HealthOne Finalizes Expansion Funding Round with Rockport
September 01, 2007
HealthOne Staffing announced today that it has closed a funding round with Rockport Group of Portland, Oregon. The financing provides growth capital to expand operations to service high market demand for its travel and international nurse staffing solutions.
HealthOne offers healthcare facilities travel nurses to address current staff shortages and long-term international nurse staff to help prevent future shortages. "The nurse staffing industry has almost been exclusively focused on short-term travel nurse relief that addresses immediate shortfalls but does nothing to break the cycle of nurse shortages that many facilities are caught in," says HealthOne Managing Director, David Carr. "We offer staffing services that address both. The high demand we’re experiencing affirms our belief that healthcare facilities don’t just want to react to shortages, they want to act to prevent them."
The company will accelerate the hiring of recruitment, client management and marketing staff and will increase the scope of its marketing campaign over the next three quarters. The company’s retooled and expanded marketing campaign will kick-off with the launch of a new website with interactive features and an expanded user portal dubbed My Health1.
HealthOne is a travel and international nurse recruitment and staffing services company headquartered in Burlingame, California. The company has recruitment offices in Sacramento, California, Portland, Oregon and Albuquerque, New Mexico. HealthOne provides its services to healthcare organizations throughout the Western United States.
HealthOne offers nurse employees the opportunity to advance their careers through short and long-term travel assignments in the professional setting of their choice while earning top compensation and benefits. HealthOne offers facility clients short-term staffing solutions that address immediate nurse shortages and long-term solutions help build staff stability to help prevent future shortages.