Professional Practice Paper The advance practice nurse that I chose to interview is Ms. Tonya King BA, MSW, MHA, and MSN-FNP. Tonya is employed with Kindred Hospice University/ Mental Health Facility. The University Behavioral Center (UCB) has been around since 1989, providing high-quality mental health and substance abuse treatment. The behavioral center provides many program options for children, adolescents, and adults. The main goal of this organization is to enable individuals to enable individuals to improve their quality of life in a safe and comfortable environment. The hospital has two separate wings, the children/ adolescent’s wing and the adult wing. The subdivided wings are adequately secured. This facility provides …show more content…
By delivering palliative care by hospice professionals, our patients can spend their remaining days in comfort and peace. Kindred at Home, a division of Kindred Healthcare Incorporated is the nation’s leading provider of comprehensive home health, hospice, and non medical home care services. Kindred at Home delivers compassionate, high-quality care to patients and clients in their homes or places of residence, including nonmedical personal assistance, skilled nursing and rehabilitation and hospice and palliative care and emotional support to our patients and their families. There are many rules and regulations governing each state concerning the scope of practice. Independent prescribing is prohibited; Florida Nurse Practitioners may not prescribe controlled substance. This is a disservice since these providers have gone to school and have had the proper education to practice and provide care as well as prescribe medication to patients. As a registered nurse and as a nurse practitioner you have taken pharmacology and studied medication, their class, action, mechanism, and side effects, as well as passing boards. This encompasses all the things needed to become an advance practice nurse, service, provide treatment and prescribe medication. This is an ongoing issue and nurse practitioners are
For this assignment I was able to interview Regina Bowman RN, BSN. Her current position is that of the Director of Medical Surgical Nursing. Her position places her over top of seven nursing units between two facilities. Regina graduated from the Mercer Medical School of Nursing in 1979 with her diploma in nursing. The Mercer medical school of nursing is still in operation although it has been renamed the Capital Health School of Nursing. Her return to school started after graduation. She enrolled at Mercer County Community College to obtain her Associates. Secondly she attended La Salle University and received her Bachelor’s in Nursing in 2003. Lastly she is currently enrolled at the Thomas Edison State University, and has a
In the United States, health care accessibility, quality, and affordability continue to be ongoing topics of discussion that effect many Americans on a regular basis. The need for affordable, quality healthcare continues to grow, not only due to a growing elderly population, but also as a result of the Affordable Care Act which has allowed millions of previously uninsured Americans access to health insurance and therefor better access to healthcare services (Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, 2010). According to the Institute of Medicine (IOM) the projected demand increased for healthcare have led to a call for expansion of primary care services by policy makers (Institute of Medicine, 2010; National Governors Association, 2012). Since Advanced Practice Nurses or Nurse Practitioners (APNs or NPs will be used interchangeably for the purpose of this paper) are one of the fastest growing groups of healthcare providers, and continue to practice and provide care in a range of settings including primary care, it is important to investigate and address any potential barriers to practice. This author believes that allowing APNs to write prescriptions for commonly used controlled substances will help improve timeliness and flexibility in health care delivery; studies have shown that there is a positive impact on high
Prior to her current role, she worked as an Assistant Director of Nursing for over 5 years at Sun Air Convalescent Hospital and a Sub-Acute coordinator for 1 year. She has been working now at Berkley Valley Convalescent Hospital as Director of Nursing for over 20
For nurses extending their role to include prescribing there is much to consider. Revelay (1999) states that, accountability involves an individual giving an account of their actions with the rationale and explanation given for these actions. The decisions regarding boundaries of practice are firmly placed in the hands of the individual practitioner (Carlisle 1992). Accountability means being able to justify any actions and accepting responsibility for them, and is an integral part of nursing practice (Rowe 2000) The NMC Code of Professional Conduct (2004) states that a nurse is personally accountable for her practice, has a duty of care to patients and must work within the laws of the country.
For this assignment, I had the opportunity to interview Samantha Hage De Reyes, family nurse practitioner, currently working at the University of California, Riverside (UCR) Health Center in Riverside, CA. Family nurse practitioners are described as health professionals with analytic skills for evaluating and providing evidence-based, patient-centered care across settings, and advanced knowledge of the health care delivery system (Hamric, Hanson, Tracy & O’Grady, 2014). My objective was to ask a series of questions pertaining to the role of a family nurse practitioner, challenges concerning this nursing role, opinions regarding the future of family nurse practitioners, and more. This interview was conducted over the phone, and it was a valuable opportunity to learn more about what it means to be a family nurse practitioner and to start thinking about what I want to achieve in my own
First, the state licensure regulates NP practice and it has been a big issue since NPs are not able to practice to the fullest extent despite of their education and training. NPs practice is regulated by state licensure and only about one-third of the nation has adopted full practice authority licensure and practice laws for NPs (Hain & Fleck, 2014). The American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) reports that, under a full practice authority model, NPs are still required to meet
State law is made up of two different forms: statues and regulations (Buppert, 2015). Under the established rules and regulations, an ARNP can: (a) monitor and alter drug therapies; (b) initiate therapies for certain diagnosis’; (c) perform additional functions as may be determined by rule; (d) and order diagnostic tests and appropriate therapies (The Florida Legislature, 2016). A practitioner licensed under chapters 458, 459 or 466, must maintain supervision for directing certain course and medical treatment (The Florida Legislature, 2016). Within the context of advanced nursing practice and the Florida Statues chapter 464.003(2), an ARNP may diagnosis, treat, alter medication regimes, diagnose, prescribe and operate, which are approved by a joint committee composed of three members appointed by the Board of Nursing, three members appointed by the Board of Medicine and the State Surgeon General or his/her designee (The Florida Legislature, 2016). On the other hand, the federal government regulates nurse practitioner practice through statutes passed by Congress and regulations (Buppert, 2015). According to Buppert (2015), federal law can override state law, and when federal and state law conflict with one another, federal law usually triumphs. Due to these state and federal statutes and regulations, this can impose a huge threat and impact to NP practice since the BON and the Nurse Practice Act usually help
Kindred hospital philosophy focuses on quality and customer service. There are several divisions in Kindred; the Nursing Center Division consists of about 90 nursing and rehabilitation centers and assisted living facilities. These nursing centers provide medical services to treat the residents who live within an area and the patients who come to the facilities for short-term and rehabilitative care. Kindred hospital has variety of medical services at different levels of intensity including intensive care unit, transitional hospital care, short-term rehabilitation, skilled nursing, home health, hospice care, post-acute and sub-acute care. Kindred offer strong relationships with acute-care hospitals;
Since the inception of the Nurse Practitioner (NP) role in the 1960s, NPs have thrived in the delivery of primary healthcare and nurse case management. Despite patient satisfaction with NPs ' style of care, nurses have been critical of NPs, while physicians have been threatened by NP encroachment on MD practice. Balancing assessment, diagnosis, and treatment with caring defines NPs ' success as primary care providers. Understand the role and Scope of Practice of NPs is sometimes difficult for some to understand. The purpose of this paper is to define the role and history of NP, compare and contrast licensure versus certifications, understand NP Scope Of Practice and Standards of Care, discuss how the State Practice Acts regulate FNP practice, discuss credentialing and privileging, and differentiate between legislative and regulatory processes.
As resistant as some states’ legislative and regulatory bodies are to grant APNs autonomy of practice, the damage being done by over-regulation is clear (Safriet, 1992). Physicians are forced into a position to either supervise the APN’s practice or be constantly consulted for approval of their practice decisions. Safriet (1992) described that in and of itself, this constant supervision may appear to patients that the APN is not competent to provide adequate or care equivalent to that of a physician. If the role of the APN is to bridge gaps in health care by relieving the medical establishment of some of the patient load by performing the same function as a physician in a primary care setting, it seems wholly unnecessary to restrain their scope of practice in those areas. This type of restrictions affect cost and patient care accessibility (Safriet, 1992). This was a problem stated in the article, however 25 years later, populations of patients remain unseen or cared for and APNs continue to be underutilized (Safriet, 1992). Rigolosi and Salmond (2014) cite the American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) when they state that not utilizing nurse practitioners due to practice restrictions costs $9 billion annually in the US (p. 649).
In order to meet the growing demand for primary care, nurse practitioners need prescriptive authority to provide quality, safe, and cost-effective healthcare to patients. The development of nurse practitioners, plus physician shortages in primary care, leads to an increasing need for nurse practitioners and access to health care. However, nurse practitioners currently face prescription regulations for controlled substances, which limits their scope of practice. The regulation of nurse practitioners prescribing controlled substances diminishes comprehensive health care services by increasing the wait time for patients and liability claims for physicians. The number of nurse
1. Briefly explain how the CIPD HR Profession Map defines the HR profession, including the professional areas, the bands and the behaviours.
The state that one would like to work in is Illinois. In Illinois it is required to have a collaborating physician to be able to prescribe medications. There are a few regulations and licensures that need to be acquired prior to being able to prescribe medications Illinois Department of Financial and professional regulation is who a NP would need to be registered through to be able to prescribe
The thought of professionalism conjures up many ideas, and possibly pre-conceived judgements. These will not always be classed as positive or negative, but will undoubtedly have a profound effect on the way you are perceived in your area of work or chosen profession.
I agree that nurse prescribing is safe and has many positives. A study by Funnell, Minns, and Reeves (2014) compared doctors and nurses prescribing practices. It showed that nurses were less likely to prescribe medications for off label uses because they determined this to be a risk and they did not want to take risks with their patients' health. The study found that prescribing by nurse practitioners was "more practical and patient centered" and more holistic, while the doctors had a more physiological view (Funnell, Minns & Reeves, 2014). Both doctors and patients were satisfied with the prescriptions that nurse practitioners were writing, even though the nurses were coming to conclusions about prescribing medications differently than the