Skip to main content

Home/ Emory Becoming an APRN/ Group items tagged DNP

Rss Feed Group items tagged

mmgray

Scope of Practice Barriers for Advanced Practice Registered Nurses - 6 views

If the previous hyperlink does not show the full text, I have included an additional link below from the Emory Library. http://emory-primoprod.hosted.exlibrisgroup.com/primo_library/libweb/action/...

APRN Practice Scope Policy

cdchongo

The Practice Doctorate in Nursing: Future or Fringe? - 0 views

  •  
    An interesting article that opines about the DNP. Here's a fairly provocative quote: "When viewed together, doctorally prepared nurses do not spend the majority of their time in direct patient care, but rather in research (11%), education (32%), and administration (30%). With these demanding roles, they cannot be expected to maintain expert levels of clinical competence required for teaching APN students. While research and practice are critical components of nursing, each requires a different skill set and education."
Hannah Addis

Nurse Practitioners: Shaping the Future of Health Care - Evolution - 0 views

  • A major factor that supported the development and evolution of the Nurse Practitioner role in the 1960s was lack of access to health services. The American public’s struggles to gain access to primary care and preventive services are certainly nothing new, and this need crosses socioeconomic lines.
  • Certification programs that focused on training the practitioner to work in a specific field followed specialization, and were sometimes tied to state licensure requirements.
  • By the early 1980s, nurse practitioner education moved into graduate programs and by 1981, most states required graduate degrees for nurse practitioner practice.  In response to the scientific knowledge explosion, programs kept adding new courses, expanding their length and their credit loads. By the turn of the 21st century, most nurse practitioner programs credit hours far exceeded those in other graduate programs. At the same time there was a growing movement towards practice doctorates in other professions and this led educators to think about new types of nurse practitioner programs. By 2005, the Doctorate of Nursing Practice (DNP) became the newest level of practitioner training, giving credit for the breadth of content in the nurse practitioner programs.
  •  
    This is a nice synopsis of key moments in history that have triggered the growth and development of the NP role in the US.
abecklen

Moving Forward Together: The Practice Doctorate in Nursing - 1 views

  •  
    Discusses the evolution of the Doctorate in Nursing (DNP) degree. Includes an interesting discussion of the "Myths vs. Realities" of various points of debate on this topic.
jstanto

Using Clinical Residency to Transition from Novice to Expert - Is it essential? - 0 views

  •  
    My intended area of practice is in HIV nursing. In my last post I provided a link to the competencies needed to be an advanced practice nurse in the field, and I talked a little bit about steps I'm taking to close that gap. To hopefully move me along the continuum from novice to expert. I thought this article was interesting and provided a broader approach in how nurses might use residency program for exactly that purpose. The article talks about DNPs but it is no different for the MSN prepared nurse. It seems that residencies may become more the norm in the future - and that might be good for all, new nurses and patients alike.
mhollyc

Perceptions of the Role of the Doctor of Nursing Practice-Prepared Nurse: Clarity or Co... - 1 views

http://www.professionalnursing.org/article/S8755-7223(15)00005-8/fulltext (For full access, search for Journal of Professional Nursing through Emory Library website) The above research article desc...

DNP nomenclature education standardization terminal degree

started by mhollyc on 28 Aug 17 no follow-up yet
1 - 6 of 6
Showing 20 items per page