What Is the Salary Like?
According to Salary.com, the average pediatric nurse’s yearly salary ranges from $66,500 to $84,000. Doesn’t sound too bad, right?
Plus, you get to be around children and babies all day long!
So decent pay, opportunities for advancement and specializations, plus your passions for helping young children can all come to fruition as a pediatric nurse.
Common Characteristics of a Pediatric Nurse
Regardless of if you have children of your own or not, taking care of this unique and fragile population can be challenging; not only physically, but mentally, too.
There are some hard things to consider that you may encounter in your role as a pediatric nurse. Do you have the character traits that typically align with those in the pediatric nursing profession?
Patience
- Do you have the patience to deal with a child that is being uncooperative or who is scared?
- Do you have the patience to deal with their parents who are frightened, lashing out, overbearing, or asking an immense number of questions?
Emotional Strength
- How will you handle seeing a child in pain or actively dying?
- Do you have children of your own? And if you do, will you see their faces in your patient who has come into the ER presenting signs of physical abuse; can you control the emotions you may feel in this moment?
Compassion
- Do you have compassion for your patient’s family and the ability to remain calm and collected when there is so much fear and uncertainty in their prognosis?
- Can you calm a child when they are about to undergo a painful procedure or receive a chemotherapy treatment?
Now of course, these are all very dramatic and heavy questions, but these are common scenarios that you may be involved in as the pediatric nurse, and you must be prepared for it.
Personally, as a nurse and a mother of two, I can confidently admit that I could not handle the job.
It truly takes a special person to do the job that pediatric nurse does, and every one of them has my respect.
Nonetheless, if you are thinking of entering pediatric nursing, think long and hard about what specialty you want to work in and truly take the time to consider how you would handle the situations I previously mentioned.