The Risks of Terminating Your Travel Nurse Contract
Whether your contract is with an agency or a hospital, there are several factors that will be negatively impacted based on your decision to break your legal agreement. Â
In sum, it is a snowball effect. Â
Travel nursing community, The Gypsy Nurse, highlights several factors you should consider before you decide to terminate your travel nurse contract. Check them out:Â
Patient Care and Current StaffingÂ
Facilities that need healthcare providers will typically begin a partnership with a staffing agency in order to have ‘more hands-on deck.’ Â
If you break your agreement, this puts one less person on the schedule; and in nursing, this can make a huge difference in patient care delivery.Â
The Staffing Agency
A cancellation can cost an agency thousands of dollars.Â
From housing arrangements to penalties from the facility they are contracted with, this is an expense most firms want to avoid at all costs.
On top of this, breaking your travel nurse contract can diminish the agency’s reputation with the healthcare facility, as it means one less nurse is going to be available in an area where they are needed.Â
Although you have a contract with the agency, the agency also has set agreements with the facility as well.Â
To avoid getting blacklisted by both the facility and your agency – express your concerns to your recruiter, or if necessary, funnel your concerns through the chain of command if you feel that the individual facility is taking advantage of you. Â
Your Career
Much like any other job, leaving without proper notice or breaking an already-signed agreement can be detrimental to your career. Â
Whether it is with the staffing agency or healthcare facility, your chances of being able to work with them in the future are quite low if you do not provide proper notice. Â
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