| | #2 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 1
| Re: New GRad Travel Nurse Hey Chris: I worked with a travel company as a recruiter and can tell you that 100% of our contracts required a minimum of 1 year experience and some hospitals expected 2 years experience. Hospitals with staffing shortages expect a traveler to start working with minimal supervision and orientation. Good luck...Ft Myers has needs. |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Trauma Queen/Moderator Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Traveler
Posts: 847
| Re: New GRad Travel Nurse I highly advise at LEAST 1-2 years experience in your specialty before traveling- you will not get much of an orientation at travel assignments- 1, maybe 2 days, then you are on your own, and are expected to "hit the ground running." As a new grad you will not have the experience required to do this, as you will learn more in your first year or two as a nurse than you did in nursing school, trust me! |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 4
| Re: New GRad Travel Nurse I was looking for the same thing, traveler nure.I am a new grad too, but I have some experience working in nursing home and private care. I have call some treveling companies and I got the same answer at least 1-2 yrs in the hospital. :frustrated: |
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| | #5 (permalink) | |
| Trauma Queen/Moderator Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: Traveler
Posts: 847
| Re: New GRad Travel Nurse Quote:
Working as an aide/CNA or even an LPN while in nursing school is not considered sufficient experience to work as a travel RN. Even if you have been a CNA for 30 years, you will still learn more in your first 1-2 years as an RN that you did in nursing school. CNA's don't do assessments, don't give medications, and don't do a LOT of the procedures that an RN does. The MINIMUM experience needed to be a safe, confident, & competent RN is 1-2 years as an RN in your specialty area. | |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| Junior Member Join Date: Oct 2007 Location: Globe Trotter
Posts: 3
| Re: New GRad Travel Nurse Chris and Gabi. Take the very sage advice above. Travel nursing is an impossible task (even if an agency managed to get you an assignment) for a new grad - no matter what else you did before you worked as a floor nurse. What we mean when we say "hit the ground running" is there is no orientation or maybe 1-2 shifts to find your way around. You won't be offered mentoring in basics such as charting, inserting iv caths or foleys. These just take practice and when you are expected to be a fill-in-nurse (traveler), there is no practice time. I clearly remember as a new grad I felt very satisfied when I was able to collect all the items I needed to start an IV on the first sweep without putting it together in my mind first. And that took weeks: Remember, you're putting together alot of other tasks at the same time. Again, these things take time / practice. Real floor nursing is nothing like what we learned in nursing school. Trust me, your first job, with a mentor, is your real education. As a traveler, I can say with certainty, you don't want to even try it as a new grad. Congrads, though, on finishing nursing school. I also remember that excitement. Welcome to the World of Nurisng. |
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