Must... Find... Food...

Meet Agency Girl. She's an RN who has been working per diem for several agencies. She has entered the dreaded Drought of Low Census and is quickly getting to the point of sharing the dog's food. Come explore Agency Girl's options with me and help her out with some advice. Nurses Announcements Archive Article

Agency Girl is feeling the pinch from The Drought of Low Census.

**Ring**

**Ring**

"Hello?"

"Hi, Agency Girl. They don't need anybody. You've been cancelled." The disembodied voice is quiet and toneless.

Sigh. "Thanks," I say, and bite my lip.

Crap. That's six in a row.

I call the other three agencies in town, hoping for the best.

"Any needs?" I ask, waiting for the inevitable negative.

"No." "Unh-unh." "Nada."

"No shift for you!" Bummed, I put the phone in my pocket and crank up my favorite mood lifting music.

I trudge over to the fridge, hoping that there has been a miracle since the last time I opened the door.

Nope. The universe hates me today. Buddy, the Wonder Poodle, runs over and helps me hunt.

I find the sad carcass of a cucumber, some slimy lettuce, and a wedge of cheddar that's only green on one end. Buddy sniffs my bounty twice, turns up his nose, growls, and runs to hide under the bed.

I think there are still a couple of crackers in the cabinet. I may be able to get a snack out of this, hopefully one that I won't woof back up. I kick the door shut.

I stalk over to the computer, drop into the chair, and check out my bank account. My jaw drops.

That can't be right. Blink, blink.

I clear the cache, shut down the browser, reboot, and try again. No change.

"Mama needs a new job, Buddy." Buddy whines from under the bed in sympathy. He's running low on treats, which is a disaster on the same level as running out of toilet paper.

It's utter pandelirium!

I search the local job listings. Some more per diems have opened up since this time last week, so I tweak my profiles and cover letters and resubmit. Maybe I'll get a call this week.

I check my email to see if I had any hits on the furniture and TV I put up for sale.

"Big money, big money, no whammy!" I screech out my mom's favorite battle cry. I have no idea what it means, but she wins at Baptist Bingo all the time.

"Let's see... you'll send me $4,000 if I send you $400. Trash! The Prince of Nigeria requests your assistance...Trash! Viagra for vixens...Eeeew. Double trash!"

At least the fake Nigerian prince is hot.

My stomach rumbles. I've already skipped too many meals in the last week and my scrubs are getting a little loose. I wonder how the food bank downtown works. But, that's Plan E. I'm not quite there yet.

Time for Plan D.

I practice soulful looks in the mirror and adjust my top to hide my tattoo. No point in antagonizing anyone. I wash my face and try to look young and pitiful.

To the Skype!

**Ring**

**Ring**

"Hello?"

"Hi, Daddy..."

-------

Agency Girl is going through what I like to call The Drought of Low Census. One of the more common problems of being an agency nurse is the unpredictability of shifts. In high census times, you could work seven days a week. In low census times, well... Have a backup plan.

Most hospitals have a predictable fluctuating pattern, with lower census in the summer. Many hospitals in rural and suburban areas have wildly swinging census patterns that go up and down depending on the travel patterns of their citizens. Examples are the "snowbirds" that desert their summer homes every fall and flock to warmer climates in the winter, and the migratory workers that swoop in during harvest time and follow the seasonal crops.

Some strategies that have kept food on my table include working with multiple agencies, landing local contracts, block booking, diversifying, and, of course, getting a "real" full-time job.

(Agency Girl: Scoff. Why would I want a real job? You have to work holidays and weekends! And do mandatory education. And see the same people all the time. And deal with the politics - super yuck!

Me: Shush! Busy here!! One of us has to make some dough.)

What is a local contract, you ask? It is basically traveling in your own city. You get the same 13 week commitment, minus the housing stipend. You are guaranteed shifts per your contract. All on the same unit, too, which is nice.

How about block booking? This is like a short contract, except for the contract. You aren't guaranteed any shifts. You sign up for 3 shifts a week for four weeks. It's a lot like being a PRN float employee, so you basically cover all the units you are qualified for. It's best to be qualified for a lot. All agencies need specialty nurses like ICU, Tele, NICU, etc. If the hospital needs you, you go in. If the hospital is overstaffed, you are the first to be cancelled.

The main thing is to be flexible. Get oriented with all the healthcare systems each agency covers and have 5-6 days a week available. Be prepared to commute. Look into diversification options, such as teaching clinicals at the local diploma mi- *cough* - career colleges for ADN RNs, LPNs, or CNAs, depending on your license and degree. You can also sign up for multiple types of positions, if you are comfortable, doing LTC, LTACH, SNF, rehab, corrections, etc.

For all of you experienced agency nurses out there, what advice would you give to any newbies or wannabe newbies experiencing The Drought? What other options have I left out?

Also, submit your suggestions for an Agency Girl adventure. At the end of the month, I will pick the one I think I can write a whole article on, do a special edition, and give you credit for the idea.

Look for Agency Girl's next adventure when she finally gets a shift and goes to an unfamiliar unit for the first time.

I am hoping the next article is coming soon and that the previous posters get some sunshine in their lives even sooner! Loved it! Ignore the negative Nancies:sarcastic:They obviously send out enough gloomy energy for ALL of us so you can continue being fun and witty, it's much appreciated.

Specializes in Oncology.

It's amazing to me to read stories of low census. My hospital is a mid sized tertiary care facility that is almost always bursting at the seams. And a summer lull? Even if our census does drop, that's when everyone wants to take their vacation and suddenly gets "sick" and I'm called for overtime literally daily. And when I tell them I can't work that day it's immediately, "Oh, you can't work today? How about tonight?"

I honestly thought this was going to be about the struggle to find time to eat at work, or the struggle to find time to go to the grocery store between all of those overtime shifts.

Specializes in Oncology; medical specialty website.
Goodness, RubyVee, did you wake up on the wrong side of the bed this morning? I don't know why you, Altra, OCNRN63, and LibraSunCNM have decided that this story is so wrong. I'm not good at figuring out veiled references over the internet.

I would appreciate it if you would approach this as a teaching moment instead of lambasting me.

I really think the dire predictions about my future employability are a little over the top and vaguely threatening. And, RubyVee, my husband is proud of me for publishing an article. He's not very concerned with a fictional bare larder. He's more upset that I didn't include a second dog patterned on our Jack Russell.

I would be happy to discuss with any of you what you see as wrong with this article, but it's kind of hard to when I have no idea what your problem with it is. Altra made a good point about stereotypes and we talked about that, but I don't understand what else is making you all so hostile. And make no mistake, I feel like I'm under attack.

I feel pretty small right now, and I don't like feeling that way, especially when I don't even know what for.

I didn't say anything about the post itself. I just said you would be well-advised not to use your real name and real likeness on this site. Even people who use an anonymous name and avatar have gotten into trouble with things they posted. I said that as advice: not being hostile, not NETY, NETY, NETY, not threatening, not to make you feel small.

You said I should have approached it as a teachable moment. That's exactly why I posted that advice. It was caution from having known individuals who found out that MBs aren't as anonymous as people think they are, even when you use a made-up screen name and avatar.

Specializes in Oncology.
Agency Nurse should not use her full name, nor use her picture as an avatar. Agency Nurse might say something one day that could be offensive to one of the nurses she crosses paths with, and could wind up losing shifts as a result.

She's staff, as evidenced by the purple name. I think it's part of the gig.

Specializes in Oncology; medical specialty website.
She's staff, as evidenced by the purple name. I think it's part of the gig.

Staff where, here? I don't really pay attention to the color of someone's screen name. There are plenty of staff here who do not use their likeness/real name when they post.

I don't see how what I said was wrong. If someone wants to tell me how I was out of line, please tell me.

Thought this was going to be about food.

Agree with Altra 100%, BTW. No offense, OP. If this is what you like to do, you have enough positive responses here so you shouldn't feel "small". When you do put it out there, not everyone is going to applaud.

I'm not really an article "fan". The best reads for me have been the from the heart articles, where it is the writer's own situation. I still can't get over the Hospice Nurse article, where the "water stilled" at the end. I didn't bookmark it, but it made me cry.

Specializes in Post-Surgical, Med-Surg, Travel, Agency.
Staff where, here? I don't really pay attention to the color of someone's screen name. There are plenty of staff here who do not use their likeness/real name when they post.

I don't see how what I said was wrong. If someone wants to tell me how I was out of line, please tell me.

Part of the gig does indeed require use of my own name, which is followed by "Writer." I hadn't noticed the difference in the colors until it was pointed out, either.

Perhaps I misunderstood the tone of your post. The way you repeated "Agency Nurse" felt disrespectful since my name is Samantha and Agency Girl is Agency Girl. If you didn't mean it that way, then I apologize. I saw your post as part of a pile-on and could have been mistaken.

Thought this was going to be about food.

Agree with Altra 100%, BTW. No offense, OP. If this is what you like to do, you have enough positive responses here so you shouldn't feel "small". When you do put it out there, not everyone is going to applaud.

I'm not really an article "fan". The best reads for me have been the from the heart articles, where it is the writer's own situation. I still can't get over the Hospice Nurse article, where the "water stilled" at the end. I didn't bookmark it, but it made me cry.

No offense taken, Farawyn. I was braced for criticism, but I suspect I was not as prepared as I thought and may have taken some posts too close to heart.

I was unprepared for the support I received, also. To those who PM'd me, thank you!

I haven't read that particular article you referenced, but I will now if I can find it. I have read a couple of articles on here that hit me "in the feels," and I liked it. Actually, I was a sobbing, "Steel Magnolia" style mess. Very cathartic, but I had the ugly snots. Ick.

Yea, it wasn't an ugly snot thing, but it was a teary thing.

I'll try to find it.

Okay, it's called Accusing Hospice. I'll PM you the link. It's striking me as very rude (on my part) to post another article link in response to your article, when, really, it's just my opinion, so who cares?

Specializes in Oncology; medical specialty website.
Part of the gig does indeed require use of my own name, which is followed by "Writer." I hadn't noticed the difference in the colors until it was pointed out, either.

Perhaps I misunderstood the tone of your post. The way you repeated "Agency Nurse" felt disrespectful since my name is Samantha and Agency Girl is Agency Girl. If you didn't mean it that way, then I apologize. I saw your post as part of a pile-on and could have been mistaken.

No offense taken, Farawyn. I was braced for criticism, but I suspect I was not as prepared as I thought and may have taken some posts too close to heart.

I was unprepared for the support I received, also. To those who PM'd me, thank you!

I haven't read that particular article you referenced, but I will now if I can find it. I have read a couple of articles on here that hit me "in the feels," and I liked it. Actually, I was a sobbing, "Steel Magnolia" style mess. Very cathartic, but I had the ugly snots. Ick.

How could it have been a "pile-on" when you had only gotten one negative post at the time I posted? How was reiterating TOS a personal attack? I referred to you as "Agency Nurse" because I thought you were writing about yourself. I missed the clue that this was fiction. My bad.

I know that staff writers have to post using their full name; I was actually one of the people hired as a staff writer. Due to health problems, I have only been able to write one article.

Specializes in Nurse Leader specializing in Labor & Delivery.
I don't see how what I said was wrong. If someone wants to tell me how I was out of line, please tell me.

I guess I feel like, we're all grown ups here. If people choose to use their real name and photo, why do other people care? Not everyone feels the need for total anonymity. I choose not to, but I'm not going to scold others who choose differently.

I feel like there are a lot of "net nannies" here who actually seem to get *angry* for some reason if someone who KNOWS the ramifications of not being anonymous, still chooses differently.

Specializes in Peds Hem, Onc, Med/Surg.

I'm not an agency nurse but I completely understand. Last year we had such a low census I was getting canceled all the time. I'm a full time nurse too. My husband was out of work and I remember one paycheck after I paid the bills(not counting groceries or gas), I had $12 left. FOR TWO WEEKS. I cried so hard. We survived on what was left in the pantry and I sold crochet hats to help us get through that month.

Bright side is that now my husband doesn't complain anymore of my stash of yarn that I buy in bulk when it goes on sale. It helped us get by during that tough time last year.

Specializes in Oncology; medical specialty website.
I guess I feel like, we're all grown ups here. If people choose to use their real name and photo, why do other people care? Not everyone feels the need for total anonymity. I choose not to, but I'm not going to scold others who choose differently.

I feel like there are a lot of "net nannies" here who actually seem to get *angry* for some reason if someone who KNOWS the ramifications of not being anonymous, still chooses differently.

I wasn't angry.