9,640 results on '"physician assistants"'
Search Results
2. ICU Staffing in the United States.
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Gershengorn, Hayley B., Garland, Allan, Costa, Deena K., Dzierba, Amy L., Fowler, Robert, Kramer, Andrew A., Liu, Vincent X., Lizano, Danny, Scales, Damon C., and Wunsch, Hannah
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NURSE practitioners , *NURSE-patient ratio , *PHYSICIANS' assistants , *PROFESSIONAL associations , *PHARMACISTS , *RESPIRATORY therapists - Abstract
The last national estimates of US ICU physician staffing are 25 years old and lack information about interprofessional teams. How are US adult ICUs currently staffed? We conducted a cross-sectional survey (May 4, 2022-February 2, 2023) of adult ICU clinicians (targeting nurse/physician leadership) contacted using 2020 American Hospital Association (AHA) database information and, secondarily, through professional organizations. The survey included questions about interprofessional ICU staffing availability and roles at steady state (pre-COVID-19). We linked survey data to hospital data in the AHA database to create weighted national estimates by extrapolating ICU staffing data to nonrespondent hospitals based on hospital characteristics. The cohort consisted of 596 adult ICUs (response rates: AHA contacts: 2.1%; professional organizations: unknown) with geographic diversity and size variability (median, 20 beds; interquartile range, 12-25); most cared for mixed populations (414 [69.5%]), yet medical (55 [9.2%]), surgical (70 [11.7%]), and specialty (57 [9.6%]) ICUs were well represented. A total of 554 (93.0%) had intensivists available, with intensivists covering all patients in 75.6% of these and onsite 24 h/d in one-half (53.3% weekdays; 51.8% weekends). Of all ICUs, 69.8% had physicians-in-training and 77.7% had nurse practitioners/physician assistants. For patients on mechanical ventilation, nurse to patient ratios were 1:2 in 89.6% of ICUs. Clinical pharmacists were available in 92.6%, and respiratory therapists were available in 98.8%. We estimated 85.1% (95% CI, 85.7%-84.5%) of hospitals nationally had ICUs with intensivists, 51.6% (95% CI, 50.6%-52.5%) had physicians-in-training, 72.1% (95% CI, 71.3%-72.9%) had nurse practitioners/physician assistants, 98.5% (95% CI, 98.4%-98.7%) had respiratory therapists, and 86.9% (95% CI, 86.4%-87.4%) had clinical pharmacists. For patients on mechanical ventilation, 86.4% (95% CI, 85.8%-87.0%) used 1:2 nurses/patients. We found that intensivist presence in adult US ICUs has greatly increased over 25 years. Intensivists, respiratory therapists, and clinical pharmacists are commonly available, and each nurse usually provides care for two patients on mechanical ventilation. However, team composition and workload vary. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. International medical graduates and PAs: A history and update.
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Cawley, James F.
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During the 1980s and 1990s, international medical graduates (IMGs) sought legal and educational measures aimed at obtaining licensure as physician associates/assistants (PAs). Proponents of IMGs asserted that their ethnic backgrounds and identification with their respective communities could increase access to care for some segments of the population and therefore should be permitted pathways to qualify as PAs. A variety of legal measures were introduced into state legislatures in at least five states and were firmly opposed and defeated by the PA profession. Recent attempts by IMGs to obtain licensure as PAs have occurred in Puerto Rico and Arizona. In their haste to address healthcare access and satisfy various constituencies, state legislators and regulatory boards fail to recognize established professional norms. This is occurring as medical organizations are examining alternative pathways for state licensure of physicians who have completed training and/or practiced outside of the United States. PA organizations, particularly state chapters, must be vigilant in upholding qualifications for practice and licensure standards, and state PA organizations must work to convince legislators to avoid using PA professional regulations to solve a workforce issue that is essentially an issue of physician medical education remediation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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4. 진료지원간호사의 직무 스트레스와 조직몰입의 관계에서 긍정심리자본의 매개효과.
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명지, 한 and 영, 최 소
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CORPORATE culture ,PHYSICIANS' assistants ,NURSES ,PEARSON correlation (Statistics) ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,T-test (Statistics) ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,JOB stress ,ANALYSIS of variance ,COMMITMENT (Psychology) ,QUALITY assurance ,DATA analysis software ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,WELL-being ,REGRESSION analysis - Abstract
Purpose: This study aimed to identify the mediating effects of positive psychological capital on the relationship between occupational stress and organizational commitment in physician assistant nurses. Methods: The participants were 152 physician assistant nurses recruited from two university hospitals. Data was collected through a survey. The SPSS/WIN program (version 25.0) was used for the data analysis. Data was analyzed using descriptive stastics, t-test, ANOVA, Pearson's correlation analysis, and hierarchical regression. Results: There was a significant negative correlation organizational commitment and occupational stress (r=-.57, p<.001), and a positive correlation with positive psychological capital (r=.47, p<.001). There was a negative correlation (r=-.32, p<.001) between occupational stress and positive psychological capital. In addition, positive psychological capital had a partial mediating effect on the relationship between occupational stress and organizational commitment (β=.32, p<.001). Conclusion: Positive psychological capital serves as a partial mediator in the relationship between occupational stress and organizational commitment among physician assistant nurses. The results of this study can be used reduce occupational stress and improve organizational commitment by improving the positive psychological capital of physician-assistant nurses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. Providing care in underresourced areas: contribution of the physician assistant/associate workforce
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Mirela Bruza-Augatis, Bettie Coplan, Kasey Puckett, and Andrzej Kozikowski
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Underresourced areas ,Medically underserved areas ,Health professional shortage areas ,Healthcare workforce ,Physician assistants ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Prior studies suggest that physician assistants/associates (PAs) are more likely than physicians to work in underresourced areas. However, data characterizing the current PA workforce in health professional shortage areas (HPSAs) and medically underserved areas (MUAs) are lacking. Methods We analyzed the 2022 cross-sectional dataset from a comprehensive national database to examine the demographic and practice characteristics of PAs working in HPSAs/MUAs compared to those in other settings. Analyses included descriptive and bivariate statistics, along with multivariate logistic regression. Results Nearly 23% of PAs reported practicing in HPSAs/MUAs. Among PAs in HPSAs/MUAs, over a third (34.6%) work in primary care settings, 33.3% identify as men, 15.6% reside in rural/isolated areas, and 14.0% are from an underrepresented in medicine (URiM) background. Factors associated with higher odds of practicing in a HPSA/MUA included residing in rural/isolated settings, URiM background, and speaking a language other than English with patients. Conclusions As the PA profession grows, knowledge of these attributes may help inform efforts to expand PA workforce contributions to address provider shortages.
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- 2024
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6. Physician assistants/associates in psychiatry: a workforce analysis
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Mirela Bruza-Augatis, Andrzej Kozikowski, Roderick S. Hooker, and Kasey Puckett
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Psychiatry ,Behavioral health ,Physician associates ,Physician assistants ,Workforce ,Employment ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Physician assistants/associates (PAs) provide services in diverse medical specialties globally, including psychiatry. While health professionals in psychiatry have been described for many years, little is known about PAs practicing in this discipline. Methods We describe US PAs practicing in psychiatry using robust national data from the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA). Analyses included descriptive and inferential statistics comparing PAs in psychiatry to PAs in all other medical and surgical specialties. Results The percentage of PAs practicing in psychiatry has increased from 1.1% (n = 630) in 2013 to 2.0% (n = 2 262) in 2021. PAs in psychiatry differed from PAs practicing in all other specialties in the following: they identified predominately as female (71.4% vs. 69.1%; p = 0.016), were more racially diverse (Asian [6.6% vs. 6.0%], Black/African American [5.5% vs. 3.4%], multi-race [2.8% vs. 2.1%], and other races [Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, American Indian/Alaska Native, or other; 3.7% vs. 3.6%]; p
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- 2024
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7. 진료지원인력의 확대된 업무 수행을 위한 합법적이고 합리적인 해결 방안.
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최수정 and 김민영
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NURSES ,EMPLOYEE rights ,OCCUPATIONAL roles ,OCCUPATIONAL achievement ,PATIENT safety ,NURSING ,CERTIFICATION ,NURSING practice ,ADVANCED practice registered nurses - Abstract
Purpose: Medical support staff nurses have traditionally performed various supportive tasks for physicians, often extending beyond standard nursing roles. Despite these long-standing practices, there is a notable lack of official recognition and legal protection for these expanded responsibilities, leading to increasing legal concerns. Therefore, there is a need for proposing a rational solution to address these issues. Methods: The number of medical support staff nurses is rising, particularly as they fill gaps left by the 2024 resident physician strike. The study focuses on identifying potential challenges arising from this shift and developing strategic improvements to address these challenges effectively. Results: This study proposed legally expanding the scope of nursing duties and creating a robust system for training and certifying nurses to handle these responsibilities effectively, by integrating these roles within the advanced practice nurse (APN) framework. Conclusion: Integrating these roles within the framework of APN can offer a sustainable and legally sound solution to the ongoing healthcare crisis, ensuring patient safety and safeguarding healthcare workers' legal rights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Providing care in underresourced areas: contribution of the physician assistant/associate workforce.
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Bruza-Augatis, Mirela, Coplan, Bettie, Puckett, Kasey, and Kozikowski, Andrzej
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PHYSICIANS' assistants , *MEDICALLY underserved areas , *LABOR supply , *DEMOGRAPHIC databases , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *LOGISTIC regression analysis - Abstract
Background: Prior studies suggest that physician assistants/associates (PAs) are more likely than physicians to work in underresourced areas. However, data characterizing the current PA workforce in health professional shortage areas (HPSAs) and medically underserved areas (MUAs) are lacking. Methods: We analyzed the 2022 cross-sectional dataset from a comprehensive national database to examine the demographic and practice characteristics of PAs working in HPSAs/MUAs compared to those in other settings. Analyses included descriptive and bivariate statistics, along with multivariate logistic regression. Results: Nearly 23% of PAs reported practicing in HPSAs/MUAs. Among PAs in HPSAs/MUAs, over a third (34.6%) work in primary care settings, 33.3% identify as men, 15.6% reside in rural/isolated areas, and 14.0% are from an underrepresented in medicine (URiM) background. Factors associated with higher odds of practicing in a HPSA/MUA included residing in rural/isolated settings, URiM background, and speaking a language other than English with patients. Conclusions: As the PA profession grows, knowledge of these attributes may help inform efforts to expand PA workforce contributions to address provider shortages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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9. Advanced Practice Provider-Led Transperineal Prostate Biopsy Clinic.
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O'Hara, Alex, Mynderse, Lance, and Lomas, Derek
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EDUCATION of nurse practitioners , *CONTINUING education units , *BIOPSY , *UROLOGY , *MEDICAL quality control , *LOCAL anesthesia , *UROLOGISTS , *AMBULATORY surgery , *CYSTOSCOPY , *EARLY detection of cancer , *VISUAL analog scale , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *NURSING , *PROSTATE tumors , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *WOUND infections , *MAGNETIC resonance imaging , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PROSTATE , *UROLOGICAL nursing , *ADVANCED practice registered nurses , *MEDICAL records , *ACQUISITION of data , *NEEDLE biopsy , *CLINICS , *HEALTH outcome assessment , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *MEDICAL practice , *DISEASE risk factors , *DISEASE complications - Abstract
The once antiquated transperineal prostate biopsy has experienced a recent resurgence in popularity based on the many studies demonstrating its low infection risk and preserved diagnostic accuracy when compared to transrectal prostate biopsy. Increased demand for this procedure has placed extra strain on a decreasing supply of urologists in the United States. This has provided an opportunity for advanced practice providers to improve patient access to an important step in the prostate cancer diagnostic pathway. This article aims to demonstrate that an appropriately trained advanced practice provider can successfully perform a transperineal biopsy with local anesthesia and provide a training framework that can be customized and adapted into a variety of practice settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. Unmet Needs for Ancillary Services by Provider Type Among People With Diagnosed Human Immunodeficiency Virus.
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Thomas, Celina, Yuan, Xin, Taussig, Jennifer A, Tie, Yunfeng, Dasgupta, Sharoda, Riedel, David J, and Weiser, John
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HIV , *PATIENT monitoring , *NURSE-patient relationships , *PHYSICIANS , *NURSES as patients , *PHYSICIANS' assistants - Abstract
Background Unmet needs for ancillary services are substantial among people with human immunodeficiency virus (PWH), and provider type could influence the prevalence of unmet needs for these services. Methods Data from a national probability sample of PWH were analyzed from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Medical Monitoring Project. We analyzed 2019 data on people who had ≥1 encounter with a human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) care provider (N = 3413) and their care facilities. We assessed the proportion of needs that were unmet for individual ancillary services, overall and by HIV care provider type, including infectious disease (ID) physicians, non-ID physicians, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants. We calculated prevalence differences (PDs) with predicted marginal means to assess differences between groups. Results An estimated 98.2% of patients reported ≥1 need for an ancillary service, and of those 46% had ≥1 unmet need. Compared with patients of ID physicians, needs for many ancillary services were higher among patients of other provider types. However, even after adjustment, patients of non-ID physicians had lower unmet needs for dental care (adjusted PD, −5.6 [95% confidence interval {CI}, −9.9 to −1.3]), and patients of nurse practitioners had lower unmet needs for HIV case management services (adjusted PD, −5.4 [95% CI, −9.4 to −1.4]), compared with patients of ID physicians. Conclusions Although needs were greater among patients of providers other than ID physicians, many of these needs may be met by existing support systems at HIV care facilities. However, additional resources may be needed to address unmet needs for dental care and HIV case management among patients of ID physicians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. A Modified Delphi Consensus Approach to Define Entrustable Professional Activities for Neurocritical Care Advanced Practice Providers.
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Harrison, Daniel S., Sigman, Erika J., Ch'ang, Judy H., Sarwal, Aarti, Celotto, Abigale, Malone, Alexandra, Nowicki, Ariel, Martin, Ashley, Boling, Bryan, Nobleza, Christa O'Hana S., Reeves, Christopher, Greer, David M., McLaughlin, Diane, Woods, Elizabeth O'B., Fields, Emmaculate, Perets, Erica, Jannotta, Gemi E., Mears, Jennifer, Twomey, Kaitlyn, and Rath, Kelly A.
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DELPHI method , *ACADEMIC medical centers , *ELECTRONICS in surveying , *SCORING rubrics , *CRITICAL care medicine - Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To define consensus entrustable professional activities (EPAs) for neurocritical care (NCC) advanced practice providers (APPs), establish validity evidence for the EPAs, and evaluate factors that inform entrustment expectations of NCC APP supervisors. DESIGN: A three-round modified Delphi consensus process followed by application of the EQual rubric and assessment of generalizability by clinicians not affiliated with academic medical centers. SETTING: Electronic surveys. SUBJECTS: NCC APPs (n = 18) and physicians (n = 12) in the United States with experience in education scholarship or APP program leadership. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: The steering committee generated an initial list of 61 possible EPAs. The panel proposed 30 additional EPAs. A total of 47 unique nested EPAs were retained by consensus opinion. The steering committee defined six core EPAs addressing medical knowledge, procedural competencies, and communication proficiency which encompassed the nested EPAs. All core EPAs were retained and subsequently met the previously described cut score for quality and structure using the EQual rubric. Most clinicians who were not affiliated with academic medical centers rated each of the six core EPAs as very important or mandatory. Entrustment expectations did not vary by prespecified groups. CONCLUSIONS: Expert consensus was used to create EPAs for NCC APPs that reached a predefined quality standard and were important to most clinicians in different practice settings. We did not identify variables that significantly predicted entrustment expectations. These EPAs may aid in curricular design for an EPA-based assessment of new NCC APPs and may inform the development of EPAs for APPs in other critical care subspecialties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Interprofessional Substance Use Education for Primary Health Professionals: An Exploratory Study of Knowledge-Related Differences.
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Calleja, Nancy G. and Kondili, Elvita
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SUBSTANCE abuse , *INTERDISCIPLINARY education , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *T-test (Statistics) , *RESEARCH funding , *PRIMARY health care , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes , *HOSPITAL nursing staff , *SEX distribution , *CLINICAL trials , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *PROFESSIONS , *PRE-tests & post-tests , *RESEARCH , *CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
To investigate knowledge-related outcomes and the impact of an inter-professionally delivered substance use curriculum on primary health professionals, 286 nursing and physician assistant trainees were assessed before and following the completion of a specialized substance use curriculum. The results of paired sample t-tests indicated that participants demonstrated significantly increased knowledge of substance use. There were no significant differences in learning outcomes related to gender, ethnicity, or discipline. The study provides initial support for the effectiveness of the interprofessional substance use curriculum in significantly increasing knowledge of substance use among both nursing and physician assistant trainees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. Physician assistants/associates in psychiatry: a workforce analysis.
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Bruza-Augatis, Mirela, Kozikowski, Andrzej, Hooker, Roderick S., and Puckett, Kasey
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PHYSICIANS' assistants , *MEDICAL personnel , *PSYCHIATRY , *LABOR supply , *LABOR demand , *ALASKA Natives , *JOB satisfaction - Abstract
Background: Physician assistants/associates (PAs) provide services in diverse medical specialties globally, including psychiatry. While health professionals in psychiatry have been described for many years, little is known about PAs practicing in this discipline. Methods: We describe US PAs practicing in psychiatry using robust national data from the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA). Analyses included descriptive and inferential statistics comparing PAs in psychiatry to PAs in all other medical and surgical specialties. Results: The percentage of PAs practicing in psychiatry has increased from 1.1% (n = 630) in 2013 to 2.0% (n = 2 262) in 2021. PAs in psychiatry differed from PAs practicing in all other specialties in the following: they identified predominately as female (71.4% vs. 69.1%; p = 0.016), were more racially diverse (Asian [6.6% vs. 6.0%], Black/African American [5.5% vs. 3.4%], multi-race [2.8% vs. 2.1%], and other races [Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, American Indian/Alaska Native, or other; 3.7% vs. 3.6%]; p < 0.001), and resided in the South (43.8% vs. 34.1%; p < 0.001). PAs in psychiatry vs. all other specialties were more likely to work in office-based private practice settings (41.6% vs. 37.3%; p < 0.001) and nearly twice as likely to provide telemedicine services for their patients (62.7% vs. 32.9%; p < 0.001). While one-third (31.9%) of PAs in psychiatry experienced one or more burnout symptoms, and 8.1% considered changing their current position, the vast majority of PAs in psychiatry (86.0%) were satisfied with their position. Conclusions: Understanding the attributes of PAs in psychiatry is essential in medical labor supply and demand research. Our findings suggest that the number of PAs working in psychiatry is steadily increasing. These PAs were predominantly female, exhibited greater racial diversity, and were primarily located in the South and Midwest regions of the US. A striking difference was that PAs in psychiatry were almost twice as likely to provide telemedicine services for their patients. Although nearly a third of PAs in psychiatry acknowledged having one or more symptoms of burnout, few were considering changing their employment, and the vast majority reported high job satisfaction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. A survey of implicit bias training in physician assistant and nurse practitioner postgraduate fellowship/residency programs
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Kidd, Vasco Deon, Spisak, Jennifer M, Vanderlinden, Sarah, and Kayingo, Gerald
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Quality Education ,Bias ,Implicit ,Fellowships and Scholarships ,Humans ,Internship and Residency ,Nurse Practitioners ,Physician Assistants ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Implicit bias ,Unconscious bias ,Diversity training ,Postgraduate education ,Fellowship ,Residency ,Physician assistant ,Physician associate ,Nurse practitioner ,Advanced practice provider ,Public Health and Health Services ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Medical Informatics ,Clinical sciences ,Curriculum and pedagogy ,Specialist studies in education - Abstract
BackgroundThere has been renewed focus on advancing inclusivity within organized medicine to reduce health disparities and achieve health equity by addressing the deleterious effects of implicit bias in healthcare and clinical outcomes. It is well documented that negative implicit attitudes and stereotypes perpetuate inequity in healthcare. The aim of this study is to investigate implicit bias training in postgraduate physician assistant (PA) and nurse practitioner (NP) education; describe delivery of content to trainees; and detail program directors' attitudes toward this type of training. Although there is research examining implicit bias training in physician residency education, there are no published studies on implicit bias training in postgraduate PA and NP postgraduate residency/fellowship programs.MethodA non-experimental, descriptive study was designed to obtain information via survey from members of the Association of Postgraduate Physician Assistant Programs (APPAP).ResultsThe response rate was 41%. The majority of respondents (76%) felt that PA and NP postgraduate programs should include implicit bias instruction. Educational strategies used by PA and joint PA/NP postgraduate programs or their sponsoring institution to deliver implicit bias content to trainees include: implicit bias training modules (50%), facilitated group discussions (36%), invited speaker on implicit bias (33%), case studies on implicit bias (16%), and implicit association test (10%); however, 30% of postgraduate programs do not provide implicit bias training to PA and/or NP trainees. Barriers to implementing implicit bias training expressed by some postgraduate programs include: uncertainty in how to incorporate implicit bias training (16%); lack of strategic alignment with training program or sponsoring institution (13%); time constraints (10%); financial constraints (6%); lack of access to content experts (6%); and unfamiliarity with evidence supporting implicit bias training (6%).ConclusionThe present study sheds some light on the current state of implicit bias training in PA and joint PA/NP postgraduate residency/fellowship programs. While the majority of programs offer some sort of implicit bias training, there is a need to standardize this training in PA and joint PA/NP postgraduate education curricula using an actionable framework.
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- 2022
15. The development of a visual dashboard report to assess physician assistant and nurse practitioner financial and clinical productivity
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Kidd, Vasco Deon, Liu, Joe Haoming, Reamer-Yu, Andy, Wang, Joann Hao, and Deng, Mei
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Health Services and Systems ,Nursing ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,COVID-19 ,Efficiency ,Humans ,Nurse Practitioners ,Pandemics ,Physician Assistants ,Physician assistant ,Physician associate ,Nurse practitioner ,Advanced practice provider ,Dashboard ,Visualization analytics ,Relative value unit ,Academic medical center ,Library and Information Studies ,Public Health and Health Services ,Health Policy & Services ,Health services and systems ,Public health - Abstract
The evolving COVID-19 pandemic has unevenly affected academic medical centers (AMCs), which are experiencing resource-constraints and liquidity challenges while at the same time facing high pressures to improve patient access and clinical outcomes. Technological advancements in the field of data analytics can enable AMCs to achieve operational efficiencies and improve bottom-line expectations. While there are vetted analytical tools available to track physician productivity, there is a significant paucity of analytical instruments described in the literature to adequately track clinical and financial productivity of physician assistants (PAs) and nurse practitioners (NPs) employed at AMCs. Moreover, there is no general guidance on the development of a dashboard to track PA/NP clinical and financial productivity at the individual, department, or enterprise level. At our institution, there was insufficient tracking of PA/NP productivity across many clinical areas within the enterprise. Thus, the aim of the project is to leverage our institution's existing visualization tools coupled with the right analytics to track PA/NP productivity trends using a dashboard report.MethodsWe created an intuitive and customizable highly visual clinical/financial analytical dashboard to track productivity of PAs/NPs employed at our AMC.ResultsThe APP financial and clinical dashboard is organized into two main components. The volume-based key performance indicators (KPIs) included work relative value units (wRVUs), gross charges, collections (payments), and payer-mix. The session utilization (KPIs) included (e.g., new versus return patient ratios, encounter type, visit volume, and visits per session by provider). After successful piloting, the dashboard was deployed across multiple specialty areas and results showed improved data transparency and reliable tracking of PAs/NPs productivity across the enterprise. The dashboard analytics were also helpful in assessing PA/NP recruitment requests, independent practice sessions, and performance expectations.ConclusionTo our knowledge, this is the first paper to highlight steps AMCs can take in developing, validating, and deploying a financial/clinical dashboard specific to PAs/NPs. However, empirical research is needed to assess the impact of qualitative and quantitative dashboards on provider engagement, revenue, and quality of care.
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- 2022
16. Point-of-care Ultrasound (POCUS) Program for Critical Care Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants in an Oncological Intensive Care Unit and Rapid Response Team.
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Chen, Leon L., Tayban, Kate, Tomicich, Joanna, Buchholz, Tara, Barzola, Melissa, Mead, Elena, and Halpern, Neil A.
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CANCER treatment , *CURRICULUM , *JOB qualifications , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *HUMAN services programs , *ENDOWMENTS , *LABOR turnover , *ULTRASONIC imaging , *ONCOLOGY , *RAPID response teams , *MENTORING , *NURSING , *CERTIFICATION , *COLLEGE teachers , *INFORMATION technology , *WORKFLOW , *INTENSIVE care units , *PROFESSIONAL employee training , *CURRICULUM planning , *ABILITY , *POINT-of-care testing , *CRITICAL care medicine , *HOSPITAL wards , *SPECIALTY hospitals , *TRAINING - Abstract
Implementation of a comprehensive point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) program for nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) in an intensive care unit (ICU) setting improves their diagnostic and therapeutic skills and enhances patient care. Overcoming staffing, IT infrastructure, and administrative challenges has allowed our critical care medicine service to develop a successful program that empowers NPs and PAs and boosts their professional growth. Our POCUS program underscores the necessity of institutional support, dedicated mentorship, collaboration with qualified faculty, and creation and maintenance of a curriculum that adheres to accepted national guidelines. Insights gained from our experiences can serve as a valuable resource for institutions aiming to develop their own POCUS programs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Trends in dermatologic procedures performed by dermatologists and advanced practice clinicians among Medicare beneficiaries from 2012 to 2020.
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Shiau, Carina, Kim, Daniel Y., Young, Peter A., Baker, Andrew, and Bae, Gordon H.
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- 2024
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18. 국내 전담간호사의 역할갈등 개념분석.
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김 병관 and 정 원희
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PHYSICIANS' assistants ,FEAR ,PROFESSIONAL autonomy ,PSYCHOLOGICAL distress ,CINAHL database ,PROFESSIONAL identity ,ANXIETY ,JOB satisfaction ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,MEDLINE ,NURSING licensure ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,COGNITION disorders ,ROLE conflict ,CONCEPTS ,ONLINE information services ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,JOB performance ,SELF-perception - Abstract
Purpose: This conceptual analysis aimed to reveal the "role conflict of physician assistants with nursing licenses in Korea" by defining and organizing its concept. Methods: This study used the conceptual analysis process of Walker and Avant. Results: The role conflict of Korean physician assistant nurses can be defined by the following attributes: "Confusion of identity," "Psychological burden of work," "Anxiety and fear of legal responsibility," "Anxiety about an uncertain future," "Relative deprivation," "Sense of neglect," and a "Lack of sense of belonging." The antecedents identified were: "unclear work boundaries," "absence of work guidelines," "excessive work and poor environment," "Absence of regulations and administrative regulation," "Exclusion from unfair treatment and promotion," "Difficulty measuring job performance," "Absence of job autonomy," and "Physician group interest pursuit." The consequences were: "Decreased job satisfaction," "Decreased sense of achievement," "Decreased self-esteem," "Limited growth," "Increased turnover intentions," "Exhaustion of mind and body," "Career identity crisis," and "Frustrations." Conclusion: This study provides basic data for constructing a theory concerning role conflict among Korean dedicated nurses and promotes the development of measurement tools. Furthermore, it meaningfully presents both theoretical grounds for reducing the role conflict of dedicated nurses and evidence for legalization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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19. Beyond state scope of practice laws for advanced practitioners: Additional supervision requirements for buprenorphine prescribing
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Andraka-Christou, Barbara, Gordon, Adam J, Spetz, Joanne, Totaram, Rachel, Golan, Matthew, Randall-Kosich, Olivia, Harrison, Jordan, Calder, Spencer, Kertesz, Stefan G, and Stein, Bradley D
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Clinical and Health Psychology ,Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Drug Abuse (NIDA only) ,Substance Misuse ,Clinical Research ,Opioids ,Opioid Misuse and Addiction ,Brain Disorders ,Good Health and Well Being ,Buprenorphine ,Humans ,Opiate Substitution Treatment ,Opioid-Related Disorders ,Physician Assistants ,Practice Patterns ,Physicians' ,Scope of Practice ,United States ,Nurse practitioners ,Advanced care practitioners ,Physician assistants ,State law ,Waiver ,Collaboration ,Supervision ,Scope of practice ,Opioid use disorder ,Medications for opioid use disorder ,Public Health and Health Services ,Substance Abuse ,Health services and systems ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
BackgroundBuprenorphine is a life-saving medication for people with opioid use disorder (OUD). U.S. federal law allows advanced practice clinicians (APCs), such as nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs), to obtain a federal waiver to prescribe buprenorphine in office-based practices. However, states regulate APCs' scope of practice (SOP) variously, including requirements for physician supervision. States may also have laws entirely banning NP/PA buprenorphine prescribing or requiring that supervising physicians have a federal waiver to prescribe buprenorphine. We sought to identify prevalence of state laws other than SOP laws that either 1) prohibit NP/PA buprenorphine prescribing entirely, or 2) require supervision by a federally waivered physician.MethodsWe searched for state statutes and regulations in all 50 states and Washington D.C. regulating prescribing of buprenorphine for OUD by APCs during summer 2021. We excluded general scope of practice laws, laws only applicable to Medicaid-funded clinicians, laws not applicable to substance use disorder (SUD) treatment, and laws only applicable to NPs/PAs serving licensed SUD treatment facilities. We then conducted content analysis.ResultsOne state prohibits all APCs from prescribing buprenorphine for OUD, even though the state's general SOP laws permit APC buprenorphine prescribing. Five states require PA supervision by a federally waivered physician. Three states require NP supervision by a federally waivered physician.ConclusionsAside from general scope of practice laws, several states have created laws explicitly regulating buprenorphine prescribing by APCs outside of licensed state SUD facilities.
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- 2022
20. Utilizing Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants in Academic Emergency Departments Does Not Reduce Residents' Exposure to More Complex Patients.
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Mehta, Meghal, Scott, Sara, and Brown, Lawrence H.
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- *
PHYSICIANS' assistants , *NURSE practitioners , *ACADEMIC departments , *OUTPATIENT services in hospitals , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *TRAINING of medical residents - Abstract
Whether integration of nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) into academic emergency departments (EDs) affects emergency medicine (EM) resident clinical learning opportunities is unclear. We sought to compare EM resident exposure to more-complex patients, as well as patients undergoing Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME)–required procedures, at nonpediatric academic EDs with lower, moderate, and higher levels of NP/PA utilization. In this cross-sectional study of National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) data for 2016–2020, nonpediatric academic EDs were classified into the following three groups based on the percentage of patients seen by an NP or PA: lower (≤ 10%), moderate (10.1–30%), and higher (> 30%) NP/PA utilization. The proportion of EM resident–seen patients meeting previously established complex patient criteria was then determined for EDs at each level of NP/PA utilization. The proportion of EM resident–seen patients receiving certain ACGME-required procedures was also determined. Survey analytic procedures and weighting as recommended by NHAMCS were used to calculate and compare proportions using 95% CIs. The weighted 2016–2020 NHAMCS data sets represent 44,130,996 adult resident-seen patients presenting to nonpediatric academic EDs. The proportion of resident-seen patients meeting complex patient criteria did not significantly differ for lower (43.2%; 95% CI 30.6–56.8%), moderate (41.7%; 95% CI 33.0–50.9%), or higher (38.9%; 95% CI 29.3–49.4%) NP/PA utilization EDs. The proportion of patients undergoing an ACGME-required procedure also did not significantly differ across level of NP/PA utilization. Higher levels of NP/PA utilization in nonpediatric academic EDs do not appear to reduce EM resident exposure to more-complex patients or ACGME-required procedures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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21. A Pilot Study of Physician Assistant Student and Alumni Attitudes, Awareness, and Perceptions of Medical and Recreational Marijuana.
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Lawler, Kathryn, Strauss, Abigail, Kaczmarek, Allison, and Martinasek, Mary P.
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- *
PHYSICIAN assistant students , *STUDENT attitudes , *MARIJUANA legalization , *ALUMNAE & alumni , *MEDICAL marijuana , *MEDICAL personnel , *DRUGGED driving , *MEDICAL school graduates - Abstract
Objectives: In this study, we aimed to explore current physician assistant (PA) student and alumni attitudes, knowledge, and perceptions towards recreational and medical marijuana. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study with PA students and alumni (N = 62) from a mid-sized university in the southeastern United States. We used an online QualtricsTM survey of 40 questions pertaining to both medical and recreational marijuana. Results: When asked about counseling patients on medical marijuana only 50.8% felt comfortable. Even fewer were comfortable with discussing drug interactions (39%). Participants felt that edibles were the safest route of administration (46.8%). The majority felt patient counseling should be incorporated into health sciences courses (79.7%). There was a statistically significant association between their knowledge and their comfort in answering questions about marijuana (p < .001) and between their knowledge and their comfort in addressing drug interactions (p = .005). Conclusion: Our results align with previous research concluding that a greater amount of marijuana education should be incorporated into healthcare professionals' curricula. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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22. The role of clinical associates in South Africa as a health workforce: A scoping review
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Sanele Ngcobo, Lynn Bust, Ian Couper, and Kathryn Chu
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clinical associates ,human resources for health ,bachelor of clinical medical practice ,district hospitals ,clinical officers ,physician assistants ,physician associates ,mid-level health workers ,mid-level medical workers. ,Medicine ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Background: South Africa’s health care system grapples with persistent challenges, including health care provider shortages and disparities in distribution. In response, the government introduced clinical associates (Clin-As) as a novel category of health care providers. Aim: This study mapped Clin-As’ history and practice in South Africa, assessing their roles in the health workforce and offering recommendations. Methods: Following the framework outlined by Arksey and O’Malley, we conducted a comprehensive literature search from January 2001 to November 2021, utilising PubMed, Scopus and EBSCOhost databases. One thousand six hundred and seventy-two articles were identified and then refined to 36 through title, abstract and full-text screening. Results: Strengths of the Clin-A cadre included addressing rural workforce shortages and offering cost-effective health care in rural areas. Challenges to the success of the cadre included stakeholder resistance, rapid implementation, scope of practice ambiguity, inadequate supervision, unclear roles, limited Department of Health (NDoH) support, funding deficits, Clin-As’ perceived underpayment and overwork, degree recognition issues, inadequate medical student training on Clin-A roles, vague career paths and uneven provincial participation. Conclusion: As a health care provider cadre, Clin-As have been welcomed by multiple stakeholders and could potentially be a valuable resource for South Africa’s health care system, but they face substantial challenges. Realising their full potential necessitates enhanced engagement, improved implementation strategies and precise scope definition. Contribution: This study acknowledges Clin-As in SA as a promising solution to health care workforce shortages but highlights challenges such as stakeholder resistance, insufficient NDoH support and unclear policies, emphasising the need for comprehensive efforts to maximise their potential.
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- 2024
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23. MENTAL HEALTH DISORDERS IN PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS AND OTHER HEALTHCARE WORKERS DURING A PANDEMIC
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Pavlina Parusheva, Desislava Baltadzhieva, Darko Simonov, Kosara Kopraleva, Gergana Sandeva, and Pavlina Gidikova
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mental health ,covid-19 ,healthcare workers ,physician assistants ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The purpose of the study was to determine the manifestations of depression, stress and anxiety in physician assistants using a self-report scale and to compare with other healthcare workers. The validated self-report scale DASS 21 was used, which contains three subscales with 7 questions to measure depression, anxiety and stress, evaluated on a four-point scale. The study was performed in October 2022 among 68 physician assistants and 597 other healthcare workers from ambulatory, hospital and emergency medical care. Comparing the frequency of mental health disorders showed that the relative proportions of physician assistants with varying degrees of depression (34%), anxiety (46%) and stress (28%) were higher than for other occupational groups. For anxiety this frequency was significantly higher (p < 0.001). Comparing group mean levels of mental health disorders across occupational groups showed significantly higher levels of anxiety among physician assistants compared to physicians (p < 0.001). This indicates that physician assistants are a particularly vulnerable group in terms of anxiety symptoms. It is a positive fact that mild and moderate degrees of mental health disorders prevail. More than half (51%) of physician assistants were found to have some type of mental health disorder. The most common were the cases where depression, anxiety and stress were simultaneously present (19%). Significant correlations were found between the severity of depression, anxiety and stress (p < 0.0001). These results provide a clear signal for the need of professional assistance for mental health prevention in healthcare workers, especially in physician assistants during the pandemic.
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- 2024
24. PSYCHOSOCIAL RISK FACTORS AT WORK IN PHYSICIAN ASSISTANTS DURING A WAVE OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC
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Kosara Kopraleva, Darko Simonov, Pavlina Parusheva, Desislava Baltadzhieva, Gergana Sandeva, and Pavlina Gidikova
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psychosocial risks at work ,physician assistants ,covid-19 ,mental health ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
The aim of the study was to determine the most important occupational psychosocial risk factors for mental health in physician assistants and paramedics during the pandemic of COVID-19. The survey was conducted using 29 questions on psychosocial risks related to the organization of work and anti-epidemic measures, interpersonal relations at work, professional and personal characteristics. For assessment of mental health disorders the self-report scale DASS-21 was used, with 21 items on symptoms of depression, anxiety and stress. The survey was conducted in October 2022 with a total of 68 physician assistants and paramedics from inpatient, outpatient and emergency medical care. Psychosocial factors with the greatest risk frequency were “absence of adequate additional training in epidemic conditions”, “uncertainty in the anti-epidemic measures applied”, and “change of workplace, work tasks and organization of work without asking the opinion of workers”. At a significant frequency of risk were also worries about patients’ life and health, personal, and family members’ life and health. The last two factors correlated with the severity of depression, anxiety and stress. Looking at the interpersonal relations at work, the most problematic were “absence of recognition and encouragement for a job well done” and “inability to freely discuss problems and make decisions in the work team”. Professional psychosocial risk factors with the highest frequency were “insufficient professional experience with infectious patients”, “very high workload during the wave of COVID-19” and “lack of job satisfaction”. These three factors correlated significantly with levels of depression, anxiety and stress.
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- 2024
25. US emergency care patterns among nurse practitioners and physician assistants compared with physicians: a cross-sectional analysis
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Mafi, John N, Chen, Alexander, Guo, Rong, Choi, Kristen, Smulowitz, Peter, Tseng, Chi-Hong, Ladapo, Joseph A, and Landon, Bruce E
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Health Services ,Clinical Research ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Emergency Service ,Hospital ,Humans ,Nurse Practitioners ,Physician Assistants ,Physicians ,United States ,Health policy ,ACCIDENT & EMERGENCY MEDICINE ,Quality in health care ,Clinical Sciences ,Public Health and Health Services ,Other Medical and Health Sciences ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesNurse practitioners and physician assistants (NPs/PAs) increasingly practice in emergency departments (EDs), yet limited research has compared their practice patterns with those of physicians.Design, setting and participantsUsing nationally representative data from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS), we analysed ED visits among NPs/PAs and physicians between 1 January 2009 and 31 December 2017. To compare NP/PA and physician utilisation, we estimated propensity score-weighted multivariable regressions adjusted for clinical/sociodemographic variables, including triage acuity score (1=sickest/5=healthiest). Because NPs/PAs may preferentially consult physicians for more complex patients, we performed sensitivity analyses restricting to EDs with >95% of visits including the NP/PA-physician combination.ExposuresNPs/PAs.Main outcome measuresUse of hospitalisations, diagnostic tests, medications, procedures and six low-value services, for example, CT/MRI for uncomplicated headache, based on Choosing Wisely and other practice guidelines.ResultsBefore propensity weighting, we studied visits to 12 410 NPs/PAs-alone, 21 560 to the NP/PA-physician combination and 143 687 to physicians-alone who saw patients with increasing age (41, 45 and 47 years, p95% of NP/PA visits including the NP/PA-physician combination.Conclusions and relevanceWhile U.S. NPs/PAs-alone used less care and low-value advanced diagnostic imaging, the NP/PA-physician combination used more care and low-value advanced diagnostic imaging than physicians alone. Findings were reproduced among EDs where nearly all NP/PA visits were collaborative with physicians, suggesting that NPs/PAs seeing more complex patients used more services than physicians alone, but the converse might be true for more straightforward patients.
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- 2022
26. On the validity of biopsy cost analysis pertaining to nonphysician clinicians
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Young, Peter A and Marchetti, Michael A
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biopsy number ,diagnostic excellence ,nonphysician clinicians ,nurse practitioners ,physician assistants - Published
- 2022
27. A National Survey of postgraduate physician assistant fellowship and residency programs
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Kidd, Vasco Deon, Vanderlinden, Sarah, and Hooker, Roderick S
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Patient Safety ,Quality Education ,Child ,Curriculum ,Education ,Medical ,Graduate ,Emergency Medicine ,Fellowships and Scholarships ,Humans ,Internship and Residency ,Physician Assistants ,United States ,Physician associate ,Advance practice registered nurse ,Academic medical centers ,Residency ,Fellowship ,House officers ,Public Health and Health Services ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Medical Informatics ,Clinical sciences ,Curriculum and pedagogy ,Specialist studies in education - Abstract
IntroductionThe development of postgraduate programs for physician assistants (PAs) began in 1973 and by 2020 there were approximately 72 programs spread across a broad range of medical and surgical disciplines. PA Post-graduate education programs are voluntary and available to American licensed PAs. Therefore, an assessment of the characteristics of PA post-graduate fellowships and residencies programs was initiated.MethodA non-experimental, descriptive research study was designed to obtain information on the characteristics of PA postgraduate education programs in the US. The source of information was from surveyed members of the Association of Postgraduate Physician Assistant Programs (APPAP). Questions were drawn from consensus discussions. Directors of postgraduate programs that were operational in 2020 were eligible to participate.ResultsSeventy-two postgraduate program directors were invited to the survey and 34 program directors replied. These programs are geographically distributed across the US in 13 states. The respondents represent a wide range of medicine: surgery, emergency medicine, critical care, orthopaedics, hospitalist, psychiatry, oncology, primary care, pediatrics, and cardiology. Most programs are associated with an academic medical center and some institutions have more than one postgraduate specialty track. The curriculum includes bedside teaching, lectures, mentorship, assigned reading, procedures, simulation, and conferences. An average program length is 12 months and awards a certificate. Stipends for PA fellows are $50,000-80,000 (2020 dollars) and benefits include paid time off, health and liability insurance. About half of the programs bill for the services rendered by the PA. Over 90% of graduates are employed within 2 months of completing a PA postgraduate training program.ConclusionA trend is underway in American medicine to include PAs in postgraduate education. PA postgraduate training occurs across a broad spectrum of medical and surgical areas, as well as diverse institutions and organizations overseeing these programs. Most PA postgraduate programs are in teaching hospitals where the PA resident or PA fellow also serves as a house officer alongside a categorical resident. This study sets the stage for more granular economic and social research on this growing phenomenon in American medicine.
- Published
- 2021
28. An analysis of the selection criteria for postgraduate physician assistant residency and fellowship programs in the United States
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Kidd, Vasco Deon, Vanderlinden, Sarah, and Spisak, Jennifer M
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Fellowships and Scholarships ,Humans ,Internship and Residency ,Patient Selection ,Physician Assistants ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,United States ,Physician assistant ,Physician associate ,Nurse practitioner ,Residency ,Fellowship ,Advanced practice provider ,Postgraduate training ,Admission criteria ,Public Health and Health Services ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Medical Informatics ,Clinical sciences ,Curriculum and pedagogy ,Specialist studies in education - Abstract
BackgroundThis study aims to investigate the admission criteria used by physician assistant postgraduate education programs in selecting licensed PA applicants for postgraduate training in the United States. To our knowledge, there have been no previously published reports on selection criteria and/or other factors influencing postgraduate PA admission decisions.MethodA non-experimental, descriptive research study was designed to obtain information from members of the Association of Postgraduate Physician Assistant Programs (APPAP).ResultsTwenty-three out of 73 postgraduate programs (35%) responded to the survey. The study reported that applicant PAs and NPs are largely selected on the basis of several factors. The most heavily weighted factor is the interview itself; other selection criteria perceived to be extremely/very important included board certification/eligibility, letters of recommendation, advanced degree, and personal essay. Survey data suggest that publications, undergraduate transcripts, and class rankings are not considered to be of high importance in applicant selection. The number of PA applicants applying to each postgraduate training program averages around 26 and total number of enrollees is about 3.6 per program. Additionally, some programs reported furloughing of trainees (temporary suspension of didactic and clinical training) during the pandemic, whereas the vast majority of postgraduate PA programs remained operational and some even experienced an increase in application volume. The total cost of training a PA resident or fellow in postgraduate programs is currently $93,000 whereas the average cost of training a categorical physician resident is estimated at $150,000 per year when considering both salary and benefits.ConclusionsThis novel study examined criteria and other factors used by postgraduate PA programs in selecting candidates for admission. Results can be used by postgraduate programs to improve or modify current selection criteria to enhance the quality of trainee selection. Further research is needed to examine correlations between applicant attributes, selection criteria, and trainee success in completing postgraduate training.
- Published
- 2021
29. Role of Mid-Level Providers
- Author
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Baum, Neil, Kahn, Marc J., Daigrepont, Jeffery, Baum, Neil, Kahn, Marc J., and Daigrepont, Jeffery
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- 2023
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30. Examining Racial Disparities in Unemployment Among Health Care Workers Before, During, and After the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Jason Semprini
- Subjects
covid-19 ,workforce ,racial disparities ,advanced practitioners ,nurses ,physician assistants ,medical assistants ,nursing aides ,health equity ,Medicine - Abstract
Among the U.S. health care workforce, the COVID-19 pandemic appeared to greatly impact employment levels in 2020. However, no research has examined how the pandemic’s impact on employment varied by racial/ethnic group or beyond the initial emergency year. Our study aimed to quantitatively evaluate workforce trends by race/ethnicity before, during, and after the COVID-19 pandemic. This study analyzed each March supplement of the Current Population Survey over a 5-year span (2018–2022). We restricted the sample to nurses, physician assistants, and other non-physician health care workers (HCW), per specific census occupation codes, and constructed an event-history study to test for differential effects from each year, as compared to 2019, on the proportion of employment between non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, non-Hispanic Native (American Indian, Alaska Native, Hawaiian Islander), and non-Hispanic Asian HCW. Results suggest that the pandemic’s negative impact on the health care workforce disproportionately reduced employment for HCW self-identifying as Black or Indigenous. Rates for other groups increased 2–3 percentage points in 2020 but returned to prepandemic levels by 2022. However, for Black and Native HCW, the change was twice as large in 2021 and remained significantly higher in 2022 for Black HCW, providing more evidence that the burden of the COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately fell on people of color. Future research investigating how employment disruptions impacted the health care workforce and, potentially, health equity remains warranted.
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- 2023
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31. The influence of government policies on the nurse practitioner and physician assistant workforce in the Netherlands, 2000–2022: a multimethod approach study
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Ellen J. C. M. Dankers-de Mari, Anneke J. A. H. van Vught, Hetty C. Visee, Miranda G. H. Laurant, Ronald Batenburg, and Patrick P. T. Jeurissen
- Subjects
Nurse practitioners ,Physician assistants ,Physician associates ,Skill-mix ,Policy ,Workforce ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Abstract Background Many countries are looking for ways to increase nurse practitioner (NP) and physician assistant/associate (PA) deployment. Countries are seeking to tackle the pressing issues of increasing healthcare demand, healthcare costs, and medical doctor shortages. This article provides insights into the potential impact of various policy measures on NP/PA workforce development in the Netherlands. Methods We applied a multimethod approach study using three methods: 1) a review of government policies, 2) surveys on NP/PA workforce characteristics, and 3) surveys on intake in NP/PA training programs. Results Until 2012, the annual intake into NP and PA training programs was comparable to the number of subsidized training places. In 2012, a 131% increase in intake coincided with extending the legal scope of practice of NPs and PAs and substantially increasing subsidized NP/PA training places. However, in 2013, the intake of NP and PA trainees decreased by 23% and 24%, respectively. The intake decreased in hospitals, (nursing) home care, and mental healthcare, coinciding with fiscal austerity in these sectors. We found that other policies, such as legal acknowledgment, reimbursement, and funding platforms and research, do not consistently coincide with NP/PA training and employment trends. The ratios of NPs and PAs to medical doctors increased substantially in all healthcare sectors from 3.5 and 1.0 per 100 full-time equivalents in medical doctors in 2012 to 11.0 and 3.9 in 2022, respectively. For NPs, the ratios vary between 2.5 per 100 full-time equivalents in medical doctors in primary care and 41.9 in mental healthcare. PA-medical doctor ratios range from 1.6 per 100 full-time equivalents in medical doctors in primary care to 5.8 in hospital care. Conclusions This study reveals that specific policies coincided with NP and PA workforce growth. Sudden and severe fiscal austerity coincided with declining NP/PA training intake. Furthermore, governmental training subsidies coincided and were likely associated with NP/PA workforce growth. Other policy measures did not consistently coincide with trends in intake in NP/PA training or employment. The role of extending the scope of practice remains to be determined. The skill mix is shifting toward an increasing share of medical care provided by NPs and PAs in all healthcare sectors.
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- 2023
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32. Evaluation of an Advanced Practice Provider Onboarding and Development Program.
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Chrapah, Sandra K., Hall, Allyson G., Kennedy, Kiersten Cates, Feldman, Sue, and Peters, Timothy M.
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- *
NURSE practitioners , *PHYSICIANS' assistants , *SEMI-structured interviews , *NURSES' aides , *MOBILE apps - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the impact of implementing a comprehensive secondary onboarding and development program within a hospitalmedicine group at a large tertiary academic medical institution. Methods: This was a mixed-methods study with physician and advanced practice providers (APPs) at an academic medical institution. Results: For quantitative methods, improvement in competencies was determined using a pre-and posttest for APPs and pre- and postevaluation scores from collaborating physicians. APPs also participated in a preand post--self-assessment. For qualitative methods, experiences in the secondary onbo.arding and development program were assessed using semistructured interviews. Conclusions: For quantitative results, there were a total of 25 APPs who completed the pre- and posttest and were evaluated by at least 9 physicians. The average pretest score for APPs was 71.7% and the average posttest score was 83.0%. The average score for physicians' evaluations of APPs was 4.24/5 and increased to 4.38/5 in the postprogram evaluations. The average score for APP self-assessment pretraining was 3.52/5 and after the 12-month onboarding training, average scores increased to 3.84/5. For qualitative results, 4 APPs and 6 physicians were interviewed. Three of the APPs reported having more confidence in treating patients, whereas 1 APP viewed the program as a refresher course. All of the APPs mentioned that they would recommend the program to other APPs. Physicians reported that the program was beneficial in standardizing the care provided among the different types of APPs (physician assistants and nurse practitioners). All of the physicians also would recommend the program to other physicians and APPs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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33. Understanding academic rank among PAs practicing in academic medical centers.
- Author
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Louwagie, Victoria and Halasy, Michael
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RESEARCH ,ACADEMIC medical centers ,RESEARCH methodology ,CROSS-sectional method ,FISHER exact test ,ACADEMIC achievement ,SURVEYS ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the attitudes and prevalence of academic/clinical rank among practicing physician associates/ assistants (PAs) in different specialties and geographic locations. Methods: We surveyed PAs in clinical practice with a bias toward hospital/academic-based clinicians. The survey was a modified instrument to evaluate perceptions, attitudes, barriers, and prevalence of academic rank. Results: Overall, 65% of respondents indicated academic/ clinical rank opportunities were of interest, but 60.8% noted that they were not eligible to hold rank in their institutions. Nearly 55% indicated a desire to hold rank, but 81.9% of respondents did not hold rank. The survey response rate was 22.9%. A lack of departmental emphasis was a common barrier to rank. Conclusions: Clinically practicing PAs clearly have a desire or interest in academic/clinical rank, but barriers persist. Further development of opportunities to hold academic/ clinical rank with mentorship may improve PA careers and propel professional advancement and parity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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34. Advanced practice clinician care and end‐of‐life outcomes for community‐ and nursing home‐dwelling Medicare beneficiaries with dementia.
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Oh, Hyesung, White, Elizabeth M., Muench, Ulrike, Santostefano, Christopher, Thapa, Bishnu, Kosar, Cyrus, Gadbois, Emily A., Osakwe, Zainab Toteh, Gozalo, Pedro, and Rahman, Momotazur
- Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Older adults with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD) often face burdensome end‐of‐life care transfers. Advanced practice clinicians (APCs)—which include nurse practitioners and physician assistants—increasingly provide primary care to this population. To fill current gaps in the literature, we measured the association between APC involvement in end‐of‐life care versus hospice utilization and hospitalization for older adults with ADRD. METHODS: Using Medicare data, we identified nursing home‐ (N=517,490) and community‐dwelling (N=322,461) beneficiaries with ADRD who died between 2016 and 2018. We employed propensity score‐weighted regression methods to examine the association between different levels of APC care during their final 9 months of life versus hospice utilization and hospitalization during their final month. RESULTS: For both nursing home‐ and community‐dwelling beneficiaries, higher APC care involvement associated with lower hospitalization rates and higher hospice rates. DISCUSSION: APCs are an important group of providers delivering end‐of‐life primary care to individuals with ADRD. HIGHLIGHTS: For both nursing home‐ and community‐dwelling Medicare beneficiaries with ADRD, adjusted hospitalization rates were lower and hospice rates were higher for individuals with higher proportions of APC care involvement during their final 9 months of life.Associations between APC care involvement and both adjusted hospitalization rates and adjusted hospice rates persisted when accounting for primary care visit volume. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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35. Postgraduate Programs in Orthopaedic Surgery for Physician Assistants and Nurse Practitioners
- Author
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Kidd, Vasco Deon and Hooker, Roderick S
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Nursing ,Health Sciences ,Education ,Nursing ,Graduate ,Humans ,Nurse Practitioners ,Orthopedics ,Physician Assistants ,Professional Role ,Schools ,Medical ,Schools ,Nursing - Abstract
Postgraduate orthopaedic programs for physician assistants (PAs) and nurse practitioners (NPs) number 14 as of 2020. To better understand the characteristics of these programs a census was undertaken. The result is that most programs are 1 year in duration and in 2019 produced 40 graduates. The role of the orthopaedic PA and NP fellow is to gain an understanding of a wide range of musculoskeletal disorders, develop procedural skills, first assist in the operating room, and facilitate management of patients and discharge throughput. PA and NP fellows work alongside categorical orthopaedic physician residents. The number of graduates from PA orthopaedic training programs is estimated at 200, spanning 20 years. The other 11,145 + PAs (99%) are trained on-the-job. For hospital systems, the employment of orthopaedic postgraduate PA and NP fellows provides value through cost management and billable services.
- Published
- 2021
36. The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification
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Andrzej Kozikowski, Dawn Morton-Rias, Kasey Puckett, Colette Jeffery, Sheila Mauldin, and Joshua Goodman
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Physician assistants ,Physician associate ,PA ,Recertification ,Value of certification ,Perceptions of certification ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background To determine physician assistant/associate (PA) perceptions of the value of certification and explore how they vary across demographic and practice characteristics. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional online survey between March and April 2020 with PAs participating in the longitudinal pilot program for recertification administered by the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA). The survey was distributed to 18,147 PAs, of which 10,965 participated (60.4% response rate). In addition to descriptive statistics, chi-square tests were conducted on demographics and specialty to examine if perceptions of value of certification (1 global and 10 items measuring specific domains) were associated with a particular PA profile. A series of fully adjusted multivariate logistic regressions were performed, exploring the relationship between PA characteristics and the value of certification items. Results Most PAs strongly agreed/agreed that certification helps with fulfilling licensure requirements (9,578/10,893; 87.9%), helps with updating medical knowledge (9,372/10,897; 86.0%), and provides objective evidence of continued competence (8,875/10,902; 81.4%). The items receiving the lowest percentage of responses for strongly agreeing/agreeing were for certification providing no value (1,925/10,887; 17.7%), helping with professional liability insurance (5,076/10,889; 46.6%), and competing with other providers for clinical positions (5,661/10,905; 51.9%). Age 55 and older and practicing in dermatology and psychiatry were among the strongest predictors of less favorable views. PAs from underrepresented in medicine (URiM) backgrounds had more positive perceptions. Conclusions Overall, the findings indicate that PAs value certification; however, perceptions varied by demographics and specialties. PAs who were younger, from URiM backgrounds, and practicing in primary care specialties had among the most favorable perspectives. Continued feedback monitoring is critical in ensuring certification is relevant and meaningful in supporting PAs across demographics and specialties. Measuring PA perceptions of the value of certification is essential to understanding how to support the PA profession's current and future credentialing needs and those who license and hire PAs.
- Published
- 2023
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37. Response to the article by Hill and Lipner entitled "Numbers of nail procedures performed by physician assistants and nurse practitioners among Medicare beneficiaries increased 2013-2021".
- Author
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Shiau, Carina, Kim, Daniel Y., Young, Peter A., Baker, Andrew, and Bae, Gordon H.
- Published
- 2024
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38. Cost-effectiveness of skin biopsies performed by non-physician clinicians for Medicare beneficiaries
- Author
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Gronbeck, Christian, Feng, Paula W, Cohen, Jeffrey M, and Feng, Hao
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beneficiaries ,biopsy ,cost-effectiveness ,dermatologists ,Medicare ,non-physician clinicians ,number needed to biopsy ,nurse practitioners ,physician assistants - Abstract
An increasing number of non-physician clinicians (NPCs) are providing dermatologic care. We compared the cost-effectiveness of skin biopsies performed by dermatologists and dermatology NPCs using publicly-available Medicare claims data and numbers needed to biopsy (NNBs) published in the literature. We estimated that dermatology NPCs performed slightly greater mean numbers of skin biopsies per beneficiary (0.51 versus 0.47) at a lower payment per biopsy ($44.93 versus $55.10) as compared to dermatologists. However, we estimated a higher mean cost per malignancy diagnosed by dermatology NPCs relative to dermatologists (range based on literature NNB values, $39.08 to $190.23). This translated to a $16.7M-$43.3M aggregate cost of additional, benign biopsies performed by NPCs on Medicare beneficiaries. Although this preliminary analysis has several limitations, including the reliance on NNB values for calculations, it likely highlights the importance of training, education, and supervision to promote diagnostic accuracy. Further investigation is needed so that the potential cost of additional skin biopsies performed by NPCs can be appropriately weighed against the improvement in dermatologic access by including NPCs in the dermatology workforce.
- Published
- 2021
39. An interprofessional education initiative: Introducing a local anesthesia dental course for nurse practitioner and physician assistant students.
- Author
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Marwaha, Rochisha S., Bland, Leticia, Hicks, Jeffery, Hendricson, William D., Aguilar, Rosalie P., Torre, Magda de la, Pao, Wen, and Challa, Suman N.
- Abstract
Purpose/Objective: To assess the impact of local anesthesia (LA) course for physician assistant (PA) and adult gerontology‐acute care nurse practitioner (NP) program students on knowledge, attitudes, confidence, and intention to incorporate skills in clinical practice. Methods: The course was conducted by dental faculty for forty‐eight PA and seven NP students and consisted of two lecture hours on anatomy of the oral cavity, anesthesia and pain management, 2 hours of preclinic lab where participants practiced injection technique on mannikins, and a clinical practicum conducted by dental school faculty and residents where students observed dental treatment including administration of LA, and discussed symptom triage by NPs and PAs for patients with dental problems including orofacial pain, initial management including LA, and patient referral to dentists. An online survey was administered to all students before and after the course to assess changes in knowledge, attitudes, confidence, and intention to incorporate LA administration skills into clinical practice and elicit students' perception of program quality. Pre‐ to post‐changes were analyzed by two‐tailed t‐tests and analysis of variance (ANOVA) with significance at 0.05. Results: The response rate for pre‐ and post‐course assessment was 96.4% and 87.3% respectively. Students' overall scale score for self‐assessment of dental knowledge increased significantly from pre‐ (2.34) to post‐assessment (4.19). An increase was seen in students' attitudes regarding management of dental emergencies (t = 2.181; p < 0.05). Furthermore, overall confidence of students related to managing patients with dental problems increased significantly (2.00 to 3.85) after taking the course. Conclusion: The LA course was well received by PA and NP students and resulted in increased knowledge and confidence in recognizing common oral health conditions, understanding dental pain management including administration of LA, and making referrals to dentists to optimize patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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40. How does government policy influence the employment and training of nurse practitioners and physician assistants? A realist analysis using qualitative interviews.
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Dankers‐de Mari, Ellen J. C. M., Thijssen, Marjolein C. E., Van Hees, Suzanne G. M., Albertus, Job, Batenburg, Ronald, Jeurissen, Patrick P. T., and Van Vught, Anneke J. A. H.
- Subjects
- *
MEDICAL quality control , *RESEARCH methodology , *INTERVIEWING , *QUALITATIVE research , *CONTINUUM of care , *GOVERNMENT policy , *EMPLOYMENT , *HOSPITAL nursing staff , *DECISION making , *JUDGMENT sampling , *STATISTICAL sampling - Abstract
Aims: The aim of this study was to develop insights into how and why Dutch government policies on deployment and training of nurse practitioners and physician assistants have effect and under what circumstances. Design: A realist analysis using qualitative interviews. Methods: Data analysis of 50 semi‐structured interviews conducted in 2019 with healthcare providers, sectoral and professional associations, and training coordinators. Stratified purposive and snowball sampling were used. Results: Policies stimulated employment and training of nurse practitioners and physician assistants by: (1) contributing to the familiarity of participants in the decision‐making process in healthcare providers with and medical doctors' trust in these professions; (2) contributing to participants' motivation in employment and training; and (3) eliminating barriers perceived by medical doctors, managers and directors. The extent to which policies affected employment and training was largely determined by sectoral and organizational circumstances, such as healthcare demand and complexity, and decision‐makers in healthcare providers (medical doctors or managers/directors). Conclusion: Effectuating familiarity and trust among participants in the decision‐making process is a crucial first step. Next, policymakers can motivate participants and lower their perceived barriers by extending the scope of practice, creating reimbursement opportunities and contributing to training costs. Theoretical insights into nurse practitioner and physician assistant employment and training have been refined. Impact The findings highlight how governments, health insurers, sectoral and professional associations, departments, councils, healthcare providers and professionals can facilitate and support nurse practitioner and physician assistant employment and training by contributing to familiarity, trust and motivation, and by clearing perceived barriers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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41. The Scope of Practice for Primary Cardiovascular Disease Prevention Expanded to Advanced Practice Providers: What Does the Data Show?
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Iqbal, Sajid, Ali, Naheed Feroz, Ladak, Laila Akbar, Shivji, Rozmeen, Zulfiqar, Mehak, and Barolia, Rubina
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: The review aims to explore the available literature on the role of advance practice providers (APPs) in the primary prevention of cardiovascular diseases (CVD). Recent Findings: CVD are the major cause of death and disease with the growing burden of direct and indirect costs. Globally, one out of every three deaths is due to CVD. A total of 90% of CVD cases are due to modifiable risk factors which are preventable; however, challenges are faced by the already overburdened healthcare systems where the shortage of workforce is a common constraint. Different CVD preventive programs are working but, in a silo, and with different approaches except in few of the high-income countries where specialized workforce such as advance practice providers (APPs) is trained and employed in practice. Such initiatives are already proven more effective in terms of health and economic outcomes. Summary: Through an extensive literature search of APPs' role in the primary prevention of CVD, we identified very few high-income countries where APPs' role has already been integrated into the primary healthcare system. However, in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), no such roles are defined. In these countries, either the overburdened physicians or any other health professionals (not trained in primary prevention of CVD) sometimes provide brief advice on CVD risk factors. Hence, prompt attention is appealed by the current scenario of CVD prevention specifically in LMICs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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- View/download PDF
42. The influence of government policies on the nurse practitioner and physician assistant workforce in the Netherlands, 2000–2022: a multimethod approach study.
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Dankers-de Mari, Ellen J. C. M., van Vught, Anneke J. A. H., Visee, Hetty C., Laurant, Miranda G. H., Batenburg, Ronald, and Jeurissen, Patrick P. T.
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- *
PHYSICIANS' assistants , *NURSE practitioners , *PHYSICIANS , *PHYSICIAN supply & demand , *GOVERNMENT policy - Abstract
Background: Many countries are looking for ways to increase nurse practitioner (NP) and physician assistant/associate (PA) deployment. Countries are seeking to tackle the pressing issues of increasing healthcare demand, healthcare costs, and medical doctor shortages. This article provides insights into the potential impact of various policy measures on NP/PA workforce development in the Netherlands. Methods: We applied a multimethod approach study using three methods: 1) a review of government policies, 2) surveys on NP/PA workforce characteristics, and 3) surveys on intake in NP/PA training programs. Results: Until 2012, the annual intake into NP and PA training programs was comparable to the number of subsidized training places. In 2012, a 131% increase in intake coincided with extending the legal scope of practice of NPs and PAs and substantially increasing subsidized NP/PA training places. However, in 2013, the intake of NP and PA trainees decreased by 23% and 24%, respectively. The intake decreased in hospitals, (nursing) home care, and mental healthcare, coinciding with fiscal austerity in these sectors. We found that other policies, such as legal acknowledgment, reimbursement, and funding platforms and research, do not consistently coincide with NP/PA training and employment trends. The ratios of NPs and PAs to medical doctors increased substantially in all healthcare sectors from 3.5 and 1.0 per 100 full-time equivalents in medical doctors in 2012 to 11.0 and 3.9 in 2022, respectively. For NPs, the ratios vary between 2.5 per 100 full-time equivalents in medical doctors in primary care and 41.9 in mental healthcare. PA-medical doctor ratios range from 1.6 per 100 full-time equivalents in medical doctors in primary care to 5.8 in hospital care. Conclusions: This study reveals that specific policies coincided with NP and PA workforce growth. Sudden and severe fiscal austerity coincided with declining NP/PA training intake. Furthermore, governmental training subsidies coincided and were likely associated with NP/PA workforce growth. Other policy measures did not consistently coincide with trends in intake in NP/PA training or employment. The role of extending the scope of practice remains to be determined. The skill mix is shifting toward an increasing share of medical care provided by NPs and PAs in all healthcare sectors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Curricular Approaches to Transgender Health in Physician Assistant Education
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Rolls, Joanne, Davis, John, Backman, Richard, Wood, Tim, and Honda, Trenton
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Health Services and Systems ,Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Quality Education ,Adult ,Curriculum ,Female ,Health Services for Transgender Persons ,Humans ,Male ,Physician Assistants ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,United States ,Clinical Sciences ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,General & Internal Medicine ,Curriculum and pedagogy ,Health services and systems - Abstract
PurposeAccording to the Williams Institute, 1.4 million U.S. adults identify as transgender. Many experience health care disparities. Professional organizations call for medical education to improve transgender care, but what curricula are being delivered is unknown. The goal of this study was to conduct the first comprehensive, national survey of transgender health care curricula in physician assistant (PA) education.MethodThe authors sent a questionnaire to program directors (PDs) at all 236 U.S. PA programs in June 2018. They categorized programs as those that currently deliver at least 1 hour of transgender health content and those who do not (Teaching/Not Teaching). They examined differences between Teaching and Not Teaching programs using chi-square tests, and they evaluated comments for themes.ResultsThe response rate was 100%. Of the 236 programs, 202 (85.6%) teach transgender content and 34 (14.4%) do not. According to PDs, most transgender content was delivered in medical interviewing (44.1%) or women's health (31.4%) and the most common transgender health topics included differentiating between sex and gender and between behavior and identity (78.8%), followed by health disparities (77.5%) and barriers to care (75.0%). PDs most commonly cited a lack of time (51.3%) and faculty knowledge (35.6%) as barriers for teaching transgender health topics. Half of the PDs (50.4%) ranked transgender health as very or extremely important. The authors detected statistically significant differences between Teaching and Not Teaching programs based on geographic region (P = .01), perceived importance (P ≤ .001), and presence of knowledgeable faculty (P = .01). Presence of knowledgeable faculty was significantly associated with perceived importance (P = .01).ConclusionsThis is the first comprehensive, nationwide survey of transgender health education in U.S. PA programs. A key finding is that the presence of expert faculty is significantly associated with delivery and perceived importance of transgender health curricula.
- Published
- 2020
44. Redeployment of Orthopaedic Advanced Practice Providers at Academic Medical Centers During the COVID-19 Pandemic
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Kidd, Vasco Deon
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Prevention ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Good Health and Well Being ,Academic Medical Centers ,COVID-19 ,Coronavirus Infections ,Humans ,Nurse Practitioners ,Orthopedic Nursing ,Orthopedics ,Pandemics ,Physician Assistants ,Pneumonia ,Viral ,United States ,Nursing - Abstract
The novel coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) represents a rapidly evolving pandemic. Health systems are scrambling to mobilize and redeploy their medical staff in the fight against COVID-19. Orthopaedic nurse practitioners/physician assistants should be part of any redeployment strategy to address unmet needs during these unprecedented times. This article discusses redeployment considerations and strategies that utilize these providers appropriately while mitigating risks.
- Published
- 2020
45. Interest in Medication and Aspiration Abortion Training among Colorado Nurse Practitioners, Nurse Midwives, and Physician Assistants
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Coleman-Minahan, Kate, Sheeder, Jeanelle, Arbet, Jaron, and McLemore, Monica R
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Abortion ,Induced ,Colorado ,Female ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Humans ,Male ,Nurse Midwives ,Nurse Practitioners ,Physician Assistants ,Pregnancy ,Rural Population ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public Health ,Midwifery ,Public health ,Policy and administration - Abstract
ObjectivesWe examined advanced practice clinicians' (APCs: nurse practitioners [NPs], certified nurse midwives [CNMs], physician assistants) interest in training to provide medication and aspiration abortion in Colorado, where abortion provision by APCs is legal.MethodsWe surveyed a stratified random sample of APCs, oversampling women's health (CNMs/women's health nurse practitioners [WHNPs]) and rural APCs. We examined prevalence and predictors of interest in abortion training using weighted χ2 tests.ResultsOf 512 participants (21% response), the weighted sample is 50% NPs, 41% physician assistants, and 9% CNMs/WHNPs; 55% provide primary care. Only 12% are aware they can legally provide abortion. A minority of participants disagree that medication abortion (15%) or aspiration abortion (25%) should be in APC scope of practice. Almost one-third (29%) are interested in medication abortion training and 16% are possibly interested; interest is highest among CNMs/WHNPs (52%) (p
- Published
- 2020
46. An assessment of physician assistant student diversity in the United States: a snapshot for the healthcare workforce
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Carolyn Bradley-Guidry, Nicole Burwell, Ramona Dorough, Vanessa Bester, Gerald Kayingo, and Sumihiro Suzuki
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Diversity ,PA students ,Graduates ,Top-performing PA programs ,Physician Assistants ,Special aspects of education ,LC8-6691 ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background The Physician Assistant (PA) workforce falls short of mirroring national demographics mainly due to a lack of diversity in student enrollment. Few studies have systematically examined diversity across PA programs at the national level, and little is known about best practices for consistently graduating a diverse group of students. We descriptively characterized the extent to which PA programs are graduating a diverse group of students and identified top performing PA programs. Methods Data from the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) were used to calculate the number and proportion of racial or ethnically diverse graduates. The study sample included 139 accredited PA programs that had graduated a minimum of five cohorts from 2014–2018. Within each of the United States Census Divisions, programs were ranked according to the number and proportion of graduates who were underrepresented minority (URM) race, Hispanic ethnicity, and of non-white (URM race, Hispanic, and Asian). Results Amongst PA programs in the United States, a large disparity in the number and proportion of racial and ethnic graduates was observed. Of 34,625 PA graduates, only 2,207 (6.4%) were Hispanic ethnicity and 1,220 (3.5%) were URM race. Furthermore, a large number of diverse graduates came from a small number of top performing programs. Conclusion Despite the abundance of evidence for the need to diversify the healthcare workforce, PA programs have had difficulty recruiting and graduating a diverse group of students. This study provides empirical evidence that PA programs have not been able to attain the level of diversity necessary to shift the lack of diversity in the PA workforce. Based upon this study's findings, the top performing PA programs can be used as role models to establish benchmarks for other programs. The results of this descriptive study are currently being used to guide a qualitative study to identify the top performers’ strategies for success.
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- 2022
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47. The association of physician assistant/associate demographic and practice characteristics with perceptions of value of certification.
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Kozikowski, Andrzej, Morton-Rias, Dawn, Puckett, Kasey, Jeffery, Colette, Mauldin, Sheila, and Goodman, Joshua
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PHYSICIANS' assistants ,DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics ,MALPRACTICE insurance ,CERTIFICATION - Abstract
Background: To determine physician assistant/associate (PA) perceptions of the value of certification and explore how they vary across demographic and practice characteristics. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional online survey between March and April 2020 with PAs participating in the longitudinal pilot program for recertification administered by the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants (NCCPA). The survey was distributed to 18,147 PAs, of which 10,965 participated (60.4% response rate). In addition to descriptive statistics, chi-square tests were conducted on demographics and specialty to examine if perceptions of value of certification (1 global and 10 items measuring specific domains) were associated with a particular PA profile. A series of fully adjusted multivariate logistic regressions were performed, exploring the relationship between PA characteristics and the value of certification items. Results: Most PAs strongly agreed/agreed that certification helps with fulfilling licensure requirements (9,578/10,893; 87.9%), helps with updating medical knowledge (9,372/10,897; 86.0%), and provides objective evidence of continued competence (8,875/10,902; 81.4%). The items receiving the lowest percentage of responses for strongly agreeing/agreeing were for certification providing no value (1,925/10,887; 17.7%), helping with professional liability insurance (5,076/10,889; 46.6%), and competing with other providers for clinical positions (5,661/10,905; 51.9%). Age 55 and older and practicing in dermatology and psychiatry were among the strongest predictors of less favorable views. PAs from underrepresented in medicine (URiM) backgrounds had more positive perceptions. Conclusions: Overall, the findings indicate that PAs value certification; however, perceptions varied by demographics and specialties. PAs who were younger, from URiM backgrounds, and practicing in primary care specialties had among the most favorable perspectives. Continued feedback monitoring is critical in ensuring certification is relevant and meaningful in supporting PAs across demographics and specialties. Measuring PA perceptions of the value of certification is essential to understanding how to support the PA profession's current and future credentialing needs and those who license and hire PAs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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48. Ordering Characteristics Predictive of Noncontrast CT Head Positivity in the Emergency Department.
- Author
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Bhaumik, Debayan, Bhaumik, Smitha S., Thaker, Ashesh A., Timpone, Vincent M., Bills, Corey B., Patten, Luke, Pattee, Jack, Chow, Daniel, Sugrue, Leo P., and Callen, Andrew L.
- Abstract
Recent decades have seen a steady increase in noncontrast head CT utilization in the emergency department with a concurrent rise in the practice of physician assistants (PAs) and nurse practitioners (NPs). The goal of this study was to identify ordering and patient characteristics predictive of positive noncontrast head CTs in the ED. We hypothesized NP/PAs would have lower positivity rates compared to physicians, suggestive of relative overutilization. We retrospectively identified ED patients who underwent noncontrast head CTs at a single institution: a nonlevel 1 trauma center, during a 7-year period, recording examination positivity, ordering provider training/experience, and multiple additional ordering/patient attributes. Exam positivity was defined as any intracranial abnormality necessitating a change in acute management, such as acute hemorrhage, hydrocephalus, herniation, or worsening prior findings. 6624 patients met inclusion criteria. 4.6% (280/6107) of physician exams were positive while 3.7% (19/517) of NP/PA exams were positive; however, differences were not significant. Increasing provider experience was not associated with positivity. Attributes with increased positivity were patient age (p < 0.001), daytime exam (p < 0.05), and indications regarding malignancy (p < 0.001) or focal neurologic deficit (p = 0.001). Attributes with decreased positivity were indications of trauma (p < 0.001) or vertigo/dizziness (p < 0.05). We found no significant difference in rates of exam positivity between physicians and NP/PAs, even accounting for years of experience. This suggests increasing utilization of head CTs in the ED is not due to the increasing presence of NP/PAs, and may be reflective of general practice trends and clear diagnostic algorithms leading to head CT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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49. 상급종합병원 외과계 전담간호사의 직무 역할: 내용분석.
- Author
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임현숙, 정향인, and 최경주
- Subjects
OCCUPATIONAL roles ,OPERATING rooms ,JOB descriptions ,TERTIARY care ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,CONTENT analysis ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) - Abstract
Purpose: This qualitative study aimed to identify the detailed job roles of physician assistants working in surgical departments of tertiary hospitals in Korea. Methods: Data were collected via individual in-depth interviews and analyzed using a content analysis method. Participants were 19 physician assistants (PAs), each of whom had been working for more than one year in tertiary hospitals. Results: Overall, 348 codes were extracted and clustered into 75 subcategories (job roles). Thereafter, 75 subcategories were classified into three categories (nursing roles, medical residents' roles, and physicians' roles). Among 75 PA job roles, 1 (1.3%) was a nursing role, 7 (9.3%) were nursing or medical residents' roles, and 67 (89.4%) were physicians' roles. Physicians' roles were mostly surgery-associated functions performed in a variety of settings in numerous different ways. Conclusion: Establishing educational systems, qualification standards, and payment systems for the PAs and legalizing their professional status are necessary. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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50. Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants: An Underestimated Workforce for Older Adults with Cancer
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Coombs, Lorinda A, Max, Wendy, Kolevska, Tatjana, Tonner, Chris, and Stephens, Caroline
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Cancer ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Aged ,Aged ,80 and over ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Medicare ,Neoplasms ,Nurse Practitioners ,Physician Assistants ,SEER Program ,United States ,cancer workforce ,geriatric oncology ,nurse practitioners ,physician assistants ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivesTo describe the composition of the US provider workforce for adults with cancer older than 65 years and to determine whether there were differences in patients who received care from different providers (eg, nurse practitioners [NPs], physician assistants [PAs], and specialty physicians).DesignObservational, cross-sectional study.SettingAdults within the 2013 Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results cancer registries linked to the Medicare claims database.ParticipantsMedicare beneficiaries who received ambulatory care for any solid or hematologic malignancies.MeasurementsInternational Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9), diagnosis codes were used to identify Medicare patient claims for malignancies in older adults. Providers for those ambulatory claims were identified using taxonomy codes associated with their National Provider Identifier number.ResultsA total of 2.5 million malignancy claims were identified for 201, 237 patients, with 15, 227 providers linked to claims. NPs comprised the largest group (31.5%; n = 4,806), followed by hematology/oncology physicians (27.7%; n = 4,222), PAs (24.7%; n = 3767), medical oncologists (10.9%; n = 661), gynecological oncologists (2.6%; n = 403), and hematologists (2.4%; n = 368). Rural cancer patients were more likely to receive care from NPs (odds ratio [OR] = 1.84; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.65-2.05) or PAs (OR = 1.57; 95% CI = 1.40-1.77) than from physicians. Patients in the South were more likely to receive care from NPs (OR = 1.36; 95% CI = 1.24-1.49).ConclusionsA large proportion of older adults with cancer receive care from NPs and PAs, particularly those who reside in rural settings and in the southern United States. Workforce strategies need to integrate these provider groups to effectively respond to the rising need for cancer care within the older adult population.
- Published
- 2019
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