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Home > St. John's Mercy Medical Center > Nursing at St. John's Mercy Medical Center 
Neonatal Intensive Care Fellowship

St. John’s Mercy Medical Center’s Neonatal Intensive Care Unit is a Level III nursery. As the only Level III NICU in
St. Louis County, the unit provides extensive services for premature and critically ill infants.

As a teaching hospital, St. John’s Mercy is committed to the education and advancement of nurses by offering a
comprehensive Neonatal Intensive Care Fellowship. This program allows newly graduated nurses, or nurses changing careers, to develop a new set of organizational, nursing, assessment and delegation skills.

Nurse with mother and baby picture

The NICU fellowship allows nurses to work in a broad spectrum of patient care situations, while enhancing their nursing skills under the guidance of expert mentors.

Neonatal Intensive Care Fellowship
The Neonatal Intensive Care Fellowship Program at St. John’s Mercy Medical Center is committed to the development of critical care concepts and skill required of the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) nurse. This is a shared commitment of the participant, the nurse clinician, the manager and the preceptors.

St. John’s Mercy Medical Center’s Neonatal Intensive Care Unit is a Level III nursery providing premature or critically ill babies special care. As the only Level III NICU in St. Louis County, St. John’s Mercy’s NICU provides extensive services for newborns, with an average daily census of 46. Our health care team consists of seven neonatologists, 20 neonatal nurse practitioners and 150 staff members, including neonatal nurses and respiratory therapists. Our nurses also staff a helicopter transport team that travels with Air Rescue Consortium of Hospitals (ARCH).

Nurse conforting baby pictureOur nursery utilizes advanced technology which allows us to provide care for infants with a variety of medical problems, from full-term babies with surgical or medical issues to acutely critical premature infants, to babies who transition poorly through the extrauterine period.

The NICU is also involved in the Vermont-Oxford Consortium, a national organization of NICUs working toward care improvement in the nation’s NICUs. Through methods we have employed at St. John’s Mercy, the NICU has decreased chronic lung disease in our premature infant population by 10 percent during the past year.

Fellowship Content
The NICU fellowship consists of nine didactic days, which include self-study modules, lectures by NICU nurses and neonatologists, equipment demonstrations, a medication test, and a final review test. Each student will receive three NICU orientation manuals, for class and resource use.

This classroom period includes instruction in:

  • the premature infant
  • family issues
  • nursing skills, including suctioning and IVs
  • nutrition
  • respiratory disease
  • cardiovascular disease
  • surgical interventions
  • developmental care
  • genetics and congenital anomalies.

Clinical orientation is 10 to 12 weeks with a preceptor. The clinical practicum will guide the participant through three levels of infant care: infants preparing for discharge, intermediate infants and acute care infants. The acute infant care level includes micro-preemies, surgical infants, respiratory problems, and multiples, to name a few. Through this program, the speakers also address interaction with families, and how to assist parents in overcoming the fear and grief of the NICU experience. The fellowship nurses are also prepared for the teaching role the NICU nurse takes on as he or she helps parents learn how to care for their premature or sick baby.

Presenters and Preceptors
A variety of speakers will present during the program including neonatologists and sub specialists, neonatal nurse practitioners, staff nurses, and the clinical educators.

Picture of nurses making roundsCandidates
A NICU nurse fellowship candidate should be compassionate, possess critical thinking skills, and be able to work with autonomy as part of a multidisciplinary team.

Applicants must possess a valid nursing license in the State of Missouri or have recently graduated from an accredited nursing school with eligibility to take the Missouri State Boards within 90 days of graduation. Requirements for the fellowship also include the candidate be certified in cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and be certified in neonatal resuscitation six months after orientation. The selection process for this fellowship includes a panel interview.

Contact Information
Interested candidates should contact Mary Bekebrede, the NICU Fellowship Coordinator, at 314-251-6336. Or, click here to contact the coordinator by e-mail.

 

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