7 Pennsylvania Radiology Jobs
Travel Allied (Radiologic Technologist (X-Ray)) - Radiology
$2,652/wk
Contract Details
Travel Pay Breakdown
Benefits
Additional Information
Pre-employment modules may be required for this role. Please upload any certifications or health documents you have to your profile to expedite your on-boarding process.
Additional Details:
Artificial nails are not allowed for any travelers. Failure to adhere could result in being sent home and/or terminated if policy is not followed.
If candidate worked a perm facility in the last 12 months, 1 reference must be from perm facility.
Eligibility as Current/Previous Employee: cumulative experience applies for previous travelers.
References: At least one reference must be from the same unit/specialty as the job you're applying to.
Unit Details:
- Performs imaging in inpatient and outpatient areas as required.
- No IV starts required.
- Overall they do 200+ scans/studies per day on patients of all ages.
Shift & Scheduling:
- Saturday shift is 6:30 a.m. until 12:30 p.m. Technologist completes both scheduled outpatients and any inpatient orders.
- Outpatient Center shift is 6 a.m. until 2:30 p.m.
- Shifts at hospital are 6:30 a.m. – 3 p.m. and 9 a.m until 5:30 p.m.
- Again, all shifts are rotational. No emergency call.
- Rotating shifts to include days, weekends, holidays, and midnights.
- Rotating weekend and call requirements with a 30-minute response time.
Travel Radiologic Technologist (X-Ray) Jobs
Radiologic Technologists are in demand in nearly every healthcare setting, and the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a national median wage of $77,660 (May 2024) with faster-than-average job growth projected for radiologic and MRI technologists. Travel X-Ray Tech jobs are widely available in hospitals, urgent care, trauma centers, and outpatient clinics in urban, suburban, and rural settings. Job descriptions cover general diagnostic radiography and patient positioning, sometimes with cross-training in CT or other modalities. These roles are rewarding because X-ray imaging is the starting point for so much patient care - and travel contracts typically pay above staff rates.