Published
I worked on an adult surgical floor for 3 years before switching to NICU. I've been in the NICU for a year now. All I can say is everything is different. Everything. I used to be a phlebotomy and IV pro, used to be the go to person for a lot of things, I used to feel like I had a lot of knowledge. That all went out the window when I went to the NICU. Even a year later I am still very new and considered a new staff, and have so much to learn. It's a big transition. But it's so worth it if this is your passion. You will feel like a brand new grad again. Depending on what type of NICU you work in you may be doing more things, I work in a large academic centre so we have an IV/venous blood team, a PICC/central line team etc. So I'm not doing any of those skills and won't be for at least 5 years because that's when they consider training you...I have a lot less autonomy in the NICU than I did before...but that's my particular NICU. If it's a smaller NICU then you may not have that problem. Regardless, there's so much to learn...you will never be bored :)
SmallButMightyRN
1 Post
Hello all! I have 2 1/2 years of experience on a general med-surg floor! NICU has been my dream job since before nursing school so I applied and was hired right after my interview!
I'm SUPER excited but nervous because I have to transition from adult patients to babies! Are there any NICU/nursery/mother-baby RNs who can offer me words of wisdom as I make this BIG step in my RN career?