Who floats first?

Nurses General Nursing

Published

What are your rules for floating?

My unit has a large amount of per diem nurses and in addition, hired a group of travelers for the busy season. The travelers are not allowed to float per their contract. The rest of us are floated on rotation.

With all the staff, and many of the per diem working part time hours, I find myself floating more often than not, despite the fact that I am one of few full time staff nurses on the unit. I don't mind the occasional float and understand the need. I do feel however, these rules are unfair to the dedicated unit staff.

Is your policy similar?

Specializes in ICU.

where I used to work, it was on a rotational basis, didn't matter their status. We didn't have travellers though

Specializes in Pedi.

1. Travelers (We currently have none.)

2. Per Diem Staff (We currently don't have any who my manager allows to get hours.)

3. Regular Staff. Float dates are recorded and people are floated based on their "float date".

Specializes in Emergency/Cath Lab.

LOL extra staff to float. I like your style.

Specializes in Psych ICU, addictions.

In my last facility, per-diems were floated first. Then permanent staff were floated, and who went was usually based on seniority (though occasionally you'd get perm staff volunteer to go float). When I had left, they were trying to get away from that and spread the floating around among permanent staff more evenly.

Travelers, per diem, and full timers all float within the rotation and it's all done fairly.

Specializes in LTC.

As we have no travelers,

1.) Per Diem

2.) Scheduled Full-time rotation

If there is a per diem nurse available there should not be a need for you to float.

I'm per diem, thats why, gimme something different!

per diem, ot, then we have a list of who was floated last.

Specializes in ED/ICU/TELEMETRY/LTC.

I worked full time per diem for many years. I thought it was my duty to float first. No problem. Learned a lot. Had a lot of fun, met a lot of people. Who cares?

Specializes in MS, ED.

On my current unit, everyone takes turns (regardless of PD/PT/FT status.) When you float, the date and floor gets put in the float book and we go by who has gone the longest without floating. The only nurses who do not float are new grads with less than one year experience.

I am per diem and would probably leave if I had to float all the time, honestly. This hospital has a float pool for a reason and the rest of us (per diems) are permanently assigned to specific floors. If I wanted to float constantly, I'd join the pool and make more money! JMO.

Specializes in NICU, PICU, PACU.

Our PRN's always float first, then regular staff, regardless of PT or FT. We keep a book with the dates in it and rotate who goes by date. Our PRN's are per service, such as peds, critical care, med surg, adult ICU, none are only on one floor.

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