Courtney A. is a Nursing Assistant specializing in Registered Nurse. Currently working at healthcare usa in New York, NY. Registered Nurses provide direct patient care, administer medications, and coordinate with physicians across hospitals, clinics, and community health settings.
Overview
Experience
17+ years
Position in NurseSend Database
783,935 healthcare professionals in NurseSend hold the Registered Nurse specialty. Courtney A. is one of them.
40,242 Registered Nurses are based in NY (out of 56,127 total healthcare contacts in that state).
Typical Registered Nurse compensation in NY: $81,000 – $147,000 (median $97,000). Source: BLS OEWS adjusted for state cost of labor.
Registered Nurses (RNs) are the backbone of patient care in hospitals, clinics, and community health settings. When recruiting an RN like Courtney A., highlight shift flexibility, specialty unit opportunities, and sign-on bonuses. High-demand units include ICU, ER, and OR. NurseSend surfaces verified RN contacts filtered by specialty and location.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is Courtney A. located?
Courtney A. is based in New York, NY and is a Registered Nurse.
Where does Courtney A. work?
Courtney A. is currently at healthcare usa in New York, NY.
How do I get Courtney A.'s contact information?
NurseSend Pro members can access verified email, phone, and LinkedIn for Courtney A.. Subscribe to NurseSend to unlock direct contact information for this Nursing Assistant.
How do I recruit Registered Nurse like Courtney A.?
To recruit Courtney A., use NurseSend to access their verified email and phone number. Personalize your outreach with their specialty, current location, and relevant role details. NurseSend has 1M+ healthcare contacts searchable by specialty and location.
What is the average salary for a Registered Nurse in NY?
Registered Nurses in NY typically earn $81,000 to $147,000 annually, with a median of $97,000. Figures derive from BLS OEWS data, adjusted for state cost of labor. Senior-titled roles (Charge Nurse, Manager, Director) and high-acuity practice settings push the upper end.