Published
It can be akin to "internal" vs. "external" staff in extended care. You are either doing a bunch of separate visits for the company, as many or as few as you want, which would call for PPV. Or, you are a member of the office staff (internal) with different expectations. A regular staff person has to meet their assigned quota. An 'external' employee can turn down visits that they do not want to add to their schedule. The office is not going to pay a straight salary to someone that is only going to see three clients today out of choice. You have to know which of these two categories that you fall under to decide whether or not you like the pay setup.
In the past I worked for a home care company that paid hourly. Most recently I had a short stint with a very reputable home care company that paid per visit. I felt as if there was pressure from management to get set amount of visits completed per day to meet daily and weekly quota/productivity in order to get a decent paycheck. I decided to go back to psych nursing and get paid hourly.
There is pressure to make a certain amount of visits to support your FT status and/or pay structure. There is less pressure with PPV but it will affect your paycheck. I always figured it was akin to facility patient assignments, you absolutely have to take the ratios they assign you, you can't come into work and say you only want a 3 patient day. With PPV there is some wiggle room.
There are pros and cons to every form of compensation in home health. Most full time employees are paid salary. If you have 5 easy patients that all live close to each other, you may be able to bang out 5 visits in 3 hours and, in that case, PPV would benefit you. If, on the other hand, you have 3 complex visits with patients that live far away from each other/in areas with a lot of traffic, it could take you 5 hours to do those 3 visits and then you wouldn't be making out well with PPV.
My mgr will let me add extra hourly if the visits are extended. Also with the drive but that rarely happens with my territory. Home health in a retirement community tends to have dense patient areas.
That's nice. I'm in the city and it seriously took me 2 hours to drive 6 miles the other day. Driving around here has just been disastrous as of late with the amount of snow we've had. Though it's also taken me 45 minutes to drive 3 miles in the summer in heavy traffic areas.
RNRN_DAY
8 Posts
Hello All,
I was hired for a full time home health position with a very replicable known company. The manager told me I will not get paid by the hour instead I will get paid per visit. Is this how most home health companies pay for a Full time RN.. I think it is the same as Full time Case Manager?
Any input on this. Please