Nursing/Patient Care | Clinical Practice Areas
Nurses of all levels have the opportunity to specialize and advance their careers in many different clinical practice areas at Boston Children's.
Please explore Boston Children's Hospital inpatient, outpatient and procedural areas throughout our Community of Care locations. Visit our Centers and Services to learn more about each care area.
Inpatient care areas
Boston Children's has 400+ inpatient beds across the following clinical practice areas.
Cardiac Intensive Care Unit (CICU)The CICU cares for children with some of the most complex heart conditions in the world. We treat children with non-surgical conditions, such as heart failure, single ventricle defects, and hypoplastic left heart syndrome, as well as children with heart disease undergoing non-cardiac surgery. We also treat older patients and adults who have developed complications or who need further procedures as a result of long-standing or previously treated congenital heart disease. We are one of the largest and most sophisticated pediatric CICUs in the country.
Our Heart Center consists of nurses, cardiologists and other specialists dedicated to providing a full spectrum of cardiac services for children — and some adults — with congenital heart disease and other rare cardiac conditions. Drawing from a global talent pool, the Heart Center has grown to become the largest pediatric cardiology center in the United States.
General Pediatrics/Medicine seeks to enhance the lives of children and families locally, nationally and internationally through clinical care, teaching, research and community service. We do this by providing a full range of state-of-the-art inpatient clinical services for children and their families to optimize health and well-being.
The Department of Pediatric Surgery provides general and specialized surgical services to infants, children and adolescents with a wide range of congenital and acquired conditions, including hernias, hydroceles and undescended testes as well as cysts and tumors of the head and neck.
Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center offers the combined expertise of both a world-class cancer center and an internationally renowned children’s hospital. We work together to offer seamless, integrated care for children with all types of cancer and blood disorders, including the rarest and most complex cases. Through our joint partnership, Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s offers more specialists, treatment options and clinical trials than almost any other pediatric center treating cancer and blood disorders in the world.
The IPS is a secure, inpatient psychiatric unit licensed by the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health. We treat children and adolescents ages 8 to 17 and specialize in the treatment of youth with physical illnesses who also have emotional or behavioral difficulties.
The ICP is an inpatient unit dedicated to the care of children who require more intensive nursing care than what the general inpatient floors can provide.
The MICU provides care to critically ill children with conditions that require close and constant monitoring, including respiratory failure, serious infections, nutritional failure, congenital anomalies and life-threatening complications of metabolic diseases and endocrine disorders. In the MICU, our clinicians have developed specific expertise in caring for children with acute and chronic respiratory diseases.
The MSICU provides care for children and young adults following general surgery, transplantation, neurosurgery, craniofacial reconstruction, orthopedic surgery and trauma. Our MSICU has one of the highest volume pediatric intensive care units in the United States and is one of the largest extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) centers.
The NICU treats critically ill infants requiring complex medical and surgical care. We work closely with the Advanced Fetal Care Center to coordinate both prenatal consultation and postnatal intensive care for infants with a wide range of prenatally diagnosed conditions. Infants admitted to the NICU are frequently referred from community hospitals because they require advanced medical or surgical therapies not available where they were born.
As the world’s largest, oldest and most experienced neurology and neurosurgery centers, our team treats more nervous system conditions than any other pediatric program in the world. We provide expert clinical care for children with neurologic conditions and offer a breadth and depth of subspecialty care to deliver the most accurate diagnoses and advanced treatments available.
The Orthopedic Center is committed to providing comprehensive and compassionate care for pediatric, adolescent and young adult patients, and is honored to be recognized as the #1 Orthopedic Center by U.S. News and World Report. It is one of the world's largest and most experienced pediatric orthopedic centers.
The Pediatric Transplant Center offers specialized, uniquely collaborative programs dedicated to heart, lung, heart-lung, liver, kidney, intestine and multivisceral transplants. The team is at the forefront of clinical advances and research.
Outpatient care areas
Our nurses have the opportunity to provide direct patient care in more than 214 specialties and outpatient settings.
Ambulatory Care AreasAnesthesiology
Autism Spectrum Center
Boston Children's Primary Care at Longwood
Cardiology
Center for Nutrition
Critical Care Medicine
Dentistry
Developmental Medicine
Endocrinology
General Pediatrics
General Surgery
Genetics
Hematology/Oncology
International Health Services
Lab Medicine
Nephrology
Neurology/Neurosurgery
Ophthalmology
Orthopedics
Otolaryngology
Pain Medicine
Pathology
Patient Access
Pediatric Transplant Center
Physical and Occupational Therapy
Plastic and Oral Surgery
Practice Liaison Program
Psychiatry
Pulmonary
Sports Medicine
Urology
- Operating Room
- Post-Anesthesia Care Unit (PACU)
- Preoperative Clinic
ICU nurse staffing ratios
MGL c. 111, sec. 231 was signed into law by Governor Deval Patrick on June 30, 2014. The law establishes patient assignment limits for registered nurses in intensive care units (ICUs) in acute hospitals licensed by the Massachusetts Department of Public Health and in hospitals operated by the Commonwealth. The law provides in part that “in all intensive care units the patient assignment for the registered nurse shall be 1:1 or 1:2 depending on the stability of the patient."
Please click below for the staffing ratios in each of our intensive care units (ICUs) at Boston Children’s Hospital.