JourneyCareersNeonatal Nurse
Global Career Guide (EN)From Nursing and Midwifery β†’

Neonatal Nurse

AI

Neonatal nurses care for newborn babies, especially those born early or with health problems. They monitor the babies closely, administer medicines and treatments, and support the parents through a worrying time.

The role

What a neonatal nurse actually does, day to day.

As a neonatal nurse, you care for babies in their first weeks of life, especially those who were born too early or are seriously unwell. You work in a hospital intensive care unit with doctors, midwives and other nurses, watching the tiniest patients very closely and acting fast when something goes wrong. You're skilled at handling very fragile newborns and confident with medical equipment. The work is intense and sometimes sad - some babies don't survive, and some go home with serious disabilities. You need to be emotionally strong and able to keep going when the job is hard.

Your days involve checking babies constantly (their breathing, heart rate, temperature), giving them medicines or food through tubes, and helping them breathe with machines if needed. You talk to parents every day - answering questions, explaining what's happening, and supporting them through a frightening time. You write detailed notes about each baby's progress, work closely with the medical team, and spot problems early. When a baby recovers and goes home, it's genuinely joyful. When a baby dies, you grieve with the family. It's emotionally demanding work, but neonatal nurses say the connection with families and seeing tiny, fragile babies grow stronger makes it meaningful.

A typical week

Day to day

1Monitor vital signs and health status of newborns in intensive care units.
2Administer medications and intravenous therapies as prescribed by physicians.
3Educate and support parents on caring for their newborns and managing health concerns.
4Collaborate with a multidisciplinary team to develop and implement individual care plans.
5Perform assessments and interventions to ensure the wellbeing of infants.
6Maintain accurate and thorough patient records and documentation.
7Participate in family meetings to discuss care plans and progress.
8Engage in continuous professional development and training to stay updated on neonatal care advancements.