Martin-Misener Ruth, McNab John, Sketris Ingrid S, Edwards Lynn
School of Nursing, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS.
Nurs Leadersh (Tor Ont). 2004 May;17(2):33-45. doi: 10.12927/cjnl.2004.16345.
Recently attention has been focussed on the significance of primary care to the Canadian healthcare system. Nova Scotia. Like other provinces, is seeking ways to improve the healthcare that it provides within a financially constrained publicly funded system. The Strengthening Primary Care Initiative in Nova Scotia (SPCI) was a primary care demonstration project to evaluate specific goals related to primary care. Although the provincial government conceived the SPCI, the approach to its planning and implementation was participatory and consultative. Funded through the federal Health Transition Fund (HTF) (Health Canada 2002) and the government of Nova Scotia, the SPCI involved changes in four communities over a three-year period (2000-2002). These changes included the introduction of a primary healthcare nurse practitioner in collaborative practice with one or more family physicians; remuneration of the family physician(s) with methods other than a solely fee-for-service (FFS) arrangement; and the introduction and utilization of a computerized patient medical record. The SPCI was committed to a consultative process with stakeholders, and this gave rise to several challenges. Initially there was disagreement on the requirement for nurse practitioners at each of the demonstration sites. The Minister of Health confirmed that a nurse practitioner was a required component at each demonstration site. Differences in perspectives on the role of allied health professionals in the SPCI were encountered, and the significance of the role pharmacists have in primary care was not fully appreciated until after the SPCI had started. At the time the SPCI began there was no legislation for nurse practitioners in Nova Scotia; therefore, an approval mechanism for nurse practitioner practice was authorized through the provincial regulatory bodies for nursing and medicine. Malpractice and liability issues, particularly on the part of providers who had never worked with nurse practitioners before, were an initial concern. Recruitment of nurse practitioners into the three rural sites mirrored the difficulties with recruitment of healthcare providers encountered in other parts of rural Canada. The authors discuss their perspectives on the challenges related to interdisciplinary collaboration in health systems change that were encountered during the planning and implementation of the SPCI. Although nurse practitioner Legislation has existed in Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador for several years, many provinces are grappling with the challenges associated with the introduction of nurse practitioners and collaborative practice. This paper conveys the experience of one province and will be of interest to administrators, educators and practitioners elsewhere in Canada who are engaged in primary healthcare renewal.
最近,人们的注意力集中在初级保健对加拿大医疗体系的重要性上。新斯科舍省和其他省份一样,正在寻求在财政紧张的公共资助体系内改善其提供的医疗服务的方法。新斯科舍省加强初级保健倡议(SPCI)是一个初级保健示范项目,旨在评估与初级保健相关的具体目标。尽管该项目由省政府构思,但规划和实施方法具有参与性和协商性。SPCI由联邦健康转型基金(HTF)(加拿大卫生部,2002年)和新斯科舍省政府资助,在三年时间(2000 - 2002年)里涉及四个社区的变革。这些变革包括引入一名初级保健护士从业者与一名或多名家庭医生合作执业;采用非单一按服务收费(FFS)安排的方式对家庭医生进行薪酬支付;以及引入和使用计算机化的患者病历。SPCI致力于与利益相关者进行协商过程,这引发了一些挑战。最初,各示范地点对护士从业者的需求存在分歧。卫生部长确认护士从业者是每个示范地点的必要组成部分。在SPCI中,人们对辅助医疗专业人员的角色存在不同观点,而且直到SPCI启动后,药剂师在初级保健中的作用的重要性才得到充分认识。在SPCI开始时,新斯科舍省没有关于护士从业者的立法;因此,通过省级护理和医学监管机构授权了护士从业者执业的审批机制。医疗事故和责任问题,特别是对于以前从未与护士从业者合作过的提供者来说,是最初的一个担忧。在三个农村地点招聘护士从业者反映了加拿大农村其他地区在招聘医疗服务提供者时遇到的困难。作者讨论了他们对在SPCI规划和实施过程中遇到的与卫生系统变革中的跨学科合作相关挑战的看法。尽管安大略省、纽芬兰和拉布拉多省已经有护士从业者立法多年,但许多省份仍在应对引入护士从业者和合作执业相关的挑战。本文传达了一个省份的经验,对于加拿大其他地方从事初级医疗保健更新工作的管理人员、教育工作者和从业者来说会感兴趣。