PRN Funding Talks on Recession and Medical Staffing

The editors of Recruiting & Staffing Solutions Magazine assembled a prestigious round table of funding and lending experts and asked them a series of questions concerning the recession and how it has affected their clients. The responses to the survey was included in a special feature in the March/April issue of RSSM. PRN Funding’s CEO, Phil Cohen, was one of the factoring experts who participated in the survey.

A summary of the questions asked and Mr. Cohen’s responses are included below:

In your opinion, what is the biggest impact on the staffing industry by the present credit crunch?
Credit worthy staffing agencies are finding it increasingly difficult to either receive or renew working capital lines from banks. In addition, alternative financing vehicles traditionally utilized by smaller firms, such as home equity lines and credit cards, are also becoming more difficult to obtain. Reduced access to capital is compounded by an industry wide slow down in the payment of invoices by customers.

What do you believe will be the biggest opportunity staffing firms will have because of the present recession?
I believe the biggest opportunity staffing firms have right now is to help fill in the gaps for employers who have had to lay-off full-time employees. Staffing firms can use this recession to provide temporary workers to companies who don’t necessarily have the financial resources available to perform the necessary background checks or offer benefits packages. By utilizing staffing firms, these companies can maintain a business-as-usual atmosphere on a more affordable level.

If a staffing firm wanted to research funding and lending companies, what are the two biggest factors that separate your company from others in the industry?

  1. Medical Staffing Industry Expertise – PRN Funding, LLC understands the unique characteristics of the medical staffing industry. PRN Funding is very familiar with traditional payment terms, industry jargon and day-to-day procedures associated with the medical staffing industry.
  1. Extremely Flexible Factoring Terms – PRN Funding offers the utmost in flexibility to medical staffing companies. Our clients choose when, who, how much and how long to factor their invoices.

Which industries have been influenced the most by the downturn?
As a very focused factor, we are only qualified to comment on the medical staffing industry.  Unlike other downturns, even the medical staffing industry has been affected as facilities have had significantly less difficulty filling open shifts.

In your opinion, which industries have been the least affected by the current economic situation?
Once again, I am only qualified to comment on the medial staffing industry.  While virtually all segments have been affected, those agencies providing home health care services have been less affected than other specialties as demand for their services is less discretionary and their clients (governmental institutions) don’t have any staff of their own.

More Men Turning to Nursing Careers

It’s no secret that the poor economy has led to a number job layoffs. However,  the nursing industry is experiencing a reverse effect. More part-time female nurses are going back to work full-time because their husbands are being laid off from their jobs.

Now there’s a new growing trend…More men are entering the nursing profession. Henry Ford Community College in Dearborn, MI said that 18% of the 2009 class of nursing students are men, a number that has doubled since 2003.

Check out the video below for more information.

NYC Council Speaker Aims to Improve Nurse Shortage

Although she alluded to it about a month ago during her State of the City Address, City Council Speaker Christine Quinn formally announced a five-year partnership with CUNY to increase the university’s teaching capacity to train an additional 100 nursing students a year.

New York is hit just as hard with the national nurse shortage, turning down 575 nurse applicants last year due to a lack of nursing teachers.

Quinn’s initiative would permit CUNY to pull five to ten seasoned nurses from New York City’s hospitals and have them teach as guest faculty members. Quinn’s solution would result in the training of 100 new nurses a year.

Click here to read more about Quinn’s nurse shortage plans.

Half of Nation’s Hospitals Operating in the Red

It wasn’t very long ago when PRN Funding wrote a 3-part series on the healthcare cash flow crisis in America, giving a glimpse into the actual costs of America’s healthcare system. Written at the end of 2004,we shared a startling statistic in the three-part Cash Poor Series, 1/3 of the nation’s hospitals were operating in the red. Just 4 years later, 50% of America’s hospitals are currently operating in the red, and many are in the midst of cutting back on services and staffing.

According to an article that appeared in today’s Los Angeles Times, “Forty-four percent of hospitals have seen declines in surgeries, with hip procedures showing the steepest drop-off at 45%, according to another new survey. As a result, 47% of the hospitals surveyed expect to make staff cuts, and 69% plan to cancel or delay equipment purchases, according to the survey by Novation, a company that manages supplier contracts for hospitals.

Novation has responded by demanding that vendors maintain or roll back prices on the goods they sell to hospitals.”

Click here to read the entire article: Half of nation’s hospitals running losses.

Factoring for Home Care Agencies

The factoring experts at PRN Funding, LLC announced this week that it is now accepting factoring applications from home care agencies. For the convenience of the factoring blog‘s readers, we have included the text from the official press release below:

PRN Funding Expands Funding to Home Care Agencies

Cleveland, OH-Keeping up with the ever-changing medical staffing marketplace, PRN Funding, LLC made a formal announcement this week that it is now accepting home care factoring applications.

Previously, the focused accounts receivable factoring firm has worked exclusively with healthcare vendors that sell goods or deliver services directly to medical facilities. By adding home care agencies to their repertoire, the invoice funding firm is now able to collect payments directly from multiple state governments and their agencies.

“It has come to our attention that home care agencies and private duty firms could benefit greatly by PRN Funding’s factoring services,” said PRN Funding’s president, Philip Cohen. “It’s a growing market that we are excited to help.”

Home care, private duty and in-home care are all phrases that refer to a specialized care or life assistance care given to a person within the confines of his/her home rather than in a medical facility.

With years of experience in healthcare services financing, PRN Funding has a precise understanding of the unique challenges within the demanding business of serving vendors to healthcare institutions. PRN Funding offers financial resources to these companies by purchasing their accounts receivable–a process known as ‘factoring,’  which provides the cash needed to sustain and grow a healthcare business.

For more information, please visit PRN Funding’s Home Care Factoring page.

Housing Market Affects Nurses Living in Florida

An article from today’s Miami Herald described an interesting phenomenon going on in the world of nursing. In an effort to combat the nursing shortage, nurses living and working in southern Florida are quietly being recruited to the north with promises of cheaper housing and better hiring incentives.

Recruiters from Moses Cone Health System, located in Greensboro, North Carolina, met with a number of nurses this week in a Westin hotel in Fort Lauderdale yesterday.  Next week the recruiters will be at the Marriott Miami Dadeland, and an Orlando location is scheduled for Thursday.

Q: What do you think about this kind of recruiting method?

Click here to read the entire article: NC hospitals quietly tempt South Florida’s nurses.