Re: questions about new HH job
Trust your gut, always. But having said that, the number of visits per day can vary, especially for a per diem person who would probably be picking up visits for nurses who call off sick, who have a vacation day, or admits that no one has time for. Plus, the number of visits will vary anyway, even for the full-timers, depending on how many admits, recerts, discharges, and straight visits you have. Some weeks you do lots of admits and fewer straight visits, other weeks you may send someone to the hospital and recert them two days later, other times you may have nothing but straight visits, so it's hard to give a solid number. It's always feast-or-famine in home health.
Find out what the rate is for each: SOC (start of care aka admit), recert, discharge, and straight visit. A SOC should be close to double the straight visit rate. If you're doing infusion therapy or wound VACs, you should probably get a higher rate for those, too, depending on what it's like in your area.
If they're functioning as a staffing agency for flu shot clinics, then I can understand that the hourly rate for those will be different, depending on the contract. Some clinics pay more for RNs than LPNs, others pay the same no matter what.
A lot of agencies are doing away with mileage reimbursement these days (including mine) to cut down on costs. You should know upfront about this and don't agree to anything until you know. If you can itemize taxes at the end of the year, that will always work better to your advantage to claim your mileage at $0.505 per mile than the measly $0.28 or so that most agencies provide. If you don't itemize, though, take what they offer.
Most agencies will pay you a straight wage for your orientation time and they should tell you this upfront.
IMHO, the best way to find out what they're like it to find someone who works for them, but they probably won't give you an employee's phone number. You could always hang out in the parking lot and try to "bump into" someone
Good luck!
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