A Almutairi Hessa, N Alharbi Kholoud, K Alotheimin Hana, Gassas Roaa, S Alghamdi Musaad, A Alamri Ayman, M Alsufyani Abdulaziz, S Bashatah Adel
College of Nursing, King Saud University, Riyadh 84428, Saudi Arabia.
Department of Nursing Administration & Education, College of Nursing, King Saud University, Riyadh 84428, Saudi Arabia.
Nurs Rep. 2020 Oct 9;10(2):41-47. doi: 10.3390/nursrep10020007.
Low recruitment of Saudi nationals into the nursing profession, coupled with a growing population, has led to a severe nursing shortage in Saudi Arabia, particularly of nurses with advanced qualifications in clinical nursing. While the role of nurse practitioner has been successfully integrated into the healthcare systems of the U.S., Canada, the UK and Australia for decades, the advanced practice registered nurse (APRN), which includes nurse practitioners and clinical nursing specialists, is still not being implemented effectively in Saudi Arabia due to a variety of regulatory, institutional and cultural barriers. The author looks at some of those barriers and offers recommendations of how they might be overcome. Given that in many parts of the world, nurse practitioners are considered an essential component to meeting healthcare demands, the author considers the question of whether APRNs can find a role in Saudi Arabia's healthcare system.
沙特本国国民从事护理行业的人数较少,再加上人口不断增长,导致沙特阿拉伯出现严重的护理人员短缺,尤其是临床护理方面具备高级资质的护士短缺。几十年来,执业护士的角色已成功融入美国、加拿大、英国和澳大利亚的医疗体系,但由于各种监管、机构和文化障碍,包括执业护士和临床护理专家在内的高级实践注册护士(APRN)在沙特阿拉伯仍未得到有效实施。作者审视了其中一些障碍,并就如何克服这些障碍提出了建议。鉴于在世界许多地区,执业护士被视为满足医疗需求的重要组成部分,作者思考了APRN能否在沙特阿拉伯的医疗体系中发挥作用这一问题。