Nursery/ NICU
Responsibilities:
·
Observe what nurses in the NICU and nursery do
·
Be familiar with what procedures the babies needs,
depending on what their needs are
Knowledge/ Skills
·
Care for premature babies
·
When to identify when baby is too hot
·
What the monitors tell you about the baby
·
Understanding when baby needs to be discharged are stay
longer
·
Understanding the procedures needed to be done
when a baby is circumcised
Best thing that happened on this unit:
·
Observing the first few minutes of a baby’s life
·
Watching other people, other than the baby’s
parents, care for newborn
- protocols they take to discharge a baby
Worst thing that happened:
·
When the babies cried
·
Almost was a code pink
·
They couldn’t find a instrument they needed to
tend to a baby
1.
The technology I observed in the NICU was very helpful
for the babies there. Since they needed care the most. The babies
that were healthy and born on time weren’t hooked up to any monitors. The technology observed
while in the NICU were incubators, oxygenation machines, ventilator,
feeding tube machine, iv machine, and phototherapy light to help with yellowish skin
of the baby.
2.
Some diagnostic procedures included placing baby
under a special light to help with the yellowing of their skin and if mom had diabetes they had to give baby a
different type of formula due to a low sugar level
3.
Therapy in the nursery/ NICU were feeding tactics,
cooling of their bodies, and treating there sugar levels.
4.
Diseases/ Disorders I observed was anemia, which
was a blood disorders, and jaundice which is a high level of bilirubin in
the blood
5.
BBT – baby’s blood type, BM- bowl movement, C/S
– cesarean section, L+D labor and delivery, were all the abbreviations I heard
in the nursery and NICU.
The NICU / Nursery could be one of two things; either very quite or a room of crying babies. If any monitors would go off the nurses made sure to silent them so they wouldn't wake up any of the babies. On the door of the NICU, there was a sign that read ''I'm trying to sleep", this was to insure that when a guest would walk in they were influenced to stay as quiet as the could. The service provided from the nurse to baby was excellent and the service provided from nurse to parents was great as well because the were sure to inform and make good attraction between each other. The equipment there was very helpful for the NICU area, because those were the babies that needed the care the most.
The team on the unit was very helpful toward each other. If one nurse was busy charting babies information then she would ask another nurse to feed the baby for her. If a nurse needed something to care for the baby the other would realize the problem and give the nurse what she needed. There were many safety procedures on this unit. Before you even were allowed on this unit you had to call for a nurse to let you in. You also had to wash your hands before entering. Also each baby had a ankle bracelet to keep track of them and make sure they were accounted for and didn't wonder off with a stranger. If they were close to an elevator entrance, or in the wrong hallway, it set off alarms and everyone was to be aware and check on the baby. Diagnostic procedures included giving baby medications they needed through an iv. Some babies had yellowing of the skin which caused them to be placed under a blue light. Some of the babies needed to be on ventilators to help their respiratory system. Some Therapeutic procedures for the babies included placing them on a heating blanket to keep the warm.
While on this unit I learned lots off new knowledge such as how long baby will be in the nursery or NICU, what vital signs are taken, what test the baby must pass in order to be discharge, what different formula are to be given, what the baby schedule is like, and what was done when a baby boy was circumcised. There wasn't much medical terminology I head but I did here the most common things said on this unit including BBT – baby’s blood type, BM- bowl movement, C/S – cesarean section, L+D labor and delivery. Some skills I learned was how to tend to a baby once they are born and exactly how to bottle fed baby and how to burp them. I also learned how patient you have to be with the baby.
This was great personal experience, from this unit I could take a lot for the future. Maybe one day when I want to start a family once I get much older it would prepare me just a little bit about a new born. This unit was a great educational experience because most of the other units dealt with the care of older patients but in this case we were able to care for babies.
GRACE CARE: Dinning
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