A lot of people cut back on work travel during the pandemic, but throughout the past year and a half, Jimwesley Williams has constantly taken out-of-state gigs. A travel nurse who lives in Jackson, Mississippi, Williams got assignments in Texas, Wisconsin and Maine, where understaffed hospitals were desperate for help during surges in COVID-19 cases.
When he acquired a contract to work in Texas for COVID relief, Williams had to work six days a week.
“We just had to do what we had to do to take care of the patients,” he said. “And they were getting hit pretty bad, so they needed us.”
The work was exhausting, but also lucrative.
Depending on the specialty, some travel nursing contracts right now can pay $3,000 - $6,000 per week. The average registered nurse in Mississippi makes around $1,250 a week, for a $60,000 annual salary.
But now, Williams is back home.
“I think now in the South — because Mississippi isn't the only place — there's a need here for nurses. And [hospitals] have upped their pay,” Williams said.
Williams wanted to come back home for school and family, and said he was “blessed” to find a high-paying contract of around $100 dollars an hour in Mississippi, which is comparable to rates he’s been granted elsewhere during times of high demand.
COVID-19 hospitalizations are now twice as high in Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama as they were two weeks ago, contributing to record hospitalization numbers nationwide. In response, some Southern hospitals are offering more pay as the need for travel nurses skyrockets.
“We've got a number of hospitals that are still utilizing travel agencies, but we've had several facilities that have decreased the number of beds they can utilize because there was no funding to cover it,” Tim Moore, president of the Mississippi Hospital Association, said.