I have been travel nursing in the ICU for a year now and I notice the acuity has gone significantly down since I left my main hospital in Philadelphia. I have always chosen large teaching, level 1 trauma facilities because I love the acuity and working with the sickest patients.
Since I've traveled I notice I don't see as high acuity and when there are these high acuity cases, they don't get assigned to travelers -- fresh CABG, CVVH, fresh liver tx's etc.
Do you guys seem to notice the same trend? And if so do you hang up your traveling shoes and take a permanent position to work with the best cases? I'm starting CRNA school in the fall and I would like to be at the sharpest of my clinical skills. While the pay has been great, my ICU skills have definitely taken a hit.
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I have been travel nursing in the ICU for a year now and I notice the acuity has gone significantly down since I left my main hospital in Philadelphia. I have always chosen large teaching, level 1 trauma facilities because I love the acuity and working with the sickest patients.
Since I've traveled I notice I don't see as high acuity and when there are these high acuity cases, they don't get assigned to travelers -- fresh CABG, CVVH, fresh liver tx's etc.
Do you guys seem to notice the same trend? And if so do you hang up your traveling shoes and take a permanent position to work with the best cases? I'm starting CRNA school in the fall and I would like to be at the sharpest of my clinical skills. While the pay has been great, my ICU skills have definitely taken a hit.