Jump to content

Maternity nurse/ night nanny available


jadex

Recommended Posts

Hi,

I qualified as a maternity nurse and sleep trainer nearly 4 years ago but for the last 18 months I have been working as a full time nanny. I am looking to go back to maternity nursing again.

I have availability from mid august and will be offering cheaper rates for this to begin with at ?13 per hour to begin with. This can be for 12 or 24 hour periods.

I will be on hand to give you peace of mind knowing you have professional support on hand to guide you through those first few weeks with your baby/babies.

Children over 1 years of age for night nannying is ?12ph.

For more extensive information about how a maternity nurse can help you and the duties I do please do not hesitate to get in contact.


I have been a nanny for over 10 years with a level 3 diploma and I am also DBS checked and first aid trained. I am also am a sleep trainer so do get in touch if you would like a sleep assessment.

Thanks,

Jade

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Latest Discussions

    • Very happy to add my recommendation for Leon, who has now helped me out twice. Prompt, efficient and helpful.
    • Today we are seeing the impact of increased taxes (employers NI) with tje UK unemployment rate rising  https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cdxrp7znkdlo Unfortunately, to increase tax burdens will see the economy stall or a recession, as Angelina says, cutting spending, whilst painful short term, is a good way to bring down government borrowing.  True, we don't want to see cuts to services but there are other areas of government spending that can be reduced and with AI impacting all jobs across all businesses, maybe it will also reduce overall staffing costs. 
    • or cut costs.  The cost of debt is a huge burden, it cannot be increased.
    • Yes, they should clearly have been more honest on taxes before the election and not backed themselves into a corner. After 14 years of mismanagement and decline, they have to invest and at the same time start to bring borrowing down (otherwise they continues to be at the mercy of the bond markets). Continued cuts / degrading of public services is counter productive (a successful economy and society needs good infrastructure, education and health care).  The single biggest thing they could do to immediately improve growth would be to rejoin the single market, but I appreciate that is difficult politically.  So if you can't significantly boost growth short term, can't cut too much further, and need to raise money without borrowing, that only really leaves taxation.    Of course, where best to target those taxes - that's the real question.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...