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On this page
- What you can expect from our staff
- Our parents as partners
- Key telephone numbers
- Nursing handover times
- Medical ward rounds
- The nurseries
- Infection prevention
- Visitors
- Quiet time
- Unit facilities
- Confidentiality
- Safeguarding children
- Consent
- Car parking
- Safety and security
- Smoking
- Family integrated care
- Developmental care
- Kangaroo care
- Physiotherapy
- Feeding your baby
- Speech and language therapist (SALT)
- Ophthalmology
- The neonatal transfer service
- Preparation for home
- The neonatal outreach team
- Financial support
- Charities and other support available
- Counselling service
- Spiritual wellbeing
- vCreate
- Feedback and complaints
- The local area
- Frequently asked questions
- Appendix
- Words you may hear on the unit
Welcome to the Special Care Baby Unit at the Princess Royal Hospital
Congratulations on the birth of your baby!
We provide specialist care for babies who have been born prematurely or term but are unwell at birth. Our SCBU has all the necessary facilities and staffing to deliver high quality and up-to-date neonatal care to newborn babies and supportive care to babies and parents during the stages of recovery and growth. Your baby is here because they need extra medical and nursing care.
Along with our neonatal intensive care (NICU) sister unit in Brighton (Trevor Mann Baby Unit) we are continually involved in local, national and international research projects. As a result of many parents consenting to their babies’ taking part in such research, we have been able to constantly improve neonatal care. If your baby is a suitable candidate for one of the research projects we are involved in, a member of the research team will discuss the option of participation. It is completely voluntary, but we will give you all the information so that you are able to make an informed decision.
We are also under one NHS Trust with Worthing and Chichester, although these neonatal units run separately to TMBU and SCBU.
This welcome booklet will provide you with an overview of our neonatal unit and the care we provide. We hope you will use it as a reference guide throughout your neonatal journey, alongside the unit app and staff support.
What you can expect from our staff
• We are here to help and support you as a family, keeping you updated on the progress of your baby.
• We will be honest and open, including you as partners in your baby’s care.
• Our aim is for you to be confident and skilled in caring for your baby while on the neonatal unit.
Our parents as partners
• We work collaboratively with you in the care of your baby. This means being as present as possible to care for your baby, attending ward round discussions and having skin-to-skin with your baby when appropriate.
• When you feel ready and able to, you can follow and complete the ‘Steps to Home’ booklet during your neonatal journey in preparation for discharge home. You can start this from admission and it should help you be more involved in your baby’s care.
• We request that you bring in supplies for your baby such as nappies, nappy bags, cotton wool, and cotton buds.
• Please follow our unit guidelines and policies throughout your stay, such as visiting and infection prevention measures (you will find more information about this in this welcome guide).
Key telephone numbers
Main hospital switchboard
Princess Royal Special Care Baby Unit
Trevor Mann Baby Unit reception
Outpatient appointments
01273 696955
Ext. 64195 / 64188
Nursing handover times
Medical ward rounds
The nurseries
Infection prevention
Visitors
Quiet time
Unit facilities
Confidentiality
Safeguarding children
Consent
Car parking
Safety and security
Smoking
Family integrated care
Developmental care
Kangaroo care
Physiotherapy
Feeding your baby
Speech and language therapist (SALT)
Ophthalmology
The neonatal transfer service
Preparation for home
The neonatal outreach team
Financial support
Charities and other support available
Counselling service
Spiritual wellbeing
vCreate
Feedback and complaints
The local area
Frequently asked questions
Appendix
• Weight Conversion Chart
• WHO Hand Washing Technique
• Words You May Hear on the Unit


Words you may hear on the unit
Compiled by Elizabeth Hart, Eleanor Turk and Hannah Fraser-James.
This leaflet is intended for patients receiving care in Brighton and Hove or Haywards Heath.
The information in this leaflet is for guidance purposes only and is in no way intended to replace professional clinical advice by a qualified practitioner.