Landsperger Janna S, Williams Kristina Jill, Hellervik Susan M, Chassan Cherry B, Flemmons Lisa N, Davidson Stephanie R, Evans Emily R, Bacigalupo Mary E, Wheeler Arthur P
Division of Allergy, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Vanderbilt Medical Center, Nashville, TN 37232-2650, USA.
Hosp Pract (1995). 2011 Apr;39(2):32-9. doi: 10.3810/hp.2011.04.392.
Demands for critical care services are increasing, but the supply of qualified physicians is not. Moreover, there are mounting national expectations for continuous on-site, senior providers and for adherence to quality and safety practices. In teaching institutions, manpower shortages are exacerbated by shrinking trainee duty hours, and there is a growing desire to recoup the revenue lost when a non-credentialed provider delivers a service. Increasingly, hospitalists and acute-care nurse practitioners (ACNPs) are meeting these needs. This article describes the development of an ACNP service in a university hospital medical intensive care unit (ICU) designed to improve the range and quality of services and faculty staffing when the ICU expanded from 22 to 34 beds without adding physicians. Eight ACNPs were hired and, over 9 months, received didactic, procedural, simulation center, and supervised patient care training. Progressive workload and graded responsibility were used to transition to a 24-hour, in-house, resident-independent, attending-supervised service, which now admits just under half of all patients (3.4 ± 1.3 patients/day), cares for approximately one-fourth of the unit's critically ill patients (6.0 ± 1.4 patients/day), and responds to medical rapid response team calls daily (1.5 ± 1.7 calls/day). Over the first 5 months of operation, work output in all categories continued to increase, with ACNPs documenting an average of 11.1 ± 2.7 activities per day (all data mean ± standard deviation). Acute-care nurse practitioners also provide 40% of the daily resident core lectures and a monthly staff nurse conference. Insufficient data exist at this time, however, to report accurate billing or collection results. Specific areas discussed within this article include service structure, hiring and training, implementation, scheduling, supervision, problems encountered, productivity, monitoring, and future plans.
对重症监护服务的需求不断增加,但合格医生的供应却没有跟上。此外,全国对持续的现场高级医疗服务提供者以及对质量和安全规范的遵守期望也在不断提高。在教学机构中,实习医生值班时间的减少加剧了人力短缺的问题,而且人们越来越希望挽回非资质提供者提供服务时所损失的收入。医院医生和急性护理执业护士(ACNP)越来越多地满足了这些需求。本文描述了一所大学医院的医疗重症监护病房(ICU)中ACNP服务的发展情况。该ICU从22张床位扩展到34张床位,但没有增加医生,而ACNP服务旨在提高服务范围和质量以及师资配备。八名ACNP被聘用,并在9个月的时间里接受了理论教学、操作培训、模拟中心培训以及有监督的患者护理培训。采用渐进式工作量和分级责任制,过渡到24小时内部驻院、独立于住院医生且由主治医生监督的服务模式。目前,该服务模式接收的患者占所有患者的近一半(3.4±1.3例/天),护理该科室约四分之一的重症患者(6.0±1.4例/天),并且每天响应医疗快速反应小组的呼叫(1.5±1.7次/天)。在运营的前5个月里,各类工作产出持续增加,ACNP平均每天记录11.1±2.7项活动(所有数据均为平均值±标准差)。急性护理执业护士还提供了40%的每日住院医生核心讲座以及每月一次的护士全体会议。然而,目前尚无足够数据来报告准确的计费或收款结果。本文讨论的具体领域包括服务结构、招聘与培训、实施、排班、监督、遇到的问题、生产力、监测以及未来计划。