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COVID-19

Need a COVID-19 Nurse? That鈥檒l Be $8,000 a Week

Photographs of doctors and nurses, worn to comfort patients when the staff are dressed in protective gear, hang on a wall outside the COVID-19 ICU at the United Memorial Medical Center in Houston in June. (Go Nakamura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

[UPDATED at 2:30 p.m. ET]

DENVER 鈥 In March, Claire Tripeny was watching her dream job fall apart. She鈥檇 been working as an intensive care nurse at St. Anthony Hospital in Lakewood, Colorado, and loved it, despite the mediocre pay for the region. But when COVID-19 hit, that calculation changed.

She remembers her employers telling her and her colleagues to 鈥渟uck it up鈥 as they struggled to care for six patients each and patched their protective gear with tape until it fully fell apart. The $800 or so a week she took home no longer felt worth it.

鈥淚 was not sleeping and having the most anxiety in my life,鈥 said Tripeny. 鈥淚鈥檓 like, 鈥業’m gonna go where my skills are needed and I can be guaranteed that I have the protection I need.鈥欌

In April, she packed her bags for a two-month contract in then-COVID hot spot New Jersey, as part of what she called a 鈥渕ass exodus鈥 of nurses leaving the suburban Denver hospital to become traveling nurses. Her new pay? About $5,200 a week, and with a contract that required adequate protective gear.

Months later, the offerings 鈥 and the stakes 鈥 are even higher for nurses willing to move. In Sioux Falls, South Dakota, nurses can make more than $6,200 a week. A recent posting for a job in Fargo, North Dakota, offered more than $8,000 a week. Some can get as much as $10,000.

Early in the pandemic, hospitals were competing for ventilators, COVID tests and personal protective equipment. Now, sites across the country are competing for nurses. The fall surge in COVID cases has turned hospital staffing into a sort of national bidding war, with hospitals willing to pay exorbitant wages to secure the nurses they need. That threatens to shift the supply of nurses toward more affluent areas, leaving rural and urban public hospitals short-staffed as the pandemic worsens, and some hospitals unable to care for critically ill patients.

鈥淭hat is a huge threat,鈥 said Angelina Salazar, CEO of the , a consortium of 29 small hospitals in rural Colorado and Utah. 鈥淭here鈥檚 no way rural hospitals can afford to pay that kind of salary.鈥

Surge Capacity

Hospitals have long relied on traveling nurses to fill gaps in staffing without committing to long-term hiring. Early in the pandemic, doctors and nurses traveled from unaffected areas to hot spots like California, Washington state and New York to help with regional surges. But now, with virtually every part of the country experiencing a surge 鈥 infecting medical professionals in the process 鈥 the competition for the finite number of available nurses is becoming more intense.

鈥淲e all thought, 鈥榃ell, when it鈥檚 Colorado鈥檚 turn, we鈥檒l draw on the same resources; we鈥檒l call our surrounding states and they鈥檒l send help,鈥欌 said Julie Lonborg, a spokesperson for the Colorado Hospital Association. 鈥淣ow it鈥檚 a national outbreak. It鈥檚 not just one or two spots, as it was in the spring. It鈥檚 really significant across the country, which means everybody is looking for those resources.鈥

In North Dakota, Tessa Johnson said she鈥檚 getting multiple messages a day on LinkedIn from headhunters. Johnson, president of the , said the pandemic appears to be hastening a brain drain of nurses there. She suspects more nurses may choose to leave or retire early after North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum they could stay on the job even if they鈥檝e tested positive for COVID-19.

All four of Utah鈥檚 major health care systems have seen nurses leave for traveling nurse positions, said Jordan Sorenson, a project manager for the Utah Hospital Association.

鈥淣urses quit, join traveling nursing companies and go work for a different hospital down the street, making two to three times the rate,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o, it鈥檚 really a kind of a rob-Peter-to-pay-Paul staffing situation.鈥

Hospitals not only pay the higher salaries offered to traveling nurses but also pay a commission to the traveling nurse agency, Sorenson said. Utah hospitals are trying to avoid hiring away nurses from other hospitals within the state. Hiring from a neighboring state like Colorado, though, could mean Colorado hospitals would poach from Utah.

鈥淚n the wake of the current spike in COVID hospitalizations, calling the labor market for registered nurses 鈥榗utthroat鈥 is an understatement,鈥 said , an associate professor of industrial and labor relations at Cornell University. 鈥淓ven if the health care sector can somehow find more beds, it cannot just go out and buy more front-line caregivers.鈥

Litwin said he鈥檚 glad to see the labor market rewarding essential workers 鈥 disproportionately women and people of color 鈥 with higher wages. Under normal circumstances, allowing markets to determine where people will work and for what pay is ideal.

鈥淥n the other hand, we are not operating under normal circumstances,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n the midst of a severe public health crisis, I worry that the individual incentives facing hospitals on the one side and individual RNs on the other conflict sharply with the needs of society as whole.鈥

Some hospitals are exploring ways to overcome staffing challenges without blowing the budget. That could include changing nurse-to-patient ratios, although that would likely affect patient care. In Utah, the hospital association has talked with the state nursing board about allowing nursing students in their final year of training to be certified early.

Growth Industry

Meanwhile business is booming for companies centered on health care staffing such as Wanderly and Krucial Staffing.

鈥淲hen COVID first started and New York was an epicenter, we at Wanderly kind of looked at it and said, 鈥極K, this is our time to shine,鈥欌 said David Deane, senior vice president of , a website that allows health care professionals to compare offers from various agencies. 鈥溾楾his is our time to help nurses get to these destinations as fast as possible. And help recruiters get those nurses.鈥欌

Deane said the company has doubled its staff since the pandemic started. Demand is surging 鈥 with Rocky Mountain states appearing in up to 20 times as many job postings on the site as in January. And more people are meeting that demand.

In 2018, according to data from , about 31,000 traveling nurses worked nationwide. Now, Deane estimated, there are at least 50,000 travel nurses. Deane, who calls travel nurses 鈥渟uperheroes,鈥 suspects a lot of them are postoperative nurses who were laid off when their hospitals stopped doing elective surgeries during the first lockdowns.

Competition for nurses, especially those with ICU experience, is stiff. After all, a hospital in South Dakota isn鈥檛 competing just with facilities in other states.

鈥淲e’ve sent nurses to Aruba, the Bahamas and Curacao because they’ve needed help with COVID,鈥 said Deane. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e going down there, you鈥檙e making $5,000 a week and all your expenses are paid, right? Who’s not gonna say yes?鈥

specializes in sending health care workers to disaster locations, using military-style logistics. It filled hotels and rented dozens of buses to get nurses to hot spots in New York and Texas. CEO Brian Cleary said that, since the pandemic started, the company has grown its administrative staff from 12 to more than 200.

鈥淩ight now we鈥檙e at our highest volume we’ve been,鈥 said Cleary, who added that over Halloween weekend alone about 1,000 nurses joined the roster of 鈥渞eservists.鈥

With a base rate of $95 an hour, he said, some nurses working overtime end up coming away with $10,000 a week, though there are downsides, like the fact that the gig doesn鈥檛 come with health insurance and it鈥檚 an unstable, boom-and-bust market.

Hidden Costs

Amber Hazard, who lives in Texas, started as a traveling ICU nurse before the pandemic and said eye-catching sums like that come with a hidden fee, paid in sanity.

鈥淗ow your soul is affected by this is nothing you can put a price on,鈥 she said.

At a high-paying job caring for COVID patients during New York鈥檚 first wave, she remembers walking into the break room in a hospital in the Bronx and seeing a sign on the wall about how the usual staff nurses were on strike.

鈥淚t said, you know, 鈥榃e鈥檙e not doing this. This is not safe,鈥欌 said Hazard. 鈥淎nd it wasn鈥檛 safe. But somebody had to do it.鈥

The highlight of her stint there was placing a wedding ring back on the finger of a recovered patient. But Hazard said she secured far more body bags than rings on patients.

Tripeny, the traveling nurse who left Colorado, is now working in Kentucky with heart surgery patients. When that contract wraps up, she said, she might dive back into COVID care.

Earlier, in New Jersey, she was scarred by the times she couldn鈥檛 give people the care they needed, not to mention the times she would take a deceased patient off a ventilator, staring down the damage the virus can do as she removed tubes filled with blackened blood from the lungs.

She has to pay for mental health therapy out-of-pocket now, unlike when she was on staff at a hospital. But as a so-called traveler, she knows each gig will be over in a matter of weeks.

At the end of each week in New Jersey, she said, 鈥淚 would just look at my paycheck and be like, 鈥極K. This is OK. I can do this.鈥欌

[Correction: This story was updated at 2:40 p.m. ET on Nov. 24, 2020, to clarify that the order from North Dakota allows 鈥 but does not require — nurses to stay on the job even if they鈥檝e tested positive for COVID-19.]

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