Re: anyone start travelling with ~1 yr experience?
I started travel nursing after eight months as a staff nurse on a cardiac telemetry stepdown floor. I am on my third assignment, presently, and will have been a nurse for 2 years in June.
However, I do not recommend it for everyone. You have to be able to adapt, and "pick up and run" with the travel assignment with as little as one shift on the floor. You are expected to be a seasoned nurse, and most people aren't after one year of nursing; I took the plunge only after being encouraged by other staff nurses to do so, and in retrospect, it was a huge gamble that fortunately for me, paid off well.
Learn what you can in a staff position, and make sure you are exposed to a wide variety of situations--or at least very comfortable in your area of expertise--before you start travel. You may be expected to float quite a bit during your assignment, and even if you aren't, it can be very stressful to be responsible for patient care, a new-to-you charting system, physicians, and staff who may or may not be receptive to you as a traveler. Every hospital and unit has its own policies and procedures, not to mention culture. You must, as a traveler, be inherently adaptable and able to accept that standards of care you were used to--or not--at your staff hospital are not those of your travel facility.
As a general rule of thumb, I would not recommend travel nursing to anyone until s/he has had at least two years of nursing as staff, minimum. Even if any agency is willing to sign you on with less than a year's experience--and many are--most hospitals that use travelers are not willing to accept nurses with less than a year's experience as staff.
Travel can be very rewarding if you are well-prepared and like change and challenges. I think you will know if travel is right for you after you've spent some time on the floor as staff, but do give yourself adequate time to feel "comfortable" as a new GN and RN.
Good luck to you in whatever you choose to do!
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