9 research outputs found

    NP PRACTICE Ranking State NP Regulation: Practice Environment and Consumer Healthcare Choice

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    This study measured and ranked the regulatory environment for nurse practitioner (NP) practice and consumer healthcare choice in each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia (DC). An expert panel examined the state rules and regulations in three dimensions: (1) the environment affecting consumer access to NPs as providers, (2) the environment affecting reimbursement and NP patients' access to related healthcare services, and (3) the environment affecting NP patients' access to prescription medications. Scores in each of these domains were calculated for each state and DC, which were then ranked by the composite scores of the three domains. Findings suggest that wide variations exist in state regulation of NP practice, indicating the strong likelihood that, in some states, NPs cannot reach their full capacity to meet patients' needs. This wide variation also suggests that regulations for NP practice are not evidence based, have no patient-safety foundation, and appear arbitrary. The study results can be used as an advocacy tool for NPs working with policy makers to identify their state's or district's standing relative to the rest of the nation and to propel reform for modernizing nurse practice acts to align with improved consumer choice and evidence-based patientsafety principles

    Residents' rights and nurses' ethics in the Australian nursing home

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    Background: This article is derived from a more extensive review of literature for a qualitative study that explored the meaning of truth-telling within the care provider-aged resident dyad in high-level (nursing home) aged care. Aim: This paper describes through the literature, work practices and the culture of the nursing home as promoting instrumental care, therefore prioritizing doing-for over being-with. The nursing home, starved of time and staff, silences and isolates the aged care resident in an environment that is, arguably, rarely homelike. Conclusion: The appraisal of the nursing home offered here means that a number of residents' rights are at risk and care providers (notably registered nurses and the personal care assistants) risk contravening the Code of Ethics for Nurses in Australia

    Professionalizing and Masculinizing a Female Occupation: The Reconceptualization of Hospital Administration in the Early 1900s

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    Evidence-based practice in clinical psychology: What it is, why it matters; what you need to know

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    The Victorian Era: The Birth of Scientific Societies and the Blossoming of Public Health

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