May 2018 Moms

NICU Question

I have never had a baby in the NICU, so I thought I would ask because I know a few of you have mentioned your babies had to be in the NICU.  

Do you typically just hang out at the NICU all day every day or you can only be there during certain times?

Are you allowed to hold or touch your baby very often or does that depend on their individual condition?

I know absolutely nothing about the NICU, so any info you could provide would be awesome!

Re: NICU Question

  • It definitely is an individual basis on touching, but I think they would encourage it with all the added benefits touch does.

    We could go at any time we wanted.  They restrict 2 people per baby where we were, but I could stay as long as I wanted and whenever I wanted. We were able to nurse in the NICU so I would nurse every 3 hours or shorter if he needed it and then go back to my room to pump (because they told me I should....I don't think that was wise, but I get it if the baby isn't in the room to help stimulate it but it ended up giving me an oversupply).  

    You can also take a tour of your hospital and they will answer any questions they can for you.

    We're here for you @sparklingdiamond <3
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  • I haven't had direct experience, but every NICU nurse I've met has been an absolutely amazing person, and everyone I personally know who has had a NICU baby has said the same thing.  Really special people.
    November Siggy Challenge
      
  • J was jaundiced and he had to be in the nicu under the lights for a couple days. They had us come in to feed him every three hours, but we couldn't really hold him outside of that because he needed the UV lights, and I was too frazzled to stay in there outside of that.
    @cups4  They had me pumping as well to boost my supply which also ended up with me having a horrible oversupply that took months to get under control. They also kept pushing me to supplement with formula (not a baby friendly hospital) and told me that J was too big for me to keep up with. (8lbs8oz) A better method would have been nursing every two hours and having him roomed in with us with the UV blanket. Because the hospital convinced DH that I wasn't producing enough we developed a stupid routine of me nursing for twenty minutes (10 on each side) then I would pump while DH gave J a bottle of pumped milk, and the he would follow up with formula, but we never made him finish the serving. I can not believe how much we were over feeding him, and I'm still livid with how out of date their information about breastfeeding practices were. (The care we received and the out of date information in the NICU is a HUGE part of why we are using a birthing center this time around)
  • Oh one thing I would be prepared for that I absolutely wasn't is that babies who's mothers where drug addicts stay in the nicu and their cries are the most heartbreaking. There was one such baby in the room where they had J and he cried the entire time he was awake. The nurses held him as often as possible and sang to him etc., but it was still heartbreaking.
  • ivyvines6 said:
    Oh one thing I would be prepared for that I absolutely wasn't is that babies who's mothers where drug addicts stay in the nicu and their cries are the most heartbreaking. There was one such baby in the room where they had J and he cried the entire time he was awake. The nurses held him as often as possible and sang to him etc., but it was still heartbreaking.
    Yes, I forgot about this. And some babies have no one visiting them because they can't due to work or other kids or because moms have the baby and then skip out. It's heartbreaking. 
    I actually asked one of our nurses if we were coming in enough and she laughed. Then she told me about some of the babies with no one and how lucky our twins were to have parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles fighting over visiting.
  • ivyvines6 said:
    Oh one thing I would be prepared for that I absolutely wasn't is that babies who's mothers where drug addicts stay in the nicu and their cries are the most heartbreaking. There was one such baby in the room where they had J and he cried the entire time he was awake. The nurses held him as often as possible and sang to him etc., but it was still heartbreaking.
    Yes, I forgot about this. And some babies have no one visiting them because they can't due to work or other kids or because moms have the baby and then skip out. It's heartbreaking. 
    I actually asked one of our nurses if we were coming in enough and she laughed. Then she told me about some of the babies with no one and how lucky our twins were to have parents, grandparents, aunts and uncles fighting over visiting.
    The nurses really do try to do as much as they possibly can to cuddle and make up for it, so I definitely have mad respect for them. I couldn't do their job, I would come home crying every single day. Crying for the babies who aren't being held, crying for the babies who don't make it, and crying for the babies who finally get to go home with their parents. (I swear I don't cry a lot, but you'd never know with the way I'm posting lately)
  • Oh definitely. In our main room, all of the babies were well loved by family and friends. There was one born via surrogate who had a minor issue, but needed to be monitor. The mom was such a B that I felt bad for the husband, baby, and surrogate. The husband would check on the surrogate and try to give her updates and she would say "that's great, but we won't need to worry about her anymore". I couldn't believe it.
    Then the wife would sit on her phone while the husband would feed, change and love on their baby. 
    That was hard enough to watch. I would have been a wreck if there had been an abandoned baby by us. And I probably would have gotten yelled at for holding it. 
  • ivyvines6 said:
    Oh one thing I would be prepared for that I absolutely wasn't is that babies who's mothers where drug addicts stay in the nicu and their cries are the most heartbreaking. There was one such baby in the room where they had J and he cried the entire time he was awake. The nurses held him as often as possible and sang to him etc., but it was still heartbreaking.
    How sad :frowning:
  • I'm a NICU nurse, please feel free to ask me any questions i
  • I wrote a ridiculously long post, and I think the first 12 words posted.  @sparklingdiamond if you'd like, I'm happy to write you a message about what happens immediately at delivery and once baby gets to the NICU with CDH.

    I'm sad my whole post got lost, I found it informative!
  • My daughter was in the nicu for 3 days and it ended up being mostly precautionary. In our case, I want allowed near her for the first 24 hours. My experience was similar to what @cups4 said. In our case, they said that DD had to have formula. It was annoying and breastfeeding was tough time get the hang of, but we did after a couple of weeks.

    Also, we got a bunch of blankets and hats and stuff because people knit them and donate. That was nice. 
  • @rumbletumble that would be great thank you!
  • edited November 2017
    @rumbletumble - NICU nurse as well  :)
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