The Infusion Registered Nurse (RN) in Ambulatory Care provides safe, compassionate, and high-quality nursing care to patients requiring infusion therapy in an outpatient/ambulatory setting. The RN is responsible for assessment, planning, administering, monitoring, and evaluating infusion treatments while ensuring patient comfort and safety.
Administer intravenous (IV) medications, fluids, blood products, and biologic therapies according to physician orders and protocols.
Assess patient’s clinical condition before, during, and after infusion therapy.
Monitor for infusion reactions, complications, or adverse effects and respond appropriately.
Provide patient education on infusion procedures, medications, side effects, and self-care.
Collaborate with physicians, pharmacists, and interdisciplinary team members for optimal patient outcomes.
Maintain accurate documentation of patient assessments, interventions, and responses.
Ensure adherence to infection control, safety standards, and regulatory guidelines.
Manage infusion equipment, troubleshoot IV access devices (PICC, Port, Peripheral IV, Midline).
Support ambulatory care workflows, including scheduling, patient follow-up, and continuity of care.
Participate in quality improvement and patient safety initiatives.
Valid Registered Nurse (RN) license (State-specific).
BSN preferred, ADN accepted with relevant experience.
2+ years of nursing experience, preferably in infusion, oncology, ambulatory care, or critical care.
Certification in Infusion Nursing (CRNI) or Oncology Nursing (ONS/ONCC) preferred.
Current BLS and ACLS certifications.
Strong IV therapy and vascular access skills.
Excellent patient assessment and clinical judgment.
Ability to manage infusion reactions and medical emergencies.
Strong communication and patient education skills.
EMR documentation proficiency.
Compassionate, patient-centered approach.
Ambulatory/outpatient infusion center.
Regular day shifts; may include weekends or extended hours depending on patient needs.
Direct interaction with patients, families, and care teams.