12/10/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 12/10/2024 13:59
WASHINGTON - Children's National Health System's 54-bed, level IV tertiary care neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) attends to the complex care needs of more than 900 fragile newborns who are admitted per year. NICU Nurse Manager Maureen Maurano, B.S.N., R.N., "is a visionary nurse leader who plans, develops, implements and sustains change" as the NICU's nurse manager, colleague Tara Floyd, M.P.H., B.S.N., R.N., NE-BC, writes in an essay published in the January 2018 issue of Nursing Management.
"Maureen keeps the large, multifaceted NICU team working together smoothly to ensure the best care experience possible for our critically ill patients," Floyd writes. "The complexity of the patients under the care of her team can't be overstated: Some are born weighing less than 1 pound and spend many consecutive months in the NICU. … Especially from a neurodevelopmental perspective, expert nursing care in the earliest days of life impacts a child in positive ways throughout their lifespan. Care must be taken to ensure that staff members work well together at all times and maintain best practice, especially in a field as fast-moving as NICU nursing."
Children's NICU was ranked the nation's No. 1 for babiesout of more than 1,500 NICUs reviewed by U.S. News & World Report in 2017. In October 2017, Maurano was honored with the 2017 Richard Hader Visionary Leader Awardbased on Floyd's essay.
"Maureen and the nursing team partner with neonatology and others to provide clinically expert and compassionate care to our patients and their families. She is responsible for operations, clinical practice, regulatory readiness, family and staff satisfaction and ongoing quality-improvement efforts," says Billie Lou Short, M.D., chief of the Division of Neonatology. "It is an ambitious portfolio but in the many years we have worked closely together, Maureen always has demonstrated the utmost skill. She challenges herself to do more every day, and she inspires all of the NICU staff to achieve their very best."
Linda Talley, M.S., B.S.N., R.N., NE-BC, Vice President of nursing and Chief Nursing Officer, adds that the innovative approaches that Maurano introduced in the NICU now have taken root throughout Children's National.
"As just one example, after the medication bar coding project began other areas reached out to find solutions for using the technology while not disturbing their smallest sleeping patients whose ID bands were often wrapped in a blanket or swaddled at the time of medication administration. Now, those areas are using the same identification band extenders that Maureen initially helped bring to the NICU," Talley says.
Among her accomplishments, Maurano has:
Media contact: Diedtra Henderson| 443-610-9826| 202-476-4500