This article looks at the impact APRNs in the Emergency Department have on cost, quality of care, satisfaction and wait times. The study concludes that Emergency Nurse Practitioners have a positive influence on quality of care, satisfaction and wait times in the ER, but is inconclusive on their impact on cost.
BACKGROUND:
The trauma service experienced preventable delays caused by an Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education work
restrictions and a 16% increase in patient census. Furthermore, nurses needed a consistently accessible provider for the
coordination of care. We hypothesized that using experienced acute care nurse practitioners (ACNPs) on the stepdown unit
would improve throughput and decrease length of stay (LOS) and hospital charges. Moreover, we hypothesized that adding
ACNPs would improve staff satisfaction. On December 1, 2011, the Vanderbilt University Medical Center Division of Trauma
reassigned ACNPs to the stepdown area 5 days a week for a pilot program.
METHODS:
LOS data from December 1, 2011 through December 1, 2012 was compared with data from the same months from the
previous two years and estimated hospital charges and patient days were extrapolated. Physician and nursing surveys were
performed. Data from 2010 (n = 2,559) and 2011 (n= 2,671) were averaged and the mean LOS for the entire trauma service
was 7.2 days. After adding an experienced ACNP, the average LOS decreased to 6.4 days, a 0.8 day reduction. Per patient,
there was a $ 9,111.50 savings in hospital charges, for a reduction of $27.8 million dollars in hospital charges over the
12 month pilot program.
RESULTS:
A confidential survey administered to attending physicians showed that 100% agreed that a nurse practitioner in the
stepdown area was beneficial and helped throughput. Dayshift nurses were surveyed, and 100% agreed or strongly agreed
that the ACNPs were knowledgeable about the patient's plan of care, experienced in the care of trauma patients, and
improved patient care overall.
CONCLUSION:
The addition of experienced ACNPs resulted in the decrease of overall trauma service LOS, saving almost $9 million in
hospital charges
Systematic review of literature on the impact of Nurse Practitioners in Emergency Departments. Limited evidence of high quality. Most high quality evidence conducted in English speaking countries outside the U.S. Evidence suggests NPs in EDs associated with quality care, improved patient satisfaction, reduced wait times. Insufficient evidence related to cost-effectiveness. #BecomingAPRN16
This article asks the question: "Compared to other providers (physicians or
teams without APRNs), are APRN patient outcomes of care similar?"
The study is specific to USA and includes data regarding NPs, CNRAs, and CNMs. Outcomes were determined by the following: patient satisfaction with provider/care, patient self-assessment of perceived health status, functional status, blood glucose, serum lipids, blood pressure, emergency department visits, hospitalization, duration of ventilation, length of stay, and mortality (p9).
This article discusses APRNs working in Title X Family Planning Clinics, what lead them to practice in these clinics, and why they remain practicing in these clinics as new opportunities for APRNs arise. APRNs are described by the authors as 'critical safety nets', as they play a major role in reproductive health services and provide care to vulnerable populations and rural communities. The findings of this study, which collected data through an online survey, can and will be used during policy change decisions to improve APRN satisfaction and retention.
This article discusses the transition from student to an NP's first job. Patterns identified included isolation, loss of relationships, changes in professional relationships, and loss of control. Positive aspects of the transition included gains in personal satisfaction and a professional network.
The transition of newly graduated nurse practitioners (NPs) into practice can be challenging for the employer and the NPs. A new-graduate residency model for NPs along with evaluative criteria is presented from a primary care setting. Residency models are of benefit for new-graduate NPs to ease the transition to practice and promote patient care quality, and nurse retention, and satisfaction.
This article focuses on the Nurse Practitioners contribution to primary care. Randomized trials were performed to help us better understand how Nurse Practitioners compare to Primary Care Physicians in the eyes of patients. Conclusions showed that patients outcomes were equivalent in their satisfaction, physical, social and emotional functioning when compared to seeing a Physician versus a Nurse Practitioner. It was also found during the studies that lower costs of care was associated with NP's.
This article discusses the benefits and pit-falls to autonomous primary care Nurse practitioner practice and advocates for cost effective improvements to our healthcare system. The research suggests that Nurse practitioners who practice independently report greater job satisfaction, improved patient outcomes and provide low cost, high quality services that are equal or superior to primary care physicians. Unfortunately, current healthcare reimbursement models, policies and reluctant physicians have created barriers to autonomous NP practices. The author suggests that autonomous practice requires further research across the U.S, the establishment of a well-defined model and the evaluation of patient outcomes, in order to determine whether the present day Nurse Practitioner requires future collaborative agreements with physicians, in order to provide quality patient care across the United States.