Nurse Staffing Specialities Page

Cardiac Catheterization Lab Nurse

Nurses will assist with cardiac cauterizations, pacemakers, and defibrillation. They must be able to adapt to changing patient needs and emergencies.

ER Nurse

Nurses will treat patients with a variety of illnesses or injuries. Nurses must be able to identify and treat life-threatening diseases, as well as promptly assess and treat patients. They must cope with a wide range of ailments and traumas. They must be able to treat everyone, from fevers to heart attacks.

L&D (LDRP) Nurse

Nurses care for mothers and their babies during pregnancy, labor, and delivery. They encourage and assist women and babies throughout birth, and deal with any issues that arise. Nurses may also assist and educate new parents after birth.

Acute Rehabilitation Nurse

Nurses care for persons with temporary or permanent illnesses or disabilities. They assist people develop recovery goals and provide coping techniques.

Cardiovascular Intensive Care Unit Nurse

Post-operative cardiac patients require constant nursing care, high alert nursing, and specialized critical care equipment. Among the disorders treated are congenital heart disease, acquired heart disease, heart transplants, and patients on extracorporeal life support systems.

PCU Nurse: Leave (Progressive Care Unit)

Non-critical patients require greater monitoring and more frequent assessments from PCU and telemetry nurses. Nurses utilize computers to monitor vital signs and intervene before they become life-threatening.

Endoscopy Nurse

Nurses will monitor and examine non-ICU patients who require more regular monitoring. They employ computers to monitor patients’ vital signs and intervene before they die.

Critical Care Unit Nurse

Nurses work in contexts where patients require complicated assessments, high-intensity therapies and interventions, and constant nursing supervision. This nursing specialty focuses with human responses to life-threatening conditions, and nurses rely on a specialized body of knowledge, experience, and skills to provide care for these patients and families.

Home Health or Hospice Nurse

Nurses care for patients at home and perform tasks such as medicine administration, wound care, disease treatment and preventative education, and patient assessments.

Long Term Acute Care Nurse

Nurses provide ongoing medical, psychosocial, and personal care to patients with chronic physical or mental illnesses. This speciality requires experience in a medical surgical setting and the ability to prepare IVs, ventilators, and tube feedings.

Bariatric or Med-Surg Nurse

Adult patients are cared for by nurses. These nurses may have to care for more patients and for more conditions

Anesthesia Care Unit (PACU)

Nurses provide ongoing medical, psychosocial, and personal care to patients with chronic physical or mental illnesses. This speciality requires experience in a medical surgical setting and the ability to prepare IVs, ventilators, and tube feedings.

Surgical Intensive Care Unit Nurse

Nurses must continuously assess each patient to gauge their reaction to medical and nursing interventions. They assess the requirement for drugs such vasoactive agents and oxygen. In addition, they must be sensitive to the patient’s and family’s psychological requirements.

Pediatric Intensive Care Unit Nurse

Assisting with sophisticated assessments, high intensity therapies and interventions, and constant nursing monitoring are responsibilities of the PICU RN.

Intensive Care Unit Nurse

The nurse is in charge of patients who require sophisticated assessment, high intensity therapies and interventions, and constant nursing supervision.

Telemetry/MS

Nurses monitor patients’ vital signs such as blood pressure, heart rate, breathing rate, blood oxygen level, and ECG. So nurses can closely watch the patient remotely. It is the nurse’s responsibility to read, appraise, plan, implement and preserve accurate medical records.

Outpatient Surgery Nurse

Nurses assist patients of all ages with acute or chronic illnesses or injuries in a variety of settings. Preventive care, pain management, and education are emphasized to keep patients healthy and independent. For example, nurses conduct screenings, triage, patient education, pain treatment, case management, discharge planning, and other interventions.

Cardiovascular Operating Room Nurse

Nurses help with surgical operations, care coordination, clinical problem solving, and quality monitoring.

Must have 2 years active CVOR, balloon pump experience and BCLS certification. CORN and balloon pump experience are preferred qualifications.

DONNA NURSE

Nurses provide nursing care and education to dialysis patients and their families.

Hospice and Palliative Care Nurse

Nurses give end-of-life care and pain treatment. They improve the patient’s quality of life by efficiently treating pain and other symptoms while providing compassionate listening and counseling. They collaborate with physicians, social workers, chaplains, and others to anticipate and satisfy patient and family needs while providing culturally sensitive care.

Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Nurse

Nurses provide nursing care and education to dialysis patients and their families.

Hospice and Palliative Care Nurse

Nurses give end-of-life care and pain treatment. They improve the patient’s quality of life by efficiently treating pain and other symptoms while providing compassionate listening and counseling. They collaborate with physicians, social workers, chaplains, and others to anticipate and satisfy patient and family needs while providing culturally sensitive care.

Neonatal Intensive Care Unit Nurse

Infection, birth defects, early delivery, or other medical issues necessitating operations or therapies necessitate the care of nurses. They will directly care for these babies who need high-tech care like ventilators, incubators, or surgery. Nurses collaborate with doctors and other healthcare providers to arrange high-risk neonatal care.

Occupational Health Nurse

Nurses provide health and safety services to individuals, groups, and communities. These nurses promote and restore health, prevent disease and injury, and safeguard against occupational and environmental risks. They will conduct yearly employee physical exams to guarantee worker safety, and treat and manage any workplace injuries. Nurses keep track of workers’ compensation and OSHA data, as well as inspecting the workplace for health concerns. Drug testing, vaccines, employee counseling and education are all part of their duties.

Oncology Nurse

Nurses care for cancer patients at all stages. They help patients manage their illnesses and treatments, and may even administer chemo.

Orthopedic Nurse

Nurses treat patients with musculoskeletal diseases. This includes small fractures, multiple fractures from a car accident, and chronic bone and joint problems. These nurses can learn about fracture care, wound care, acute and chronic pain management, complex infusions, medical and surgical emergencies, and counseling.

Peds Nurse

Nurses care after children and adolescents up to the age of 18. They nurse children with acute and chronic medical and surgical disorders. Pediatric nurses recognize the expertise of the family and work with them to provide care for the child. They encourage healthy living and disease prevention while caring for patients with physical, mental, and chronic ailments.

General or Geriatric Psychiatric Nurse

Nurses treat patients’ mental health. They assess mental health issues, diagnose, organize, implement, and evaluate nursing treatment for individuals, families, groups, and communities. Help clients restore or enhance coping skills and prevent additional incapacity. Nurses also support clients with self-care tasks and manage psychobiological treatment regimens.

Postpartum OB/GYN

Nurses care for women and newborns following childbirth. They watch her recovery, both physically and mentally. These nurses can assist the mother deal with her feelings and postpartum depression. Nurses will also teach new parents how to care for their baby, including how to breastfeed or bottle feed, bathe, and monitor the baby’s health.

Nurse: Operating Room Scrubber (Perioperative)

Nurses care for surgery patients by assessing, planning, and implementing preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative care. Preoperative and postoperative training, monitoring physiologic and psychological condition, integrating and coordinating care across venues and disciplines, patient advocacy and resource efficient service are some of their duties.

Case Nurse

Nurses coordinate long-term care for patients, aiming to keep them healthy and out of the hospital. They will also explore new medicines and engage with insurance companies to assist patients get the greatest care at the lowest cost. These nurses may specialize in treating specific diseases or age groups.

FN

Nurses care for patients before to surgery. Their duties include collaborating with other healthcare providers as required by the patient. The nurse organizes the operating surgeon’s prescriptions. The nurse may also do tests, suture, dispense drugs, and perform minor surgery.

Nurse/Mother

Nurses care for mothers and their babies, a unit with interdependent needs. They must tackle both the infant’s and mother’s actions in relation to the baby and her birthing experience. Nurses must be aware of the possibilities of postpartum depression and how the mother and infant communicate. They should avoid skin-to-skin contact to help them bond.

Histology Nurse

Nurses care for patients on hemodialysis who have kidney failure. Nurses initiate, perform, and supervise the patient and equipment to ensure the process proceeds smoothly.

Must have current dialysis/hemodialysis experience and BCLS certification. ACLS certification is preferred.

Scrub Tech (CST)

Scrub technologists assist surgeons and surgical nurses during surgery. They prepare patients, monitor their vitals, and pass surgical tools and supplies to the surgeon during the procedure. They must know the operation and anticipate the surgeon’s needs. CSTs must have the knowledge and skills to provide great patient care during surgery while maintaining a sterile field.

A year of expertise in sterile techniques, instrument identification, surgical procedures, and equipment is required. Nurses must also maintain CRCST or similar certification. 2–3 years relevant experience.

CVOR Tech

Nurses care for patients on hemodialysis who have kidney failure. Nurses initiate, perform, and supervise the patient and equipment to ensure the process proceeds smoothly.

Must have current dialysis/hemodialysis experience and BCLS certification. ACLS certification is preferred.

ED Obs: ED Observation

Nurses care for patients of all ages who are not sick enough to be admitted to the hospital but are not well enough to go home and would benefit from an extended observation period (usually less than 24 hours). Prior to discharge, these nurses provide extra monitoring, diagnostic testing, and/or therapy. Chest pain, atrial fibrillation, congestive heart failure, asthma, back pain, dehydration, gastroenteritis, and trauma are common diagnoses in these units.

A year of expertise in sterile techniques, instrument identification, surgical procedures, and equipment is required. Nurses must also maintain CRCST or similar certification. 2–3 years relevant experience.

Newborn Nursery

Nurses care for newborns and infants. These nurses give immediate postpartum care. They identify the mother and her newborn, provide vaccines, monitor critical functions, collect samples for lab tests, and perform surgeries and treatments. In addition to breastfeeding, nurses educate on new toileting techniques. Nurses must respond quickly to neonates’ needs and record any infection or evolution.

IC Nurse

Nurses assist hospitals and clinics prevent infections. They examine the patient’s microbes to identify any diseases and train other nurses or healthcare workers on correct sanitation techniques.

Admin Nurse

Nurses inject patients’ medications and fluids. They keep an eye on patients’ tubing, maintain arterial catheters, and watch for medicine side effects.

X-ray nurse

Nurses care for patients undergoing radiation, ultrasound, MRI, or chemotherapy. They prepare patients mentally and emotionally for medical operations. Nurses are continuously exposed to new medical technology and must keep informed and trained.

Must have 2 years current radiation experience and BCLS certification.

Neuro/Trauma ICU

Nurses care for patients with stroke, brain hemorrhaging, trauma, and malignancies. They provide extensive assessments, intensive therapies and interventions, and constant nursing care.

Must have 2 years experience in neuro/trauma ICU and BCLS and ACLS certifications.

Intensive Care Unit

Nurses treat patients with multi-system diseases. They analyze, diagnose, treat, evaluate, and monitor critically ill patients.

Must have current critical care experience and BCLS and ACLS certifications. Preferably a critical care certification.

Must have 2 years current radiation experience and BCLS certification.

Wound

These nurses treat wounds caused by medical treatments, diseases, or injuries. Patients with ostomies will also be treated by nurses post-surgery. Patients are assessed, wounds are managed, and healing is monitored by these nurses. Nurses prevent bedsores, clean wounds, and design wound care treatment regimens.

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