06Jun

As the number of coronavirus cases continues to grow, the demand for healthcare workers is surging.

Glassdoor analysis well before the outbreak was declared a pandemic, said, “Dozens of job postings for health care workers, scientists and data specialists are popping up as organizations prepare for the outbreak.”

More recently, the report’s author Daniel Zhao told public media’s Marketplace, “There is a wide mix of skills needed… [including] epidemiologists or virologists to registered nurses, down to call center or front-desk workers who are helping handle the influx of community questions.”

Here at Green Key Resources we’re experiencing an even greater increase in calls for healthcare workers, especially from nursing homes and medical centers.

“We are seeing a huge uptick in requests from our hospitals for staff to work in all different departments,” says Brett Braterman, Principal within Green Key’s healthcare division in New York City.

“The requests are ranging from registered nurses to lab technologists and medical assistants, where hospitals are preparing for a combination of increase in patients and their own staff unable to work. In addition, our nursing homes have also hit panic mode and gone on a hiring frenzy trying to cover their own staff calling out.”

Even before the coronavirus outbreak, nurses and many other healthcare professionals were in short supply. The situation now has become so critical that New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and Colorado Governor Jared Polis called on former and retired healthcare workers to help.

Cuomo asked that nurses and doctors contact their past employer to “reconnect” with the workforce. New York is sending letters to retired health care professionals and all schools of nursing, public health and medicine encouraging qualified health care personnel to sign up for on-call work.

Healthcare workers anywhere in the nation can also call us at 212.683.1988 or simply upload a resume here. You can also review our open healthcare positions here.

Because of the nature of their job, healthcare workers are particularly at risk of contracting Covid-19. Cuomo said it’s critical to create a reserve of professionals who can fill-in for workers who may fall ill or be ordered quarantined. The Washington Post reported last week that 160 employees of a Massachusetts medical center were quarantined after coming into contact with patients who tested positive. The hospital issued a call for nurses to replace the quarantined professionals.

Nurse.org said Washington State hospitals are hiring hundreds of nurses to help with the influx of cases that have hit the state particularly hard. The report said the Seattle metro area has issued a call for travel nurses from throughout the country to replace nurses who are or will become quarantined and to conduct testing and monitor quarantined individuals.

Quoting the head of a local healthcare staffing firm, Nurse.org says pay rates for these temporary nurses is as high as $2,600 a week. “We really need travel nurses, especially public health nurses, to come work here for at least 13-weeks,” Mona Veiseh, president of the staffing agency told the publication. “These are urgently needed, with crisis pay.”

In particularly hard hit Northern California, San Francisco Mayor London Breed issued an emergency order to expedite the hiring of as many as 100 nurses and health care workers. Special, invitation-only hiring events will be scheduled with job offers made on the spot.

Photo by Ashkan Forouzani on Unsplash

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Jun 6, 2023

Americans Give Nurses High Marks for Ethics

Americans give nurses their highest approval for honesty and ethics, rating them above every other profession in a recent Gallup survey that included doctors, school teachers, judges and clergy.

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Conducted in December, Gallup found more Americans than ever say nurses have high or very high standards of honesty and ethics.

While nurses have been at the top of the ratings for 20 of the last 21 years, the COVID pandemic has so spotlighted the work they do that the percentage of survey respondents rating them highly increased by 4 points over 2019. According to Gallup, 89% of Americans gave nurses the highest ratings. Only firefighters have ever scored higher and that was in 2001 shortly after the 9/11 attack when they measured at 90%.

Doctors, who last year were said to have high or very high ethical standards by 65% of survey takers, improved by 12 points. Their previous high of 70% came in 2011 and 2012. Pharmacists, too, improved their standing for honesty and ethics in the view of the public, increasing to 71% from last year’s 64%.

Coming in just behind doctors were grade school teachers (the only teacher category Gallup measured). Their current 75% rating is nine points higher than the last time the group was included which was in 2017 when they were measured at 66%. Gallup says, “This may reflect public appreciation for the risks taken by teachers in going back to school during the pandemic, as well as their commitment to teaching under unprecedented circumstances, whether in the classroom or online.”

Rounding out the top five rankings are police officers who were measured at 52%, a drop of 2 points from the 2019 survey. Despite the decline, they were still one of only five professions to have a majority of Americans rating them high or very high for honesty and ethics.

Gallup’s annual Honesty and Ethics poll surveys a number of different professions each year, with a handful such as nurses, doctors and police officers included consistently. Besides reporting the cumulative results, Gallup breaks down the results by demographics and party affiliation. The divide among the various groups can be substantial for some ratings of professionals.

However, for nurses it didn’t matter whether the respondent was a Democrat, Republican, or Independent, the results were the same. They all thought highly of the profession’s ethics.

Photo by Bermix Studio

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