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Wednesday, September 14th, 2011 12:45 pm
Governor Jerry Brown will speak at the National Nurses United (NNU) union's convention this evening, Lieutenant Gov. Gavin Newsom is scheduled to address the organization tomorrow morning, and filmmaker Michael Moore is slated to speak to at the conference on Friday. Over 1,000 nurses are scheduled to attend the convention in San Francisco.
NNU is also actively engaged in a "campaign for a tax on Wall Street financial speculation in order to provide revenue for Main Street reforms, including jobs at living wages, guaranteed healthcare for all, and freedom from hunger, homelessness, and retirement insecurity." (NNU, Media Advisory, 9/13/11)
Filed under: california board of vocational nursing and psychiatric technicians, California Healthcare, California Politics, Medical Board of California, Nursing, Nursing Association, Nursing Union
by
Kevin Murphy
Tags: Board of Nursing Attorney, Board of Nursing Defense Attorney, Board of Nursing Defense Lawyer, board of nursing san diego, California Board of Nursing Defense Lawyer, California board of registered nursing, California Nurse, California State Board of Nursing; Cal. Nursing Board Discipline, Facebook Healthcare Attorney, National Nurses United, Nursing UnionNo Comments »
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Thursday, April 29th, 2010 7:33 am
Nurse Practitioners prime candidates for Primary Caregivers in the face of Dr. Shortages:
Nurse practitioners are going to play an integral role as primary caregivers, filling the void left by massive physician shortages throughout the United States. (Stuart, 4/28/10). The Association of Medical Colleges reports that the U.S. may be facing a 150,000 doctor shortage by 2025. (Chapman, 4/18/10 Chicago Tribune "Nursing our way out of a doctor shortage"). The American Medical Association estimates the doctor shortage to equal a deficit of 85,000 by the year 2020. Regardless, the data is evident that doctors are facing extraordinary understaffing difficulties at the same time they are facing astronomical increases in their patient loads.
28 States currently have introduced legislation designed to expand the role of advanced practice nurses to that of Primary Caregiver. ("Fewer doctors may lead to more patients seeing nurse practitioners") Several states already allow independent advanced nursing practice, and many other states are currently seeking to fill the void left by a lack of physicians. Oklahoma is currently seeking to expand nurse practitioners' roles (Coburn 4/21/10 "Officials look to PAs, nurse practitioners for aid in physician shortage"), as well as Oregon, Washington, California. (Johnson AP 4/14/10 "Shortage may mean a bigger role for nurse practitioners"), New York (Gordon 4/25/10 "Take advantage, New York, of our nurse practitioners)
Nurse practitioners, or "advanced practice nurses," are highly trained registered nurses who usually possess a masters degree or a doctorate in a specialized nursing discipline. Nurse practitioners have advanced education, experience and training in the diagnosis, treatment and management of common illnesses (Parker, ehow "Nurse Practitioners & Patient Education). The American Academy of Nurse Practitioners indicates that 95% of advanced practice nurses already prescribe medications, writing an estimated 19 prescriptions per day.
Healthcare Reform impact on doctor shortages:
32 Million more Americans are anticipated to be included in the healthcare patient pool as a result of the recently passed healthcare reform legislation. (4/14/10 "Use nurse practitioners to reduce doctor shortage") This large number of additional patients will further exacerbate physician shortages across the country. Medicare typically reimburses nurse practitioners at a lower rate than doctors are reimbursed, which could end up saving millions of dollars at a time when our economy is in dire need of reducing government spending. Maryland columnist Jay Hancock explains that nurse practitioners should be allowed to practice completely independently from physician supervision, and that they are already allowed to practice independently in Washington, Oregon, Alaska, Washington D.C. (Hancock, The Baltimore Sun "Md. should make nurse practitioners independent").(Stuart, 4/28/10 "Nurse practitioners key to unlocking healthcare access").
Doctors are beginning to mount opposition to such measures arguing that allowing nurse practitioners to usurp physicians' roles will place patients at risk. Dr. Daniel Carey, President of the Medical Society of Virginia, has stated, "When you talk about increasing the scope of practice of nurse practitioners...we have problems with that. They are not acknowledging the significant difference in training." (Smith 4/26/10 "Health reform may expand non-physician roles") The American Medical Assoc. (AMA) President James Rohack has said, "increasing the responsibility of nurses is not the answer to the physician shortage." (Bagg, 4/19/10) "Doctors have shown up in white coats to testify against nurse practitioner bills. The AMA, which supported the national health care overhaul, says that a doctor should supervise an NP at all times and in all settings. Just because there is a doctor shortage, the AMA argues, is no reason to put nurses in charge and endanger patients." Associated Press; Maher 4/19/10 "Hey Nursie!" The Battle over Letting Nurse Practitioners Provide Primary Care"). One critic claims "doctors went to their medical schools for a reason, and allowing a nurse to take over their roles is a short-sighted way of solving these shortages." (Joyner, 4/18/10 "Let doctors, not nurses, doctor")
Nurse practitioners have accumulated their own support, and are beginning to form their own professional associations across the nation. (Gallaher, 4/22/10 "Whatcom County nurse practitioners form new professional association"). Univ. of Southern Indiana Professor Daniel Lucky describes the difference between Nurse Practitioners and Physicians as not being education or professional qualifications but instead it is their healthcare approach, "NP practice is based on the nursing model of care -- not the medical approach...Nursing teaches us that we should not reduce human beings to mere signs and symptoms, place a disease on someone, give them a pill and send them off. As nurses we are trained to look at the entire patient from a holistic perspective and then, actively partner with the patient and family to not only correct problems, but also enhance optimal health. Nursing care places the patient -- not the provider -- as the central focal point." (Beaulieu, 4/14/10 "Expanding roles of nurse practitioners stir controversy"). In fact, the Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation recently released a report recommending immediate removal of legal and financial barriers preventing advanced practice nurses from providing primary care. (Glenn, 4/20/10 "Nurse practitioners new primary care providers?") Nurse practitioners assert that they are not trying to infringe on doctors' specialities, but are a critical resource in providing patient care in this time of dire need. (West, 4/27/10 "Not looking to replace doctors") In actuality, nurse practitioners do not commit malpractice as often as physicians or, at least, they are not sued as often -- only 1.4% of Nurse Practitioners are named as a primary defendant in medical malpractice lawsuits. (Stuart, 4/28/10 "Nurse practitioners key to unlocking health care access")
Conclusion -- Let the Nurses Doctor!
Murphy Jones LLP represent nurses in licensing, discipline and malpractice matters and are intimately familiar with the nursing profession, and have full confidence in nurses' abilities to render superb healthcare to patients.As healthcare attorneys, we support the expansion of nurse practitioners' primary care roles provided that they do not usurp the proper functions of physicians. Physicians are adept with dealing with advanced diseases and treatments for complex disorders; whereas advanced practice nurses are more than capable of diagnosing common diseases and disorders, and prescribing medications to treat patients. A 2000 study published by the Journal of the American Medical Association reported that patients of nurse practitioners recovered as well or better than patients under the supervision of a primary care physician. A main benefit of expanding nurse practitioners' roles is that they manage patients with current illnesses and simultaneously teach patients how to stay healthy. This is exactly the type of care America needs if we are going to improve the overall health of our citizens and simultaneously lower health care costs. Often times, patient satisfaction is higher among patients receiving care from an advanced practice nurse as opposed to a licensed physician. (British Medical Journal 4/6/10 "Systemic review of whether nurse practioners working in primary care can provide equivalent care to doctors") So with happier and healthier patient results coupled with reduced costs and government spending, allowing nurse practitioners to use their knowledge helping patients while reducing the doctor shortage voids is common sense and good business judgment.
As the old adage says, "Doctors diagnose, Nurses HEAL!" So why not let nurse practitioners do both?!
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Filed under: Administrative Law, California Board of Pharmacy, California Healthcare, California Politics, Healthcare Law, Legal Insights, Medical Malpractice, Nevada Healthcare, Nevada Politics, Nursing, Nursing Association
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Kevin Murphy
Tags: Administrative Law, Advanced Practice Nurse Attorney, attorney medical malpractice, Board of Chiropractic Examiners Attorney, Board of Chiropractic Examiners Lawyer, board of nursing california, board of nursing san diego, Board of Pharmacy Attorney, Board of Pharmacy Lawyer, Board of Registered Nursing Attorney, Board of Registered Nursing Defense, Board of Registered Nursing Defense Attorney, california board of medicine, California board of registered nursing, California Nurse, California Nurses Association, California state board of nursing, California State Board of Nursing; Cal. Nursing Board Discipline, Direct Supervision of Nurses, Doctor Shortage, Facebook Healthcare Attorney, Facebook Medical Attorney, Healthcare Discipline Defense, Healthcare Reform Effect on Nursing, Healthcare Reform Impact on Nurse Practitioners, Healthcare Reform Impact on Nurses, Healthcare Reform Impact on Nursing, las vegas nursing board, Medical Board Attorney, Medical Board Lawyer, nevada board of nursing, Nevada Board of Registered Nursing, Nevada Board of Registered Nursing Attorney, nevada state board of nursing, Nurse Practitioner Attorney, Nurse Practitioner Business Attorney, Nurse Practitioners, Nurse Practitioners business attorney, Nurse Practitioners expanding role, Nurse Practitioners Lawyer, Nursing Board Attorney, Nursing Discipline, Personal injury attorney in san diego, Politics, state boards of nursing, Twitter Healthcare Attorney, twitter.com/HealthAttorneys18 Comments »
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Sunday, November 8th, 2009 12:38 pm
Aspiring nurses must complete fingerprinting with LiveScan, and the board must receive the results from the Dept. of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation which can take 3 – 6 weeks. As of August 10, 2009, the Board is no longer issuing interim or temporary licenses prior to the completion of the fingerprinting process. This process can be lengthy and should be prepared in advanced to ensure timely licensing and/or certification. If you need help with the licensing process, contact our attorneys for a consultation.
http://www.rn.ca.gov/
Filed under: Administrative Law, Civil Litigation, Legal Insights, Medical Malpractice, Nursing, Nursing Association, Personal Injury Law
by
Kevin Murphy
Tags: attorney medical malpractice, board of nursing california, board of nursing san diego, California board of registered nursing, California Nurse, california nursing license, California state board of nursing, las vegas medical malpractice, las vegas nursing board, medical malpractice law firms, nevada board of nursing, nevada state board of nursing, Nurse Fingerprint, Personal injury attorney in san diego, Personal injury lawyer in san diego, san diego medical malpractice, san diego medical malpractice attorney, state boards of nursing1 Comment »
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