On the
Move
Traveling Health Professionals Go Where the Work Is
by Megan
Malugani
The spirit of adventure is alive and well in Jill Cole, a traveling healthcare
"temp." In just two years, the ICU nurse has crisscrossed the country several
times, hopping from job to job as a short-term, contracted employee.
Cole is currently completing a 13-week assignment in Seattle, and previously worked in
California, Connecticut, Arizona, Wisconsin and Oregon. She has also had two stints in her
home state of Indiana. "This has been my big opportunity to see the U.S. I'd heard
about but never experienced," Cole says. "Everywhere I've gone I've learned
something new, both about healthcare and about the country."
Cole is one of thousands of healthcare "travelers" -- nurses, radiologic
technologists, physicians, therapists and other professionals -- who are able to see the
country while bringing in a paycheck. Travelers have been a fixture in the healthcare
marketplace for years, but the need for them is cyclical and varies both geographically
and by occupation. For example, the demand is currently high for experienced nurses with
certain specialties, but low for physical and occupational therapists.
To become a traveler, Cole signed up with TravCorps,
a staffing company for healthcare professionals. TravCorps and other agencies (such as StarMed and American
Mobile Nurses ) that place travelers usually locate and pay for housing. The agencies
may also offer health insurance, retirement plans and other benefits.
"There aren't too many jobs where you can travel around and meet new people and
see new places every few months," says Jack Cooper, a radiologic and nuclear medicine
technologist who signed up with TravCorps 18 months ago after holding down more
traditional jobs for 30 years. Cooper is currently stationed in Lexington, Kentucky.
"This has been a good assignment because I'm close to great hiking, kayaking and
fishing," he says. There are on-the-job benefits to working as a traveler, too.
Cooper says he enjoys working with new and different equipment and appreciates the fact
that he's not dragged into hospital politics.
Travelers are generally well received by hospital staff: "The only reason you're
there is because they're short-staffed and need help," Cooper says. "Your
presence relaxes everyone and the tension level in those departments goes down." And
in cases where staff is resistant, a traveler can earn respect by pulling her weight and
going the extra mile to help coworkers, Cole explains. If all else fails, she falls back
on a tried-and-true strategy for fitting in at new workplaces. "If I take a batch of
homemade cookies or cinnamon rolls in to share, I instantly go from being 'that travel
nurse' to 'Jill, the cookie chick.' It's worked every single place I've been."
|