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After I spend some time as a travel nurse, I will definitely want to return to a permanent job and enter a new specialty. I'm currently 2+ yrs on med-surg-tele and am interested in working eventually in the ED. Do some people have any trouble transitioning from travel nursing to permanent in a different specialty from which they traveled in?
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At one of my former hospitals we would have med/surg/tele travelers float to our ED when we had a lot of holds and high census. A couple loved the ED and wanted to stay and be trained. They had to sign a one year commitment for their training (new grads sign a 2 year). It was all about attitude and willingness to learn.
Paco,
you can do a few things to position yourself for a career in the ER.
Take ACLS, PALS and TNCC. Join ENA. Consider taking EMT classes, or volunteering at a firehall, you will learn a lot. Keep your resume up to date.
Tell your recruiter you prefer contracts in hospitals with a trauma center.
Get to know people, ER nurses and ER travel nurses and ask how did you get started.
If you are at a hospital that feels right, and has a bunch of ER openings, and just apply. If you already know their EMR that is one thing they don't have to train you on and a big plus in your favor.
I have read stories online about agencies wanting a finders fee but I have no first hand knowledge of it ever happening.
Travel nurses are a resilient bunch which is a good trait for an ER nurse. You are not limiting yourself by being a med surg travel nurse, quite the opposite.
icuRNmaggie, BSN, RN
1,970 Posts
It is not uncommon for employers to have nurses, both experienced and new grads, sign 2 year contract before investing in sending them to a three month long Critical Care course.
You have to work somewhere for the next two years anyway, so it's not a huge commitment in order to gain solid skills and experience.