Lau Denys T, McCaig Linda F, Hing Esther
National Center for Health Statistics, CDC, Hyattsville, Maryland; Department of Prevention and Community Health, Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University, Washington, District of Columbia; Department of Pharmacy Systems, Outcomes and Policy, College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois-Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
National Center for Health Statistics, CDC, Hyattsville, Maryland.
Am J Prev Med. 2016 Sep;51(3):403-9. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2016.02.028. Epub 2016 Apr 11.
The healthcare system in the U.S., particularly outpatient, office-based care, has been shifting toward service delivery by advanced practice providers, particularly nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs). The National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS), conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is the leading source of nationally representative data on care delivered by office-based physicians. This paper first describes NAMCS, then discusses key NAMCS expansion efforts, and finally presents major findings from two exploratory studies that assess the feasibility of collecting data from NPs and PAs as sampled providers in NAMCS. The first NAMCS expansion effort began in 2006 when the NAMCS sample was expanded to include community health centers and started collecting and disseminating data on physicians, NPs, PAs, and nurse midwives in these settings. Then, in 2013, NCHS included workforce questions in NAMCS on the composition and clinical tasks of all healthcare staff in physician offices. Finally, in 2013-2014, NCHS conducted two exploratory studies and found that collecting data from NPs and PAs as sampled providers in NAMCS is feasible. However, modifications to the current NAMCS procedures may be necessary, for example, changing recruitment strategies, visit sampling procedures, and physician-centric survey items. Collectively, these NCHS initiatives are important for healthcare research, practice, and policy communities in their efforts toward providing a more complete picture of the changing outpatient, office-based workforce, team-based care approach, and service utilization in the U.S.
美国的医疗保健系统,尤其是门诊和基于办公室的护理,一直在向由高级执业提供者提供服务转变,特别是执业护士(NPs)和医师助理(PAs)。由疾病控制与预防中心的国家卫生统计中心(NCHS)进行的国家门诊医疗保健调查(NAMCS),是关于基于办公室的医生提供护理的全国代表性数据的主要来源。本文首先描述了NAMCS,然后讨论了NAMCS的关键扩展工作,最后介绍了两项探索性研究的主要发现,这两项研究评估了在NAMCS中作为抽样提供者从NPs和PAs收集数据的可行性。NAMCS的首次扩展工作始于2006年,当时NAMCS样本扩大到包括社区卫生中心,并开始收集和传播这些机构中医生、NPs、PAs和助产护士的数据。然后,在2013年,NCHS在NAMCS中纳入了关于医生办公室所有医护人员组成和临床任务的劳动力问题。最后,在2013 - 2014年,NCHS进行了两项探索性研究,发现作为抽样提供者从NPs和PAs在NAMCS中收集数据是可行的。然而,可能需要对当前的NAMCS程序进行修改,例如,改变招募策略、就诊抽样程序以及以医生为中心的调查项目。总体而言,这些NCHS举措对于医疗保健研究、实践和政策界努力更全面地了解美国不断变化的门诊、基于办公室的劳动力、基于团队的护理方法和服务利用情况非常重要。