Huang Patty Y, Yano Elizabeth M, Lee Martin L, Chang Betty L, Rubenstein Lisa V
VA Greater Los Angeles HSR&D Center of Excellence, Sepulveda, CA 91343, USA
Health Serv Res. 2004 Aug;39(4 Pt 1):887-904. doi: 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2004.00263.x.
Increasingly, primary care practices include nurse practitioners (NPs) in their staffing mix to contain costs and expand primary care. To achieve these aims in U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers (VAMCs), national policy endorsed involvement of NPs as primary care (PC) providers.
To evaluate the degree to which VAMCs incorporated NPs into PC practices between 1996 and 1999, and to identify the internal and external practice environment features associated with NP use.
We surveyed 131 PC directors of all VAMCs in 1996 and 1999 to ascertain the staffing and characteristics of the PC practice and parent organization (e.g., academic affiliation, level of physician staffing, use of managed care arrangements), and drew on previously published studies and HRSA State Health Workforce Profiles to characterize each practice's regional health care environment (e.g., geographic region, state NP practice laws, state managed care penetration). Using multivariate linear regression, we evaluate the contribution of these environmental and organizational factors on the number of NPs/10,000 PC patients in 1999, controlling for the rate of NP use in 1996.
From 1996-1999, NP use increased from 75 percent to 90 percent in VA PC practices. The mean number of NPs per practice increased by about 60 percent (2.0 versus 3.2; p<.001), while the rate of NPs/10,000 PC patients trended upward (2.2 versus 2.7; p=.09). Staffing of other primary care clinicians (e.g., physicians and physician assistants per practice) remained stable, while the NP-per-physician rate increased (0.2 versus 0.4; p<.001). After multivariate adjustment, greater reliance on managed-care-oriented provider education programs (p=.02), the presence of NP training programs (p=.05), and more specialty-trained physicians/10,000 PC patients (p=.09) were associated with greater NP involvement in primary care.
Staffing models in VA PC practices have, in fact, changed, with NPs having a greater presence. However, we found substantial practice-based variations in their use, suggesting that more research is needed to better understand how they have been integrated into practice and what impact their involvement has had on the VA's ability to achieve its restructuring goals.
基层医疗实践越来越多地将执业护士纳入其人员配置组合中,以控制成本并扩大基层医疗服务。为了在美国退伍军人事务部医疗中心(VAMC)实现这些目标,国家政策认可执业护士作为基层医疗(PC)提供者的参与。
评估1996年至1999年间退伍军人事务部医疗中心将执业护士纳入基层医疗实践的程度,并确定与执业护士使用相关的内部和外部实践环境特征。
我们在1996年和1999年对所有退伍军人事务部医疗中心的131名基层医疗主任进行了调查,以确定基层医疗实践和上级组织的人员配置及特征(如学术隶属关系、医生人员配备水平、管理式医疗安排的使用情况),并借鉴先前发表的研究和卫生资源与服务管理局的州卫生人力概况来描述每个实践的区域医疗环境(如州执业护士实践法、州管理式医疗渗透率)。使用多元线性回归,我们评估这些环境和组织因素对1999年每10000名基层医疗患者中执业护士数量的贡献,并控制1996年执业护士的使用比例。
从1996年到1999年,退伍军人事务部基层医疗实践中执业护士的使用率从75%提高到了90%。每个实践中执业护士的平均数量增加了约60%(从2.0名增加到3.2名;p<0.001),而每10000名基层医疗患者中执业护士的比例呈上升趋势(从2.2名增加到2.7名;p=0.09)。其他基层医疗临床医生的人员配置(如每个实践中的医生和医师助理)保持稳定,而执业护士与医生的比例增加(从0.2增加到0.4;p<0.001)。经过多元调整后,更多地依赖以管理式医疗为导向的提供者教育项目(p=0.02)、存在执业护士培训项目(p=0.05)以及每10000名基层医疗患者中有更多经过专科培训的医生(p=0.09)与执业护士更多地参与基层医疗相关。
事实上,退伍军人事务部基层医疗实践中的人员配置模式已经发生了变化,执业护士的比例更高。然而,我们发现其使用情况在基于实践的层面上存在很大差异,这表明需要更多的研究来更好地理解它们是如何融入实践的,以及它们的参与对退伍军人事务部实现其重组目标的能力产生了什么影响。