Published
I am looking for a change. I was just wondering if many of you work with men in your units. I always heard that most NICU nurses come from labor and delivery.
Most NICU nurses I've met have never worked labor and delivery at all, they want very little to do with caring for adults as patients. I'm usually the only male in the units I work in just like Bortaz. It gives me something unique to bring to my patients. The fathers are tremendously thankful seeing another male handling their tiny infant and teaching them to do so as well. If you want to do NICU, ask if you can shadow somewhere and see what it's all about. Best of luck.
We don't have any male nurses that I know of(I am a few weeks new and we have over 100 nurses for my unit), but we do have a lot of males in respiratory. And a lot of the MDs/residents are males...and we have a male NP. I don't think parents/staff are unreceptive to males! I think it's awesome if you want to move to NICU :)
And I came from the adult world- telemetry. No peds/L&D experience outside of nursing school!
I've worked in several different NICU's over the years and have known very few NICU nurses who previously worked L&D. Also, I have never seen any significant amount of discrimination against men as RN's in NICU's.
Finally, you might be interested to know that the founder and first President of the National Association of Neonatal Nurses was/is a man. (Chuck Rait). Also, there were at least 3 other men providing active leadership to the specialty in the early days of that organization (Tracy Karp, Vince Casani, and David Allen). So while men have definitely been a minority of the NICU nursing population, they have certainly been a visible and respected part of the NICU nursing community.
MattNurse, MSN, RN
154 Posts
I am looking for a change. I was just wondering if many of you work with men in your units. I always heard that most NICU nurses come from labor and delivery.