Published
...Also...you may want to edit your post to remove the name of your employer.
Really. That would be a terrific idea.
There will be some days when you wonder if neonates are a different species. Turns out to be sorta true. Many, many things you know abt adults will not be true for babies,esp premies.
If you haven't already acquired a Merenstein and Gardner, get one and several hi-lighters as well. Start working on that. Review fetal circulation.
[COLOR=#003366]Neofax 2013 - free eBooks download is a good reference.
Best wishes. Check back w/us.
Congrats! There is no hard and fast rule regarding feeds and temperature and I don't work at your facility, but here is some of the Patho:
Normal temperature is at least 36.5 for infants. If a baby is colder than this, they have an increased metabolic demand and less blood is shunted to the gut (survival mode is blood to your brain and heart), therefore increased chance of necrotizing enterocolitis. Plus hypothermia is a sign of sepsis...and no feeding kids when they are on the decline, for similar reasons as related above.
reesepiece
5 Posts
Hi there! I've been a nurse for 7 yrs. All my experience has been with adults! (From Med-Surg, IMC, to ICU). I am nervous about starting in the NICU. Any advice for what I will need to review for NALS or NRP?? Is NRP the new NALS?? I work at Sunrise Hospital in Las Vegas, NV. I'm hoping to work in their NICU.