Re: Switch to NICU/Neonatology
I found a quote from somebody else explaining this. Basically Level 1 is wellborn nursery, level 2 is like progressive care and level 3 is intensive care. It is confusing because trauma centers are graded the other way around. Level 1 trauma has the greatest number of resources and skilled people.
Here is the quote and I am probably doing this worng but I want to give credit:
From EricJRN
"Re: Level 2 vs Level 3 NICUBabies in Level II NICU's have some problems that make them not quite suitable for a newborn nursery, but they generally don't have immediately life-threatening issues. Critical babies born in hospitals with Level II NICU's are generally stabilized and transferred to Level III NICU's.
Level III NICU's take care of kids that require interventions like ventilators and pressor agents. A Level III NICU generally has on-site or rapidly available pediatric surgeons and other subspecialists, but they may or may not be able to repair complex cardiac defects or utilize ECMO. (Sometimes you'll see Level III divided into IIIa, IIIb, and IIIc, depending on the services of the unit. I've even seen NICU's with ECMO capability who call themselves Level IV NICU's).
To make this more confusing, some hospitals have only Level II units, some have their Level II and III babies all on one unit, while others have completely separate Level II and III units.
Level III units are often found in suburban/outlying hospitals, but often patients will have to be transferred to an academic center for really complex problems."
I work in a 60 bed Level 3 with Level 2 mixed in. So my assignment could be all 2 or all 3 or a combination of both. Hope this helps! Let me know if you have further quesitons!
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