Dean of UCLA School of Nursing Calls Nurse Practitioners the “Critical Link” in Meeting Enormous New Demands for Car

LOS ANGELES--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- One of the nation’s leading voices in patient care and safety said today that the key to successfully navigating the challenges and changes that healthcare reform will bring is the ability to “reimagine and redefine” what nursing is all about.

“The addition of as many as 35 million more people with health insurance will create enormous demands that the current system is simply not prepared to handle,” said Courtney Lyder, dean of the School of Nursing at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). “Today’s shortage of primary care physicians will only be exacerbated unless we look to nurses and nurse practitioners to fill the gaps in providing needed care.”

Presently, nurses make up the largest segment of the healthcare workforce, with more than three million nursing professionals in the United States and as many as 19 million worldwide. Still, Lyder believes that most people are not aware of the many roles that nurses play or of the fact that they are the “heart and soul” of medical institutions across the U.S. and around the world.

“Without too much fanfare, and away from the media spotlight, nurses are redefining and expanding their roles, championing quality of care improvements, spearheading research innovation, advocating for patient rights, and generally challenging the status quo,” said Lyder. “And they have been doing all this while not surrendering their historical role as patient advocate and trusted bedside clinician.”

Still, according to Lyder, nursing’s greatest role may lie ahead.

Even before health reform, the Association of American Medical Colleges predicted a shortage of primary care physicians, estimating that an additional 45,000 would be needed by 2020 to keep up with demand. But fewer and fewer students in medical school are choosing primary care medicine, opting instead for specialties that may bring with them higher income, more prestige and a less-demanding lifestyle.

The professionals most qualified to fill this primary care gap are nurse practitioners. Nurse practitioners are registered nurses who have completed graduate-level education (either a master’s or a doctoral degree) and who are able to deliver some medical care without the direct supervision of a physician. This includes prescribing or renewing prescriptions for most drugs (California is the only state where this can’t be done); ordering blood tests; performing routine medical examinations; monitoring chronic conditions; counseling patients about prevention; and treating colds, sore throats and the flu.

In recent years, many states have expanded the scope of duties that nurse practitioners and physician assistants are allowed to perform. For example, Montana allows nurse practitioners to work without any doctor supervision. By contrast, Texas requires a doctor’s direct (on-site) supervision at least 20 percent of the time. Twenty-eight states are debating further loosening restrictions that prevent nurse practitioners and physician assistants from performing more tasks independently.

“Nurse practitioners not only have the academic credentials, but on average have already worked 10+ years as registered nurses, so they have practical, bedside experience to complement what they’ve learned in the classroom,” said Lyder. “And studies have shown no difference in outcomes when patients are treated by a nurse practitioner or a physician.”

The influx of new insured patients into the system also will have a profound effect on where people receive care. When appropriate, some patients may prefer to receive treatment for minor conditions in a more convenient setting, such as a retail clinic with evening hours, even if it is by someone other than a traditional medical doctor. Again, nurses and nurse practitioners will be called upon to fill this important role. And with a greater national focus on prevention rather than just treatment, Lyder believes nurses offer the best cure for the physician shortage.

The UCLA School of Nursing is redefining nursing through the pursuit of uncompromised excellence in research, education, practice, policy and patient advocacy. Ranked among the top nursing schools in the country by U.S. News and World Report, the school also is ranked number 4 in nursing research funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and number 1 in NIH stimulus funding. In 2009-2010, the school received $18 million in total research grant funding and was awarded 26 faculty research grants. The school offers programs for the undergraduate (BS), postgraduate (MSN and MECN) and doctoral (Ph.D.) student. For more information, please visit the website at nursing.ucla.edu.



CONTACT:

for UCLA School of Nursing
Laura Perry, 310-794-4022
[email protected]

KEYWORDS:   United States  North America  California

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