Elevate your possibilities
The Johns Hopkins Hospital- The Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) is a 49 bed Level IV unit. The unit is a regional referral center for both mothers and babies.
The staff cares for neonates as young as 24 weeks gestation up through full term infants with complex congenital anomalies.
The full range of services for neonates is provided including neonatal care immediately after birth, newborn therapeutic hypothermia, and high frequency oscillatory ventilation.
The unit is also a part of the Maryland Regional Neonatal Transport Team providing efficient ground and air transportation services for this young population.
With passionate and driven leaders' support, our nurses are able to dedicate themselves to patient safety, clinical excellence, and life-long learning.
Take the forward step towards success and come experience the Hopkins Way!
Shift : 12 hour night shift, part-time 30-32 hours per week
What Awaits You :
- Achievable and Progressive Clinical Ladder to encourage career growth and development
- Tuition Reimbursement - Up to $15,000 per year
- Dependent Child Tuition - Payment for up to 50% of child's tuition and eligible mandatory academic fees at an accredited, degree-granting institution
- Annual Bonuses - Optional Opportunity for up to $2,000 every year through acknowledgment of your professional nursing contributions AND an extra bonus for completing activities that benefit your health throughout the year!
Who Should Apply :
- BSN / MSN preferred. Must be from an accredited nursing program.
- Applicants with an Associate’s degree in nursing from an accredited nursing program may be considered; provided they are enrolled in an accredited BSN / MSN program within 1 year of hire and complete the degree within 5 years of hire.
- Active Maryland or Compact RN license is required
- BLS CPR certification required : AHA, Red Cross, or Military Training Network accepted
- RN work experience required
- Ability to role model and support practices consistent with evidenced-based care, guide others with plan of care, independently make clinical decisions in complex situations, and proactively assist others with patient assignment.