Remove Military Remove Nurse Shortage Remove Travel Nursing
article thumbnail

Nursing Work Environments: A Brief Guide

Nurse.com

Recently, nurses have navigated their careers through a global pandemic, a travel nursing boom, supply issues, and continue to face an ongoing nursing shortage. Nearly 30% of nurses considered leaving the profession in 2021, compared to 11% in 2020, according to Nurse.com’s 2022 Nurse Salary Research Report.

article thumbnail

A Fortuitous Career: California Nurse Leader Earns DNP Executive Leadership

Post University

After becoming wounded in the Gulf War, Operation Desert Storm, Chad wound up at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. There, he was cared for by several excellent nurses. He accepted his first nursing position at Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta, a large Level 1 trauma center. He decided to enlist in the U.S.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

How to Get Your Nursing License in Multiple States

Registered Nursing

Flexibility : Ideal for travel nurses, military spouses, and telehealth providers. For example, a nurse licensed in Texas who receives a travel nursing assignment in Florida can begin work immediately, without waiting for an endorsement license.

article thumbnail

How Nurse Licensure Compacts Can Ease Chronic Nursing Shortages

Health Leaders | Nursing

Nurse Licensure Compacts (NLCs) may be “one tool in the toolbox” to help ease chronic nursing shortages reaching into every state and practically every health facility, says Nicole Livanos , director of state affairs at the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN).