A reflective writing project
This writing project is being coordinated by Dr. Katie Gallagher (University College, London (UCL)), Breidge Boyle (Co-Editor; Journal of Neonatal Nursing), Alex Mancini (Chelsea and Westminster NHS Trust, London) and Julia Petty (COINN and UK Neonatal Nurses Association Board member).
We welcome the contributions of neonatal nurses around the world, who have reflected on the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on neonatal care, babies, families and staff.
The reflections are hosted here and will also be published in the Council of International Neonatal Nurses News Pages in the Journal of Neonatal Nursing. These are open access articles and can be accessed with the link below.
For contributions to this series of reflections of neonatal nursing in the covid-19 global pandemic, please email your videos or reflections to either:
Breidge Boyle (JNN Editor) [email protected],
Katie Gallagher (UCL IfWH) [email protected],
Alex Mancini (Chelsea & Westminster NHS FT) [email protected]
or Julia Petty (UK NNA) [email protected]
Our thoughts go out to all the neonatal nurses and allied health professionals around the world, and the families that we work with at these challenging times.
Your Stories
Barbara HowardThe University of Sheffield, UK
COVID-19 has certainly been a force for change in neonatal academia. Like a typhoon it has spun through our relatively ordered world, thrown everything in the air and left students and academics trying to guess where things will settle when this is all over.
Brittany Kyle Neonatal Intensive Care Unit, IU Health Ball Memorial Hospital, USA
Written in March 2020: I am a NICU nurse and, as such, I am not on the front lines of this pandemic (yet). There is a lot of acknowledgement for healthcare workers, especially nurses, and I feel guilty for not being on the front lines.
Dr Leticia Bazo-Hernández Rovira, Virgili University, Spain
Fortunately, natural selection, different immunological characteristics, among other assumptions, Sars-Cov-2 affects very few children, and those affected, seem only to be so in a slight way. There have been cases of neonates born to a mother with Covid-19.
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