UC Davis Children’s Hospital Deploys Webcam for Each Neonatal Bed
The program is funded by a grant and allows parents and families to see their babies when they can’t be at the hospital.
The UC Davis Children’s Hospital, located here, has equipped each bed in the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) with a webcam.
The initiative will allow parents and families to see their baby from a computer, tablet or cell phone for when they can’t be at the hospital, according to a press release from UC Davis Health.
The expansion to every bed is the latest addition to the UC Davis FamilyLink program and features a secure web portal and webcam access. Webcams and flexible tripods are mounted on the infant incubators, warmers and cribs in all 49 NICU beds.
“Our families come from all over Northern California, some from very far distances and many are here for a long time,” states UC Davis Neonatologist Kristin Hoffman. “Many have to go back and forth for their job or to care for their other kids, and it’s stressful to have a baby in the NICU.”
Aaron Ridgeway, who lives 90 minutes from the hospital, explains he and his wife use FamilyLink every night to see their son in the NICU.
“It has been indispensable as a means of staying connected to our baby,” he says. “Frankly, we wouldn’t have the same attachment or rapport with his carers without it.”
“It’s nice to be able to talk to the nurse at night and just be able to look in on him and see how he’s doing and say goodnight,” mother Katherine Marlin tells KCRA 3. “It just brings some calm to us that we otherwise wouldn’t have.”
Hospital officials have been working for years to expand the program and were finally able to do so after finding a more affordable product.
“Since we expanded access to our system, it’s been amazing. I’m seeing many more families using the webcams,” Hoffman says. “That’s been so rewarding because we’ve worked really hard to make it available for all families who come to our NICU.”
The program is funded by a grant from Children’s Miracle Network Hospitals.
(This article first appeared on SSI sister publication campussafetymagazine.com.)