If you're a healthcare professional that wants to help, here are all the ways you can volunteer across the US
- If you're a doctor or a nurse looking for how to help during the COVID-19 pandemic, Business Insider has broken down all the ways you can volunteer.
- You can apply to a staffing agency which gives workers short-term contracts to work at high coronavirus outbreak hospitals. Business Insider previously reported that some agencies have been offering volunteer nurses more than $5,000 a week.
- States, cities, and the federal government have their own volunteer registries.
- If you're a healthcare worker with information on staffing during the novel coronavirus outbreak, email aakhtar@businessinsider.com.
- Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.
Many public health experts have been worried about an imminent hospital staffing issue amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Andy Slavitt, an administrator in the Obama administration and cofounder of a public health research group, recently said New York City's greatest challenge in treating coronavirus is finding enough nurses and respiratory therapists. Nurses have told Business Insider they worry they will get sick due to the dire shortage of protective equipment, like masks.
Even when doctors and nurses are rushing to places like New York to help fight coronavirus, hospitals are running into confusion and bottlenecks when they try to organize volunteers, The New York Times reports. New York state, city, and individual hospitals all have separate volunteer websites for interested workers.
Staffing agencies, which typically supply hospitals with short-term contract workers, have better infrastructure to place volunteers - and they're offering nurses $5,000 a week to go to COVID-19 outbreak zones. But many volunteer workers told the Times they feel uncomfortable accepting the thousand dollar rates.
If you're a healthcare worker looking for the best way to volunteer, Business Insider broke down all the ways you can get involved.
If you're looking to travel outside your state, here's how to get a license to practice medicine:
Usually, doctors and nurses can only practice in the state in which they received their license. But in this crisis, organizations have adopted new measures to help healthcare workers travel to states with more dire outbreaks.
- Under the Uniform Emergency Volunteer Health Practitioner Act, states under emergency can waive licensing requirements for out-of-state medical volunteers. Here's a list of 18 states that have enacted the UEVHPA act.
- States with the most outbreaks - including New York and California - have waived out-of-state licensing requirements for volunteer medical personnel.
- The Federation of State Medical Boards has a website tracking the states waiving state license requirements during the COVID-19 pandemic.
If you're looking for volunteer registries, here they are state and federal organizations:
State level
Many state governors have introduced volunteer forms for healthcare workers looking to work in high-outbreak states like New York, New Jersey, and California:
- New York state has a survey that interested health and mental health workers can fill out.
- California Peace Corps is looking for volunteer physicians, pharmacists, nurses, respiratory therapists, and more.
- Michigan is looking for nursing home and hospital workers to volunteer.
- New Jersey has a survey open to healthcare workers of all licenses.
- Louisiana is looking for active healthcare professionals to volunteer.
- Massachusetts is looking for those with active state licenses to volunteer as emergency response nurses.
Federal level
Federal agencies also have recruiting efforts aimed at healthcare workers willing to treat the coronavirus. The Medical Reserve Corps matches medical volunteers with local community groups on the frontlines of coronavirus. Interested volunteers can learn more on the Medical Reserve Corps website.
If you're a retired physician or nurse and looking for ways to practice again, here's how to renew your license in a crisis.
The American Medical Association broke down several ways to volunteer as a retired healthcare professional:
- 30 states have expedited licensing for retired and inactive licensing. To qualify, retired physicians and nurses must not have either a suspended or revoked license. A full list of states with modified license requirements for retired healthcare workers can be found here.
- Many older doctors might face increased risk if they come into contact with the COVID-19 disease, as the illness has a higher death and hospitalization rate for people above 60 years old. But many schools and health systems are employing seniors to teach or train online.
- Hospitals in New York City, like Mt. Sinai, have healthcare worker volunteer forms for positions that don't include direct patient care.
- The AMA recommends reaching out directly to a hospital or school to see if there are volunteer opportunities available online.
If you're interested in using a for-profit staffing agency, many of which offer steep rates to emergency respondents, here are some options:
Many staffing companies that typically employ hospitals and clinics with short-term or contract workers have pivoted to helping travel nurses. These agencies take a cut of the pay hospitals offer.
Aya Healthcare, for instance, told Business Insider that hospitals have increased nurse pay rates based on rapidly increasing demand. Some companies, like IntelyCare, have set up COVID-19 training programs. Other rapid-response staffing companies like Fastaff are helping nurses get licensed to practice outside of their state.
Do you have a personal experience with the coronavirus you'd like to share? Or a tip on how your town or community is handling the pandemic? Please email covidtips@businessinsider.com and tell us your story.Get the latest coronavirus business & economic impact analysis from Business Insider Intelligence on how COVID-19 is affecting industries.