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The Impact Of Acnp On Trauma Care Patients

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The Impact of ACNP on Trauma Care Patients
Role of the APN in improving patient outcomes
The rapidly increasing sector of aging population and an implementation of the Affordable Care Act, which extends coverage to an additional 32 million of Americans, would culminate in the dire shortage of medical providers (Moote, Kleinpell, & Todd, 2011, p. 452). Predicted shortage of health care workforce intensifies the interest in and need to understand better NP utilization, productivity, and unique value (Moote, Kleinpell, & Todd, 2011, p. 453). Within the last decade growing shortage of physicians and the restriction on resident duty hours implemented by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) in 2003 presented wide employment opportunities for Acute Care Nurse Practitioners (ACNP) (Moote, Kleinpell, & Todd, 2011, p. 452). As nurse practitioners (NPs) assume an increasing role in providing care to hospitalized patients, evaluation of the quality of care provided by ACNPs is an important determinant of their impact on the patients’ outcomes (Kapu & Kleinpell, 2012, p. 1, Sidani & Doran, 2010, p. 31). While organizational constraints and variations in the scope of practice persist, in order to firmly establish the position of the ACNPs in acute care settings, it is imperative to determine to what extent NPs contribute to the quality, safety, and effectiveness of healthcare (Stanik-Hutt, et al., 2013, p. 492).
Over the years, it became apparent that

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