A neonatal nurse.
I think its called a neonatal nurse
neonatal nurses
mainly registered and enrolled nurses
RNS
They are called "industrial" nurses.
The Marie Curie Cancer Care is a nation wide charity organization that provides end of life care for terminally patients. Nurses take palliative care of you at your home.
Other individuals, nurses, doctors, diseases, voulenteers, type of food they serve, ect.
Residents in intermediate care facilities receive some nursing care and assistance with persona needs. In general, residents will receive less intensive care than they would receive in a hospital or with a skilled nursing staff.
In chemistry, an intensive property is a property that depends on the type of matter in a sample.
An Intensive Care Unit seeks to assist of support the lives with people who are severely ill or who have complications that are life threatening like being in a coma or certain body organs failure. The facilities and doctors in this department are of high quality and the doctors are of great experience. The ICU helps patients with feeding, blood transfusion and breathing assistance.
The field of nursing is further subdivided into a range of fields that provide specific types of nursing care. A nurse in a NICU will have entirely different responsibilities from a nurse in an emergency room. Subacute Care Nurses provide total inpatient care for people who suffer from an acute illness, a severe injury, or the long-term impact of a chronic disease. When patients need specific types of care immediately after (or even in place of) acute care hospitalization, it is Subacute Care Nurses who provide this service. Subacute Care Nurses work with patients who have active medical conditions that need total nursing care. Subacute Care Nurses are also in charge of administering complex treatments that would otherwise require a stay in a hospital, such as pain management for chronic pain patients, or end of life care for the dying. Subacute Care is an intensive type of care that requires more work than you’d find in a nursing home setting, but is still less involved than fully acute care. Conditions that sometimes require a Subacute Care Nurse include AIDS treatment, postoperative care, brain injury recovery, severe infections, hospice, and ventilator treatment. People interested in a career as a Subacute Care Nurse should be fully prepared to work with all age groups, with special emphasis on elderly patients. Subacute Nurses need top notch clinical skills, and the adaptability to work both on their own and as part of a complete medical team. Training in extended-care, surgical care, and critical patient treatment (including IV therapy and, tracheostomy skills) is a must. Subacute Nurses must have their RN or BSN in order to find work. Median starting salary in this field, according to US News and World Report, is about $54,000, though your actual starting salary is highly dependent on the region you work in, your past experience, and what type of care facility you work in. Subacute Nurses in hospitals tend to earn more than those who work in long-term care facilities like nursing homes. The highest reported starting salary for a Subacute Care Nurse is $66,000 for nurses working in large markets like New York City or Los Angeles.
Registered Nurses assess and care of patients throughout the spectrum. They provide interventions based on a patient's diagnosis to improve their outcome. Nurses do not simply follow a doctor's command, nurses need to have excellent critical thinking skills in order to understand the patient's pathophysiology and pharmacology and how this effect's the patient. Often if there is a change in a patient's status the nurse is the first to notice and must alert the doctor for critical drug and lab values.
RN opportunities There is no profession which offers as many opportunities for diversified roles as does nursing. Nurses may follow their personal and professional interests by working with any group of people, in any setting, at any time. Some nurses follow the traditional role of working in a hospital setting. Within the hospital setting, nurses may work in areas including: Critical Care; Emergency; Maternal/Child Care; Medical: Cardiology, Diabetes, Gastroenterology, Gerontology, Nephrology, Neurology, Oncology, Pulmonary, Rehabilitation, Renal, Rheumatology, Urology; Operating Room/Recovery Room; Pediatrics; Psychiatric/Mental Health; Surgical: Burn, Cardiovascular, Ear/Nose/Throat, Gastroenterology, Orthopedics, Plastic Reconstructive, Transplant Others may work in non-hospital settings including: Public/Community Health; Mental Health Agencies; Home Health Care; Physician's Office; Health Maintenance Organizations and Managed Care Companies; Insurance; Occupational Health; Research Centers; Extended Care Facilities; Clinics; Outpatient Surgery Centers; Hospices; Community Schools, Day Care Centers; Military Branches; Independent Practice; Schools of Nursing; Senior Centers, Shelters, Churches RNs can specialize in neonatal, pediatric, gerontologic, or geriatric care. Nurses that specialize by work setting or treatment type may include the following: Medical and Surgical Nurses - found in all healthcare settings and perform a variety of basic nursing functions Home Healthcare Nurses - work at patients' homes to aide with the recovery from accidents, surgical procedures, or childbirth Transplant Nurses - monitor both transplant recipients and donors to ensure organs are not rejected and that both patients heal properly Critical Care Nurses - work in a hospitals' critical or intensive care ward, and mainly work with cardiovascular, respiratory, and pulmonary failure Emergency and Trauma Nurses work in hospital emergency departments, treating life threatening conditions. They may also work as Flight Nurses, providing patient care in helicopters while en route to the nearest medical facility Specialty nurses working in the organ and body type category are generally found in specialist offices or outpatient care centers. These nurses normally work with one of the following specialists: Dermatologists - focusing on skin related conditions Gynecologists - focusing on women's reproductive systems Orthopedic Nurses - focusing on muscular and skeletal issues Nephrologists - focusing on kidney diseases The final category, disease, ailment, or condition nurses may be employed in any type of healthcare setting. They commonly work with oncology, genetics, addictions, HIV/AIDS, or developmental disabilities. There are also positions requiring candidates to possess RN licensure which requires little or no contact with the patients. These occupations include nurse administrators, forensic nurses, case managers, and others.
midwives, OB nurses, or surgical nurses depending on the circumstances of birth
Care for this type of furniture is less intensive. As long as there is a good weather resistant coating on it you will not have to do anything to it. When you see rust on is you can lightly sand it and spot paint it.
scrubs