Born to
Roam
Travel
nurse-turned-entrepreneur gears her agency to nomadic nurses
who crave job security
By Phil McPeck
On the strength of the
nursing shortage, Terri Hill, RN, has traveled from the
operating room to the boardroom of her own small but growing
company, HC Travelers.
Travel nursing for the
Indianapolis surgical nurse began as a lark with a purpose.
It was a chance to reconnect with distant family and-at
least by one nurse-alleviate California's desperate need in
1990 for operating room nurses.
With her husband and four
children in tow, Hill accepted a six-week assignment to a
Los Angeles-area hospital. It was a memorable month and a
half of work and leisure that years later would lure her
back to travel nursing and a career that she could not have
imagined.
After Los Angeles, Hill, 44,
resumed her perioperative nursing career in Indianapolis,
working for seven years as a staff nurse, nurse manager and
director of nursing in a surgery center. "The day I worked
24 hours straight was the day I knew things had to change,"
Hill said.
She returned to travel
nursing, mostly accepting assignments within 60 miles of her
home. Last year, however, she was working in Oakland,
Calif., and, while sharing her travel experiences with an RN
from Canada, realized that she was not alone in her main
frustration with traveling nurse agencies.
"I was never anxious about getting on a plane, going
to a hospital on my very first day, going to an apartment
that I didn't know," Hill said. "The biggest anxiety that I
had was, 'Where's the next place I'm going to work?'
"I would call my recruiter
when I knew my contract was coming to an end, and she
wouldn't return my phone calls. This would happen over and
over again. So you go ahead and stay for another month,"
Hill said. "I was [in] Bakersfield (Calif.) for six months
because my recruiter wouldn't return my phone calls. And I
almost think it was intentional."
That experience became the
driving force behind HC Travelers, which Hill, a graduate of
Ball State University, launched this summer. Negotiations
were unsuccessful with two staffing agencies that wanted to
add travel divisions before a deal for backing went through
with Pinpoint Resources, which had just acquired Healthcare
Professionals, an Indianapolis nursing agency.
Hill said she needed
start-up capital of at least $75,000 to cover salary and
expenses for two travel nurses for two months. As an
employer, HC Travelers provides health insurance, retirement
and other benefits. Travel nurses also can expect contracts
to include transportation, housing and a rental car while on
assignment, Hill said.
In the first weeks, Hill
hired 10 nurses and is screening other applicants. "My goal
is not to grow so quickly that I can't provide good customer
service," she said. In her way of thinking, her
nurse-employees are customers every bit as much as the
hospitals, long-term care facilities and surgery centers
they staff.
"I've heard over and over from travel nurses that
what they want is somebody who will return their phone calls
and be there when they need them," Hill said. Her days run
from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m. In the evening and into the wee hours
of the night, she catches up on voice mail and e-mail.
Additionally, she continues to work occasional shifts in
surgery at St. Francis Hospital & Health Centers in
Indianapolis.
At one time, Hill was a
perioperative consultant for an Indianapolis nursing agency,
developing a now widely used skills checklist and tests for
potential operating room nurses and certified surgical
technologists. She also recruited nurses, building the
agency's OR nurse database to more than 50 candidates.
Having walked in their
shoes, she knows what it takes to succeed as a travel nurse.
"You have to be prepared to
walk in from day one, maybe with a five-minute orientation
of the unit, and be able to work on your own," Hill said.
Consequently, she recruits RNs with at least one year of
experience who adapt well to change.
Medical facilities seek
travel nurses usually on one-month contracts as a stopgap
for positions they are unable to fill with permanent
employees because of the nursing shortage, Hill said.
Occasionally, six-week and longer opportunities are
available for travelers who cover for nurses out on
maternity, family, disability or other leaves.
Because they are ambassadors
of the company, Hill said applicants are screened closely
for everything from technical and interpersonal skills to
whether they have been regularly tardy in previous
positions. "We're looking for the cream of the crop," she
said.
"It doesn't matter how well
I come across to a company and what I do to make them happy.
If I'm sending them nurses who are not fitting their needs,
they're going to move on to someplace else," Hill said.
What she has found is that
RNs not yet tied down with family obligations are
well-suited to travel. So are older nurses whose children
are grown. Perhaps they are divorced, widowed or their
husbands are retired or have positions that allow them to
work almost anywhere. Hill also encourages nurses to
consider, as she did, an initial position where family is
nearby for emotional support.
"I liked the one-month
assignment," Hill said. "I can do anything for one month.
Then if I liked the facility, I could extend, and if I
didn't, I could move on."
Contact Phil McPeck
at getpjm@aol.com.
Original source at
http://www.nurseweek.com/news/features/02-09/hill_web.asp |