Jalloh Fatmata, Tadlock Matthew D, Cantwell Stacy, Rausch Timothy, Aksoy Hande, Frankel Heidi
Fatmata Jalloh and Stacy Cantwell are nurse practitioners, Department of Surgery, and Heidi Frankel is medical director of the surgical intensive care unit, Keck Medical Center, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California. Matthew D. Tadlock is a trauma fellow, and Hande Aksoy is a research fellow, Los Angeles County and University of Southern California Medical Center, Los Angeles, California. Timothy Rausch is a registered nurse, Ronald Reagan University of California, Los Angeles, Medical Center.
Am J Crit Care. 2016 Jul;25(4):357-61. doi: 10.4037/ajcc2016118.
Acute care nurse practitioners have been successfully integrated into inpatient settings. They perform invasive procedures in the intensive care unit and other acute care settings. Although their general scope of practice is regulated at the state level, local and regional scope of practice is governed by hospitals.
To determine if credentialing and privileging of these nurses for invasive procedures varies depending on the institution.
Personnel in medical staff offices of 329 hospitals were surveyed by telephone with 6 questions. Data collected included acute care nurse practitioner and hospital demographics, frequency and type of procedures performed, proctoring and credentialing process, and the presence of residents and fellows at the institution.
The response rate was 74.8% (246 hospitals). Among these, 48% (118) employed acute care nurse practitioners, of which 43.2% performed invasive procedures. Three hospitals were excluded from the final analysis. Of the hospitals that credentialed and granted privileges to the nurse practitioners for invasive procedures, 60.4% were teaching hospitals. A supervising physician was the proctor in 94% of the nonteaching hospitals and 100% of the teaching hospitals. The most common number of cases proctored was 4 to 7.
The majority of hospitals employ acute care nurse practitioners. The most common method of privileging for invasive procedures is proctoring by a supervising physician. However, the amount of proctoring required before privileges and independent practice are granted varies by procedure and institution.
急性护理执业护士已成功融入住院环境。他们在重症监护病房及其他急性护理环境中执行侵入性操作。尽管其总体执业范围在州一级受到监管,但地方和区域执业范围由医院管理。
确定这些护士进行侵入性操作的资格认证和权限授予是否因机构而异。
通过电话对329家医院医务人员办公室的人员进行了6个问题的调查。收集的数据包括急性护理执业护士和医院的人口统计学信息、所执行操作的频率和类型、监考和资格认证过程,以及该机构住院医师和研究员的情况。
回复率为74.8%(246家医院)。其中,48%(118家)雇佣了急性护理执业护士,其中43.2%进行侵入性操作。3家医院被排除在最终分析之外。在为护士进行侵入性操作授予资格和权限的医院中,60.4%是教学医院。在94%的非教学医院和100%的教学医院中,监考人员是主治医生。最常见的监考病例数为4至7例。
大多数医院雇佣急性护理执业护士。授予侵入性操作权限最常见的方法是由主治医生进行监考。然而,在授予权限和独立执业之前所需的监考量因操作和机构而异。