Closing the Distance: Making Bedside Cameras Standard in the NICU


Closing the Distance: Making Bedside Cameras Standard in the NICU

Closing the Distance: Making Bedside Cameras Standard in the NICU
Jaylee Hilliard

By Jaylee Hilliard, MSN, RN, NEA-BC, CPXP, Vice President of Clinical Strategy, AngelEye Health.

In many neonatal intensive care units (NICUs), bedside cameras are still treated like an optional amenity. That framing no longer aligns with the reality of modern neonatal care or with what families experience during prolonged separation.

In one study, only 22% of parents with bedside camera access described separation from their infant as extremely stressful, compared to 63% of parents without access. The question is no longer whether families value virtual visibility, but why access remains inconsistent across units and health systems.

For many families, separation from their child is an unavoidable part of the NICU experience—not from lack of desire, but because medical acuity, postpartum recovery, distance, work, and caregiving responsibilities make around-the-clock presence nearly impossible. Even in units with open visitation, most units are not structured with private rooms or accommodations that allow families to remain at the bedside overnight. Parents must balance learning their infant’s care plan, participating in bedside rounds, and preparing for discharge during the limited hours they can be there.

When access to the bedside becomes inconsistent, stress rises. The NICU experience is emotionally intense for many families, and prolonged separation often intensifies that strain. Beyond physical distance, uncertainty between clinical updates or overnight when parents cannot be present can compound anxiety and make an already difficult experience feel overwhelming.

Visual access is not a substitute for bedside participation, but it can reduce uncertainty during unavoidable separation. When hospitals treat bedside cameras as essential infrastructure, they acknowledge how NICU stress truly manifests and can address it with tools that protect privacy, support clinicians, and integrate seamlessly into care delivery.

Visual Access as a Component of Family Integrated Care
Family integrated care has long shown that meaningful parent participation in care and decision-making supports better outcomes for both infants and parents. Bedside cameras do not replace hands-on caregiving, skin-to-skin time, or bedside teaching. Rather, they serve a complementary function: maintaining connection when physical presence is not possible.

Studies have linked real-time video access to improved parental well-being, a stronger sense of involvement, and greater trust in the care team. That connection matters clinically as distress can affect how families process information, stay engaged over long hospitalizations, and build confidence for discharge.

The question, then, is not whether cameras offer value, but whether they’re implemented well and equitably.

Operational Integration: Designing Cameras That Support Families and Care Teams

When bedside cameras are deployed with clear privacy standards and defined workflows, they stop functioning as isolated tools and begin operating within the care model itself. In practice, families use visual access during the hours they cannot be physically present and when bedside participation isn’t feasible. Overnight, during recovery, or while balancing work and other responsibilities, cameras extend connection beyond hospital walls in a structured way when other real-world constraints prevent physical presence.

For care teams, the difference is operational. Despite concerns of adding another technology to manage or another tool to navigate, when implemented with clear governance, cameras can support continuity without adding burden. Cameras Support communication consistency across shifts, reduce information gaps between updates, and align with broader efforts to make family-integrated care reliable rather than dependent on individual practice styles. The real distinction is not whether a unit simply has cameras, but whether that visual access is intentionally designed into the clinical environment.

Without defined expectations, visual access can feel informal and unpredictable. With governance structures such as one-way video, pausing during hands-on care, and consistent communication norms, expectations become standardized. Families understand what they will see, when it may pause, and how to escalate questions appropriately. This clarifies boundaries for both clinical staff and parents.

What Standardized, Scalable NICU Camera Programs Get Right
Inconsistent enrollment and informal workflows can unintentionally create access gaps. When visual access depends solely on staff reminders, language availability, or passive opt-in processes, some families receive full support while others are left navigating the system on their own. Standardization prevents that variability. A standard-of-care approach is not “install cameras and hope for the best;” it’s a deliberately designed, burden-light program with clear operating norms:

  • One-way team-to-family micro-updates (photo/video/text) that are brief, consistent, and easy to standardize across shifts.
  • Proactive enrollment at admission, integrated with existing workflows (not passive opt-in) and supported by plain-language, translated instructions.
  • Privacy-protective operations by default, including pausing during hands-on care and no audio.
  • Language access built into the platform rather than added later.
  • Ongoing monitoring of activation and use by language, insurance, and distance, with targeted support when gaps appear.

Designing and operationalizing NICU camera programs is practical and cross-functional, requiring coordination among clinical leadership, patient experience, IT/security, and NICU operations to support safety, trust, communication, workforce experience, and equity.

Moving the Frame From “Amenity” to Expected Care
NICUs standardize practices to reduce harm and improve outcomes. NICUs standardize practices to reduce harm and improve outcomes. Over time, interventions such as standardized handoffs, barcode-based safety checks, and structured discharge-readiness workflows have shifted from “nice to have” to expected care. Bedside cameras—implemented with privacy safeguards and equitable access—fit that same evolution.

Bedside cameras, when implemented with strong privacy safeguards and equitable access, align with that same purpose. They support connection during unavoidable separation, reinforce trust, reduce unnecessary communication strain, and help extend family participation beyond visiting hours.

Treating visual access as a dependable component of care, rather than a discretionary add-on, requires planning and governance, not improvisation. Clear expectations for families, consistent staff workflows, privacy-first controls, and active monitoring for equitable access are what distinguish a technology feature from care infrastructure.

In NICU care, “must-have” capabilities are those that standardize safety and reduce variation over time and across staff. With privacy-first governance and workflow integration, bedside cameras meet that bar—shifting from an optional feature to dependable infrastructure.

The real question is not whether cameras feel family-centered, but whether they function like other NICU-critical systems: standardized, governed, equitable, and reliable across every shift.

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