Need some SERIOUS advice from Neonatal/Pediatric NP's

Specialties NP

Published

Hello all,

I am VERY seriously considering going this route. I have recently gained admittance into a undergrad nursing program in order to get a second B.S. in nursing. However, I know I would like to go onto pursue my NP in a speciality probably either Pediatrics or Neonatology.

I am desperately looking for information from ANYONE regarding the lifestyle (hrs worked), where work (esp for Neonatal NP how hospital hrs work), starting salary, amount of autonomy vs dependence on attending/supervising physician and any other helpful advice you may have to share.

Thanks in advance.

Specializes in Nursing Home ,Dementia Care,Neurology..

Moved to Nurse practitioner forum for more input.

Specializes in Neonatal ICU (Cardiothoracic).

I'm still studying for my NNP, so I'll have to answer your question based on my observation alone.

Lifestyle/hours worked: Anything goes. NNPs here work 12 hour rotating shifts of 6 nights and 7 days per month. Some facilities hire into straight 12hr days and nights. Some require a significant amount of call. Some have 24 shifts. It is all going to depend on the facility.

Where to work: NNPs practice primarily in the hospital setting. Some DO practice in followup or well-baby clinics, however with an NNP, you are limited to caring for children 0-2 years old.

Salary: Check out Salary.com for details about your area. More rural areas would probably be in the 65k+ range, and metropolitan in the 85k+ range. Again, it all depends on the area. NNPs here in NYC can make six figures due to being unionized. Fortunately there is a huge demand for NNPs. A recruiter who recruits both neonatologists and NNPs told me once that NNPs are much harder to come by.

Autonomy: Depends on the unit. Where I work, the NNPs take their own patients in a resident-like role, being supervised by a neonatal fellow, and ultimately, the attending. At a smaller non-teaching facility, the NNP would probably be much more autonomous, especially at a facility that does not have 24hr neonatologist coverage.

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