Obamacare Means Expanded Roles for Nurse Practitioners

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As Obamacare draws millions of previously uninsured Americans into the healthcare system, the shortage of physicians will become increasingly acute. So who will care for this avalanche of new patients?
 
State laws restrict the practice of medicine and those who are allowed to prescribe medications to licensed physicians. This may be changing as states expand the role of non-physicians.
 
Dr. Amesh Adalja, a quadruple board-certified physician notes that for many conditions, a nurse practitioner may begin to fill the gap. Using non-physicians to provide care in certain instances provides increased access to healthcare and may even reduce the cost of healthcare.
 
Predictably, physician trade associations have expressed their opposition to this physician-independent practice of medicine. Limiting medical practice to only state-licensed physicians limits a patient’s healthcare choices, forcing patients to opt for the costlier services of a physician. Yaron Brook and Don Watkins, authors of a Free Market Revolution, feel that the current physician licensing laws are simply “a way to establish an anti-competitive guild system.” The system is kept alive by laws that tout patient safety and by physician-paid fees to state medical boards to the tune of $6.5 billion a year. While medical boards certify physicians, these certifications don’t guarantee a physician’s proficiency. This is why hospitals and third-party payers frequently insist on additional qualifications before hiring a physician or paying for care at full rates.
 
Expanding a nurse practitioner’s authority to treat patients has been opposed by the American Medical Association (AMA), the American Academy of Family Physicians, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Osteopathic Association, which all support direct supervision of NPs by physicians.
 
Physicians may have to give in as Obamacare kicks in. "That horse has already left the barn," says Linda Aiken, professor of nursing at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing and director of the Center for Health Outcomes and Policy Research. "With Obamacare coming in and millions of people getting insurance, there is no other way to provide them with reasonable access in the short term except to expand the role of NPs and physician assistants (PAs). It takes 20 years to train a doctor, so there isn't any alternative." 
 
Clearly, a physician’s expertise and training is preferred for complicated medical conditions. That said, other simple conditions could be as effectively served by a physician’s assistant, a nurse practitioner or a nurse midwife.
 
While the government should “watchdog” physicians who defraud patients or materially misrepresent themselves, it should limit its role in the provider-patient relationship. This means allowing patients to seek the help of a physician’s assistant or nurse practitioner, without being hamstrung by unwieldy licensing laws and guild-minded state government medical boards.

Image courtesy of imagerymajestic / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
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  • Jerry P
    Jerry P
    Nurse Practitioners and P.A.'s are the ideal caregivers for the high cost frail elderly with multiple chronic conditions- delivering the bulk of their care in their home.  It is still a good idea for mid-levels to have a collaborating physician backup for the times when more knowledge is required.  ACO's are going to drive a lot of the care to the home- using N.P.'s and P.A.'s.
  • vincent s
    vincent s
    i think this country will go broke- with  the obama care kicks in.-but i maybe wrong. and i do not think it right for obama to force the people of this great country to go along with his obamacare.and if we dont then we will be fine.we are a free people of this country.i hope i am right on this to.this country does not belong to obama.
  • Eileen P
    Eileen P
    I have worked in the healthcare industry for 26 years.  In all of my positions, I have interacted with nurse practioners and physician assistants.  I think they are well trained and can handle many of the issues in a physician's office.   Patient care will not suffer is there is adequate communication between providers.
  • Beverly C
    Beverly C
    You have your facts wrong. Physician Assistants prescribe medications. They also see patients autonomously with supervision by MD. The only change necessary to help in the upcoming shortage is to increase the number of PAs an MD may supervise.
  • Beverly S
    Beverly S
    I have an associate degree in Medical Office Specialist. This I am having problems getting employment. What can I do to enhance my schooling in the medical field? Ex. Phelbotomy. Or nurse but many nurses' that I know can not get employment. I am very concerned but when I try to help and to further what I love to do there are always road blocks. Appreciate a reply. Thank You
  • Rose V
    Rose V
    I like the idea of NP's and PA's being able to care for patients and prescribes scripts and treatments.I do not like the implication that NP's and PA's shoudl get paid less for the same work as a physicain and I do not like that the article implies that APN's can't handle complicated cases.
  • Andrea T
    Andrea T
    It takes 20 yrs to train a physician   how long do you think ittakes to train a physicians assistant or an  nurse practitioner?
  • Nettie H
    Nettie H
    I have always been of the opinion we as NP's really do not need MD's to supervise us. Collaboration sure.
  • Chris G
    Chris G
    NP good option. Most PA's not enough training, not equipped with knowledge.
  • Angela T
    Angela T
    I feel they should expand the care of np and pa to help rectify the situation instead of making the matter worse or more expensive healthcare is already barely affordable
  • Judy Z
    Judy Z
    ITS THE INSURANCE COMPANIES THAT HAVE THE PROBLEMS WITH PAYING FOR THE SERVICES PROVIDED BY THESE INDIVIDUALS
  • Kimberly J
    Kimberly J
    I think every person in this country should have access to insurance. People die in this country just because they cannot afford healthcare.
  • Octavian C
    Octavian C
    doctors have to do their jobs that's why they are learning for 20years.OK!
  • Patricia K
    Patricia K
    As a registered nurse for 38 years and a Nurse Practitioner for 12 years I do feel competent to care for many adult patients, relating to health promotion, disease and medication management as well as diagnosing and treating multiple health issues.  We are an integral member of the health care team and those who are not willing to accept and utilize our skills are only placing a multitude of patients at risk for denial of health care
  • Deborah P
    Deborah P
    I believe that Nurse Practitioners play a vital role in the healthcare industry; as well as the Physician Assistants. However, I do not agree that Nurse Practitioners should be treated differently than the Physician Assistants. If the Physician Assistants as the name implied is supervised by the licensed Medical Practitioner (MD), this should also apply to the Nurse Practitioners as well.If you give such strong powers to the Nurse Practitioners you are in essence saying they are as well educated as the medical doctors although they are not. You are saying they can made all medical sound decisions without the support of a real physician. What should happen if the NP (Nurse Practitioner provide incorrect information or medicate treatment to a patient and the patient sues? Will the NP be required to acquire their own malpractice insurance without the support of a license physician.As it stands now, there are some barriers in place to prevent NP's from believing they are medical doctors. If you remove these barriers when you have so many licensed organizations such as:American Medical Association (AMA),American Academy of Family Physicians, American Academy of Pediatrics and theAmerican Osteopathic AssociationIf all these verified, licensed agencies believe that NP should be supervisors, I'd say based on their knowledge, experiences and factual data there is a reason. If Obamacare is going to create high risk medical care for consumer, then there is certainly a problem and there could be an increase in patients receiving poor medical advice at the same time.I, for one, have had the experience of a nurse practitioner and for the most part they serve their roles well for non-threatening ailments. However, they are nurses with a Master's Degree and not doctors. Their decision authority should not be at the same level of a doctors.By moving forward with the Nurse Practitioner out of demand for general medical care, and advancing their role you put all of us consumers at a disadvantage and you gradually start minimizing the role of the Medical Doctor (MD). You in essence are sending us back in time where nurses did have such a high role in the medical profession. My question is why were they removed from this role in the first place; and there is data to support that decision as well.Consumer's today want everything fast, but they do not consumer the risk of fast results. Meeting the growing need of more people needed healthcare, but advancing the role of NP is outrageous.
  • Dr. Robert N
    Dr. Robert N
    Doctors of Chiropractic are licensed physicians in most states and because they receive much of the same training as MD's and DO's are already considered primary care physicians in states such ad Illinois.  Hospitals are already reaching out to many DC's in an effort to bring them on board as well.  With Obamacare putting an emphasis on preventive care and many patients inclinations toward a more natural, conservative approach, DC's are ideally fitted for expanded roles in our healthcare system.
  • Alex Kecskes
    Alex Kecskes
    David:  Check out my article, Real Financial Aid for Nursing Students at http://www.beyond.com/articles/details-5615-article.html
  • David M
    David M
    I'm wondering what's going to change in becoming a NURSE?Schooling at this time has gotten to expensive for me to think about & if there is another way to get educated on becoming a NURSE, I'm open to anything to get me there.Thank you

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