Hansen-Turton Tine, Ritter Ann, Torgan Rebecca
National Nursing Centers Consortium.
Policy Polit Nurs Pract. 2008 Nov;9(4):241-8. doi: 10.1177/1527154408319450. Epub 2008 Jun 18.
A national survey showed that nearly half of all major managed care organizations in the United States refuse to credential nurse practitioners as primary care providers. In nurse-managed health centers throughout the country, nurse practitioners provide primary care to underserved populations with similar outcomes to primary care physicians. Insurers' prohibitive credentialing and reimbursement policies reduce these centers' capacity for growth and, in turn, threaten the long-term sustainability of a key component of the health care safety net. Two years after conducting a national survey of insurers' credentialing and reimbursement policies regarding primary care nurse practitioners, researchers returned to the subject matter and found that many of the same financial barriers to nurse-managed health center sustainability still exist. Although some progress had been made since 2005, this progress did not appear to be attributable to regulatory changes or renewed enforcement of existing laws.
一项全国性调查显示,美国近一半的主要管理式医疗组织拒绝认可执业护士作为初级保健提供者。在全国各地由护士管理的健康中心,执业护士为服务不足的人群提供初级保健,其治疗效果与初级保健医生相似。保险公司过高的资质认证和报销政策降低了这些中心的发展能力,进而威胁到医疗安全网关键组成部分的长期可持续性。在对保险公司关于初级保健执业护士的资质认证和报销政策进行全国性调查两年后,研究人员再次回到这个主题,发现许多阻碍护士管理的健康中心可持续发展的财务障碍仍然存在。尽管自2005年以来已经取得了一些进展,但这一进展似乎并非归因于监管变化或对现有法律的重新执行。