveling ICU nurse. While travel nurses snag the attention of healthcare employers nationwide, they are also touring a great deal of it! Working in bustling cities in the  U.S. is a wonderful perk that comes with the job, and the best part?  At 50 States Staffing, we provide free deluxe housing accommodations for you, your spouse, children and pets!

ICU nurse - find Florida nursing jobsSay, for example, you’re interested in Florida nurse jobs; once you accept the job offer, our recruiters put everything in motion, providing you with the tools and convenient online resources to relocate with ease, making your way in an exciting new city that’s at the center of well known shopping and dining districts, site-seeing highlights and more.

Still, it’s hard to say goodbye to your comfort zone and leave a permanent staff job, but consider the pros of a travel nurse career—with its free private housing, included in travel nurse job benefits, plus exposure to new sites and professional experiences, almost anybody would be tempted; so how do you make the right call when the question arises: Should I stay or should I go? Veterans of the profession recommend a close study of travel nurse testimonials as the first step in your decision making process.

I’ve Read Other Travel Nurses’ Rave reviews. What Other Factors Should Weigh In On My Decision to Take an ICU Travel Nursing Job?

ICU travel nurse jobs at 50 States Staffing offer superior pay, flexibility in scheduling, life-enhancing benefits and the opportunity to see Alaska, Hawaii, New York City, Florida, Montana, Maine—just to name a few! Click on the travel nurse jobs locations link to read more about hospital highlights. Assignments last anywhere from 4 to 26 weeks, and VIP customer care is there for consult anytime you need it, to feel even more “at home!”.

Questions You Should Ask Yourself Before Embarking on an ICU Travel Nurse Job

Because you may change ICU travel nurse jobs as often as 4 times a year, it’s a good idea to remind yourself why you got into this vein of nursing in the first place, so make sure you answer in the affirmative to everything on this shortlist.

  • Is my background and experience working with diverse patient populations both impressive and positive?
  • Am I able to facilitate multiple treatment techniques with patients?
  • Do I have an interest in Health IT and emerging trends in medicine?
  • Do I look toward my healthcare career to provide me with cultural enrichment?

That last item on the list resonates the most with R.N.s born to be travel nurses. If you’ve always  wanted the chance to blend work and adventure, AND meet friends for life, contact 50 States Staffing TODAY by calling 800-996-2206 or apply online! Happy trails, travel nurses!

Patient Safety Becomes a Serious Issue in Light of 30-Minute Medication Administration Rule

Monday, November 22nd, 2010

In a travel nursing career, R.N.s face new challenges in patient care that translate into a much wider range of medications, methods of administration, and unanticipated events on the job; this is why the 30-minute medication administration rule—set by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS)—draws both concern and criticism from nurses across the board. The rule mandates administering meds no more than 30 minutes before or after a certain time.

nurse and 30 minute medication ruleTo date, major players in the healthcare arena have requested meetings with CMS to discuss the 30-minute rule and its threat to patient safety. Officials at the Institute for Safe Medication Practices (ISMP) were among the first; they conducted a survey that gathered nurses’ opinions about the rule, with many respondents citing dangerous examples of its impact on patient safety. Overall, nurses objected to the rule’s rigidity, stating hardships when the uniqueness of patients’ individual treatment plans, as well as being forced to rush in medication administration, came up during the course of a typical shift.

Medication nurses used to administer patient meds; fast forward to now, when its just one part of a primary nurse’s daily routine

Other groups requesting meetings with the CMS include the American Nurses Association (ANA), its health officials in agreement with nurses about what is unsafe and impractical in the 30-minute rule. ANA is among the fray in pointing out how the duties of primary nurses have grown to include multiple responsibilities over the decades, expecting that one nurse, assigned to each patient, is responsible for virtually all aspects of care—from patient assessments to careful coordination of care that includes safe and timely administration of medications.

Well-trained Registered Nurses Across America are Up to the Task!

Registered nurse jobs at 50 States Staffing represent a fraction of highly skilled and capable nursing staff across this great country. Members of our team receive high pay and  generous benefits package, working amidst low nurse-to-patient ratios. No matter what facility employs a qualified registered nurse, patients may rest assured he or she exhibits competency in all veins of nursing, including the knowledge and experience with medication to apply ideal timing in their administration.

Advocating a return to letting nursing staff use their best and most educated judgment in administering meds, rather than strictly adhere to the 30-minute rule, 50 States Staffing Clinical Coordinator Debbie Bacurin, R.N. says:

“Of course, there are medications that need to be kept on a time schedule and this should continue.  Since nurses have so much responsibility and knowledge about what is going on in their patients’ lives both in and out of the hospital, there is no reason for them to not have the ability to determine the best time for the patients’ medications to be given. These nurses are well aware of high risk patient groups, and their needs regarding meds as well.”

Health IT provides reasons for nurses to relax more about administering medications

Good news for travel nurses and permanent healthcare staff in medical and rehab facilities across America is this: billions of federal dollars are moving forward with electronic health records, which means bar codes will, in the projected future, promote medication administration safety. Nurses will be able to scan the medication, the patient’s ID, the provider, and affirm that everything checks out.

Pharmacists are also aware of the 30-minute rule and the challenges it presents, working with nurses to create better patient outcomes. The American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (ASHP) in Bethesda, MD believes that nurses need adequate time to teach patients about their medications and answer family members’ questions. Ultimately, and this is unanimous among nurse advocacy groups, R.N.s require flexibility if they want to improve patient safety.

Flexibility being the buzz word in travel nurse careers, call 1-800-996-2206 or apply online today! Healthcare needs you, and so does its millions of patients!

Footnote: To read more about promoting patient safety in your travel nursing career, read “The Institute of Medicine’s To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System,” which talks about unsafe practice environments.

Nursing Informatics Increase Career Opportunities for OR nurses

Monday, November 15th, 2010

What operating room nurses trained in this career can expect in terms of certification, training, salary, and job growth

Last week, a Part 1 blog on Nursing Informatics brought its readers up to date on a hot new healthcare career that’s setting trends and establishing benchmarks for perioperative nurses around the world. Considering health informatics as a nursing career path launches your operating room job into the stratosphere for growth and earning potential.

Nurse Informaticists work in healthcare facilities as executives, administrators, educators, and consultants; their expertise is required in, not just hospitals, but pharmaceutical companies, public health organizations, research labs, medical software companies—even insurance agencies!  Current income statistics report that Senior Nursing Informatics Specialists and Chief Nursing Information Officers (in major cities) earn between $105K-$145K per year!

Be a part of one of the Largest Growing Industries in Healthcare!

With the US Department of Labor estimating a 49% surge in Health IT jobs and Nursing Informatics, it’s easy to see why the last few years have seen a quarter increase in nurses joining the American Medical Informatics Association (AMIA). Other reasons to consider a career in Nursing Informatics include:

  • Nursing Informatics ranks as a top career in U.S. News & World Report
  • The need for approximately 70,000 health informatics specialists, as stated by the CEO of AMIA
  • Electronic medical records tops ECRI’s Top 7 Health Plan IT Trends to Watch

Nursing Informatics Careers Require Graduate Level Learning and Advanced Clinical Knowledge

As a travel nurse, you pick up technical skills, continuing education credits and specialty certifications that allow you to ease from OR jobs to a Nursing Informatics career. The American Nurses Credentialing Center (ANCC) offers the Informatics Nurse Board Certification Exam for the RN-BC credential. Visit an ANCC pdf on exam content to better prepare. R.N.s interested in Nursing Informatics should also:

  • Hold or seek a Master’s degree or certificate in Nursing Informatics or related field
  • Have completed 30 hours of continuing education in informatics within the last three years
  • Qualify—as an active state licensed R.N.—to sit for the Informatics Nursing Certification Exam, awarded by ANCC.
  • Have practiced a minimum of 2,000 hours in Nursing Informatics within the last 3 years OR practiced a minimum of 1,000 hours and completed a minimum of 12 semester hours in informatics courses OR complete an accredited graduate program in Nursing Informatics.

Perioperative Nurses Benefit from Nursing Informatics Careers

When perioperative nurses obtain credentialing as Nursing Informatics Specialists, they become eligible for emerging roles in healthcare that are in high demand, such as nurse informaticists for the Association of PeriOpeative Registered Nurses (AORN) and special projects, like VA-Kaiser—launched by Kaiser Permanente; it’s the nation’s largest national data exchange initiative to date!

Travel nurses may have the edge in landing Health IT jobs. When 50 States Staffing recruits registered nurses, they are placed in top ranking hospitals, over 75% of which are ranked consistently in U.S. News & World Report. A-list healthcare employers are the first to create jobs in Heath IT!

50 States Staffing Offers Travel Nurse Career Resources that Pave the Way!

Our travel nurses benefit from an unlimited CEU online education, making it both easy and convenient to ensure compliance with the latest educational requirements; this way R.N.s get used to virtual learning, computers and technology, and are more likely to discover an aptitude for Nursing Informatics.

Ensure the best and most privileged information regarding choices in your travel nursing career by tapping into our resources today. Travel nurse careers give you the power to impact patients exponentially—from providing care to a single patient, to developing and deploying Nursing Informatics solutions that impact and benefit thousands. Call 50 States Staffing at 800-996-2206 or apply online today for a jumpstart in the nation’s best nursing jobs!

Nursing Informatics is a Hot Career, Easing USA into a Widespread Global Transition to Electronic Healthcare Records

Monday, November 8th, 2010

Learn more in Part One of this two Part Series

More healthcare providers are moving from paper files to electronic medical records—take Denmark hospitals, where 100% of doctors and nurses have ditched their clipboards in favor of wireless handheld computers. Dozens of countries are on track to do the same, including the American healthcare system.

To smooth the transition, registered nurses trained in Nursing Informatics both manage and communicate computerized patient data; learn more here about Nursing Informatics is, and how it benefits perioperative nurses and patients alike.nursing informatics

Nursing Informatics Specialists can also work in acute or ambulatory care. If you are a travel nurse with a penchant for computers, as well as highly efficient at accurately charting every medical detail, getting on track to a career in Nursing Informatics is a check mate career move toward a healthy six figure salary!

For travel nurses who find themselves resisting the high tech, don’t automatically discount yourself as unable to get on board with e-health records.

According to Debbie Bacurin, R.N., former nurse manager of an ED, initiation into a new way of operating is tough, but well worth the effort.

“When I implemented computerized documentation into my ED, it was very difficult for the nurses to make this transition—but when I visited that same ED about 6 yrs after implementation, it was as easy for them as taking vital signs. It was wonderful for the nursing staff to know that everyone’s standards were being met—from the CMS to The Joint Commission!”

Are you a progressive in the healthcare industry who wants to see Nursing Informatics in action? For those travel nurses working in operating room and med/surg jobs, interested in “a day in the life” of a Nursing Informatics Specialist, tune into this interview with an R.N, at Boston Children’s Hospital.

How Nursing Informatics Benefits the Patient

Nursing Informatics Specialists have thousands of case studies for comparative review at their fingertips, with the ability to access a large patient population for cross-reference on best treatments. Nursing Informatics is also an ideal database for storing names and images of medicines, so that the patient can help his practitioner identify drugs by sight—handy when some are unsure of a pharmaceutical’s official name.

Since Nursing Informatics helps to better treat patients’ side conditions, like diabetes or ulcers, it’s no wonder why healthcare systems as large as Kaisier Permanente are taking on the VA Kaiser Project—in which Nursing Informatics Specialists are being recruited in impressive numbers at even better salaries; part 2 of this blog series will elaborate!

The technology at the Nursing Informatics Specialist’s fingertips creates the following advantages:

  • It’s easier to share patient outcomes across disciplines.
  • Automated systems make it easier for R.N.s to document all the work they do.
  • Electronic records identify trends and sets benchmarks.
  • Automated systems, at the center of Health IT, make the case for increased resource allocation.

Why you need to tune into our Part 2 Installment on Nursing Informatics!

If you think your career as a travel nurse is leading you steadily up the ladder, tune into this blog next week when we reveal the steps and resources necessary for starting an entry-level Nursing Informatics career, and working your way up to Chief Nursing Information Officer! Your journey starts by letting a leading nurse staffing agency match your talents to a cutting edge healthcare facility—where nursing staff is on track to achieving literacy in the finer points of Health IT! Call 800-996-2206 or apply online today!