how is health insurance for nurses?

Nurses General Nursing

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I want to be a traveling nurse and was wondering how is health insurance for nurses? Because im type 1 diabetic and I have hereditary high blood pressure and having type 1 diabetes isnt exactly cheap.

Also do traveling nurses have to have their bsn or is an adn good enough? Either way I plan to get my bsn eventually I just wanted to get started working sooner rather than later because im already 19 and havent started college yet.

1. My health insurance has been great. If i stay within my network i only have a 20 dollar copay for office visits, no deductable. 40 for specialist no refferal needed. Mri's and such are as little as 7 dollars if done within net work. Meds for me dropped from 20 dollars with blue cross to 2 dollars. I would just get your bsn. Some colleges allow you to convert in as little as a year

OP...just an FYI in case you don't already know this, but you will need a minimum of 1 year of experience as a nurse to be a travel nurse. And that's after 4 years of college, including prerequisites, if you get your BSN (which I also recommend BTW). So who knows what insurance will be like 5 years from now, for travelers or anyone else.

Health insurance for nurses runs the gamut from excellent to none at all. By the time you get out of school who knows what the rule will be.

Specializes in Ante-Intra-Postpartum, Post Gyne.

Depends on where you work. My first job the insurance was AWESOME. My insurance now SUCKS, and is worse than an HMO.

It depends entirely on your employer. It used to be (when I started out in nursing decades ago) that you could take for granted that, as a nurse working in healthcare, you would have great insurance. Now, more recently, I've had insurance that ran the gamut from terrific to really crummy, depending on what organization I was working for. Although I'm currently working prn and am not eligible for benefits, I hear from my coworkers that the insurance offered by my current employer is particularly lousy. We work in a free-standing psychiatric hospital that is part of a large, non-profit healthcare "system" -- although the system's administration feels that mental health care is important enough that the system offers a full range of psychiatric/mental health services to the community, and they blather on and on in public about what a vital and necessary service this is that "we" are offering to the community (and they certainly want people in the community to come to the facility and get treatment :)), the (only) health insurance offered to employees of the system includes no coverage for mental health treatment. If any of us need mental health treatment of any kind, we're just !@#$ out of luck. Doncha love it??

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