and structures involved are the Pennsylvania Board of Nursing, the Pennsylvania state government, insurance companies, and any healthcare organization that employ nurse practitioners. The ultimate decision maker is the state senate of Pennsylvania. As stated above, currently the bill has not been passed for nurse practitioners to practice independently in the state of PA for reasons as mentioned above. The bill is to be reintroduced in the near future, according to senator Pat Vance (8 on your
variety of problems. You have to have good skills, knowledge, characteristics and training to become a Nurse Practitioner. Nurses can work in different places such as offices, health care centers, hospitals and several other. It is most likely for licensed nurses to work in hospitals. (Frederickson 94) They can work independently or as a joint team with other Doctors or Nurses. Nurse Practitioners earn a very high salary and earn many benefits. (Maurer 2) Nursing is a job that demands hard work and several
the presence of hospitals offering them more up-to-date technology, better hours, and more resources available to them. Underserved (rural) areas tend to have fewer resources for professional support due to lack of budget and location. Rural practitioners tend to serve a larger number of patients, which means longer hours and less one-on-one time with patients. Also, most physicians serving in the rural areas report longer hours of work, more call and less quality time away. “From a professional
intervention a nurse organizes is based off of theory, and revolves directly around the patient. The current practice used as a Registered Nurse in the emergency room setting is similar, but less complicated than that of an Advanced Practice Nurse Practitioner. Emergency room nurses firstly ask the patient what their chief complaint is upon arrival. The chief complaint labels the patient, and gives them a triage level based on the amount of resources needed to intervene. The chief complaint (or
amount of schooling and how much debt I’d be in, I thought it through and figured out I want to be a nurse practitioner. They have similar duties to a registered nurse except they give advanced services to patients, and it can be cheaper going to medical school as well as having to go for a shorter amount of time than a regular doctor as well as great benefits and salary. Nurse practitioners serve mainly as specialty care providers, giving advanced nursing services to patients. They evaluate patients
Human Services is a profession that continues to grow and develop. It is a very broad profession but the Human Services workers main goal is to help many people overcome problems socially, emotionally, mentally, physically, and academically. The Human Services profession helps individuals meet their unique needs in order to better shape the client and their environment. Human Services workers help people secure the right fundamentals to survive in unstable circumstances. Despite the issues Human
amplified over the duration of a career this can result in a several million dollar income gap between physicians (Phillips et al., 2009). Mid-level practitioners exhibit a similar income gap. In 2013 the average salary of a nurse practitioner and physician assistant was $98,817 and $107,268 (Wolfgang, 2014). Physician assistants and nurse practitioners in the fields of dermatology, oncology, emergency medicine, and surgery exhibited a mean salary exceeding $130,000 in 2013 (Wolfgang, 2014). These
Discussion Currently, there is still a large shortage of primary care practitioners in the United States. The margin between available providers and those in need continues to grow. Many people without proper access to care have to delay seeking help for what ails them ("Health Wanted," 2012). Glicken & Miller (2013) state that
to contact the Family Nurse Practitioner covering this patient and she immediately came to the floor to assess him. After her assessment I told her what my recommendation was, and she agreed. She clarified everything with the patient and made sure he understood her reasoning, put the order in and contacted the MD to hold off on the patients discharge. At this moment I realized that being a Family Nurse Practitioner was my calling. Becoming a Family Nurse Practitioner will allow me to take charge
PROFESSIONAL NURSING INTERVIEW For my interview I met with H.R. who has her BSN, and is currently working to complete her degree as a Family Nurse Practitioner. She has been a nurse for three years, most of which has been spent working in surgery in a large hospital. She also hopes to further her education and eventually be teaching future nursing students. The purpose of this paper is to provide an outside view of how someone sees the Nursing profession as a whole. I posed several interview