Traveling With Pets: Year of the Horse Edition

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Year of the Horse: Whether you've got a dog, cat, or even a horse in tow, a pet friendly travel nurse company can help you.

Year of the Horse: Whether you’ve got a dog, cat, or even a horse in tow, a pet friendly travel nurse company can help you.

For a lot of Travel Nurses, it is super important that they are able to bring their pets with them on the road. The majority of Travelers have a beloved dog or cat without whom the adventure of Travel Nursing just wouldn’t be complete.

But other Travelers have less common pets in tow. We’ve heard of Travelers with rabbits, lizards, fish, and pot-bellied pigs riding shotgun on their journey. Today, in honor of 2014 being The Year of the Horse in Chinese astrology, we’d like to introduce you to a very special and unique traveling pet: Eichie the Traveling Horse!

Eichie is traveling with Medical Solutions Travel Nurse Amanda T. The pair have been together for 11 years and even compete in barrel races together! To read more about Eichie and Amanda click here.

As you can imagine, traveling with a 1200-pound pet requires a bit of pre-planning in the way of logistics. But even if you’re just traveling with a cat or a dog, you may need a little help planning for them to join you on the road.

If you plan to travel with a pet, you should definitely seek out an agency that is pet friendly and will be able to offer you some assistance in that area. Here are a few things a pet friendly Travel Nurse company can do to make traveling with pets easier for you:

  • First, your recruiter should inquire about your pets to get to better understand your needs when it comes to traveling with pets.
  • Pet friendly agencies will offer you help when it comes to finding housing that accommodates you and your pet. Some will even pay your pet deposit as part of your contract.
  • They may offer discounts that can help you care for your animals.
  • They may provide resources that can help you learn about how to best manage bringing your pets on the road with you.

So, do you travel with your pet(s)? Share your traveling with pets stories in the comments.

RNs Still Make A Difference in Philippines

Megan 2“I’d go back tomorrow,” states MNA member Megan Cassidy if she were asked to return to hurricane-ravaged Roxas, Philippines.  And she’d be warmly welcomed by residents as well as the Registered Nurse Relief Network (RNRN) operation continuing to provide health services nearly three months after the area was decimated.

“The people we served are so appreciative that we keep coming,” said Cassidy who is back at her job as a pediatric nurse at Children’s Hospital in Minneapolis after volunteering in the Philippines from Jan. 15 – 27.  ”But at the end of the day, it was my privilege to be there,” she added.  “You can’t helped be touched when you see people with so little, still smiling, who want to cook for you.”  One of Cassidy’s RNRN companions was a native of Roxas and his family would regularly bring home-cooked meals to the team.

From their main clinic, Cassidy’s group travelled to set up day camps in San Rafael, Estancia and a remote mountain village of Lemery.  “We treated people who walked two hours to get to us,” said Cassidy.  For some, it was the first time they had received any medical care in their lives.  One day, Cassidy estimates that two of their physicians each saw at least 300 people.  “Yet they were so patient,” said Cassidy, reflecting on the image of seeing “lots of people in a small space who had big needs.”

Cassidy was impressed by the effectiveness of the RNRN operation, which collaborated with the Philippines-based Alliance of Health Care Workers.  “The trust and respect was already established, because our hosts knew the needs of the community so well.”

Cassidy describes citizens of a country living in danger every day.  “Houses are down, infrastructure is down and people are displaced,” said Cassidy.   The landscape is littered with steel beams bent in half, and sharp metal shards continue to be a source of injury.  Downed power lines, flattened schools and a prominent oil spill hinder relief and reconstruction efforts.

The RNRN program is dedicated to providing health resources as long as needed.  Even though the demand is great for volunteers, a limited number can go at any one time, due to funding restraints.  And although RNRN  is still accepting volunteers, National Nurses United (RNRN’s parent organization) encourages nurses to contribute financially to maintain this much-needed relief effort.  Click here to learn how you can help.

Anything you can do will make a difference to the victims of Hurricane Yolanda.  One of the biggest transformations might be your own.  “You learn to prioritize; you learn what’s important,” said Cassidy. “We can all be global citizens, no matter where the need is.”   Having conscious conversations can spark an idea or point us in a direction for overcoming inertia, and Cassidy is having those exciting discussions with co-workers “and everyone I know.”

Read a blog entry by one of Megan’s colleagues

Click to view slideshow.