Interventional Radiology RN Travel Nursing Guide

Interventional radiology nurses (also known as IR RNs) are highly trained and specialized. There’s a consistent and ever-growing demand for interventional radiology RNs and allied healthcare professionals to work in this important area of healthcare, and that results in many high-paying travel nursing and allied opportunities in lots of exciting locations nationwide! If you’re an IR RN, tech, rad tech, work another related role, or aspire to be a part of this work, keep reading to learn more about this unique career path and explore nationwide job opportunities. If you’re ready to explore jobs now, apply here or search interventional radiology RN jobs and other interventional radiology jobs here.

Interventional Radiology Travel Nursing Careers

A career as a travel interventional radiology RN or travel IR tech can help you steer clear of nurse burnout while still sharing your specialized skills and incredible talent with facilities nationwide that need your help the most. Of course, your work in healthcare will always be highly demanding, but with the many locations and facilities nationwide you can visit while working, travel nursing can help keep you dedicated to your work and focused on providing excellent patient care. Also, travel healthcare is a fantastic avenue for sharpening your skills, gaining more experience in a variety of settings, and improving your resume — all while you explore the country and the opportunities available to you!

According to Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, interventional radiology is “a medical sub-specialty of radiology utilizing minimally-invasive image-guided procedures to diagnose and treat diseases in nearly every organ system.” The IR healthcare team performs tests, delivers diagnoses, and treats wide-ranging illnesses and conditions. In many situations, interventional radiology can be substituted for more serious surgeries and can even prevent hospitalization. As technology improves and demand for minimally invasive surgeries increases, IR nursing is proving to be one of the fastest-growing specialties.

To succeed working as an IR RN, you must be very tech-savvy, detail-oriented, flexible, highly organized, and good at working in a team environment. Life-long learners fit well in this specialty as it’s crucial to keep up with changes in IR technology and procedures. Many facilities like to hire IR nurses with backgrounds and experience in critical care, PACU, ER, and ICU. Interventional RNs may work in a variety of environments, including hospitals, outpatient surgery and imaging centers, and radiology clinics.

The interventional radiology team’s ultimate goal is to complete successful, minimally invasive testing and procedures to improve patient health outcomes and drive down the need for patient hospitalization whenever possible.

Who Works in Interventional Radiology?

A multidisciplinary team of healthcare and administrative professionals work in interventional radiology. This team can include IR nurses, rad techs, other techs, interventional radiologists, radiologists, oncologists, cardiologists, other specialists, nursing assistants, administrative staff, and social workers/case managers.

Who’s Treated in Interventional Radiology?

Patients can be treated by interventional radiologists, IR RNs, and rad techs for a vast variety of reasons. Some common IR procedures, according to Johns Hopkins, include angiography, angioplasty, embolization, gastronomy tubes, intravascular ultrasound, stent placement, foreign body removal, needle biopsy, IVC filter, injection of clot-dissolving meds, catheter insertion, and cancer treatment.

IR travel nurse

Quick Interventional Radiology Facts

  • Commonly required interventional radiology RN education: Associate Degree in Nursing (ADN) and/or Bachelor of Science in Nursing (BSN), plus passing the National Council Licensure Examination (NCLEX)
  • Commonly required interventional radiology certifications: Advanced Cardiovascular Life Support (ACLS), Basic Life Support (BLS)
  • Commonly preferred interventional radiology certifications: Advanced Radiology Life Support (ARLS), Emergency Neurological Life Support (ENLS), Pediatric Advanced Life Support (PALS)
  • Commonly required experience to become a travel interventional radiology RN: Facilities typically require a minimum of two years of recent, in-hospital experience in order to hire you as an interventional radiology travel nurse. You’ll also want the benefit of this amount of on-the-job experience to help protect your license and allow you to provide top-notch patient care while adjusting to travel nursing.
  • Average annual interventional radiology RN salary range: $89,000-$131,500

Locations where interventional radiology RNs are in high demand: Demand for interventional radiology RNs is growing nationwide! Locations like Wyoming, California, New Jersey, Washington, Maryland, New York, and Washington, D.C., reflect high demand with higher average salaries for IR RNs in many cities.

Frequently Asked Questions

Find answers to your questions about Travel IR RN Jobs with Medical Solutions.

Simply apply here. You can also call us at 1.866.633.3548 and speak with a recruiter, who can answer your questions and send you an information packet. All we need to begin is your application and resume. Once we receive your information, we can begin discussing potential assignments that fit your profile. When you find a job you want, your recruiter will submit you for the job and walk you through the process from there.
Most assignments are 13 weeks in length, but we’ve seen them as short as four weeks and as long as 24. You are obligated to finish your assignment as contracted, but there is no contract binding you to work more assignments afterward. You can take a new assignment right after your last or take a break. It’s all up to you!
Your total compensation package — including your hourly pay, benefits, bonuses, reimbursements, etc. — is completely customized to fit your needs. Pay rates vary from assignment to assignment depending on location, the hospital, your specialty, and other factors.