Independent Nurses providing medical care?

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This may be a dumb question, but how can a nurse be an independent care provider as so much of what we do depends on physician orders (IVF, meds, certain procedures, etc.)? Do you collaborate with a physician, which would then mean you're not truly independent or is there another way?

I'm very curious about how this is done, as the idea of being an independent contractor is very appealing to me. I understand how it can be done as, say, a legal nurse consultant or someone who is not doing direct patient care, but I don't understand how it works when you're providing direct patient care.

Thanks for any input!

Great post! Becoming an RN may triple or better your bill rate. I do travel contracts and the last three and I have not worked for less than 60 since incorporating 8 years ago. If you decide to specialize in something other than home health or LTC after gaining your RN, you will need to work a real job for a couple years before contracting yourself out. Since you have significant experience as a CNA, you may find that becoming an RN will enhance your ability to place other CNA's with RN oversight and build your agency's business.

This could be my post exactly. Same job,years, Goal. Would appreciate any info you have or find along the way. Very motivated.

02/16/2012

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