ANCC to retire most popular, and eventually all, NP roles.

Specialties NP

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I just received an official notice from ANCC that my credential will be “retired.” My credential is “Adult Nurse Practitioner,” but other credentials on the chopping block are ACNP, Adult and Child PMHNP and CNS, and GNP and CNS. The rationale is because “ANCC will not offer certifications that fail to meet the requirements of the new regulatory model.” The ANCC will review the FNP, PNP, Family PMHNP, and Pediatric CNS on its next review cycle, in three years.

ANCC is referring to the APRN consensus model, a model that I support for full integration of appropriate life-span treatment, but not at the expense of throwing out the current model in favor of a revamped shiny new credential under the auspices of the “Old credential +Gerontology NP.” I image adding on the word Gerontology to each new credential is in the future, except pediatrics.

I was in favor of restructuring NP education back to where it was when I completed my Adult NP program, when the program was a true two-year curriculum, and was inclusive of aged 16 to tomb. At that time, the FNP was womb to tomb. I agree some current NP programs have become too splintered and focused, and this could be a problem in the future. America does have an aging population, and that is a very significant fact. These issues should be addressed.

I do not understand, nor do I agree with, throwing out the current credentials. There is no evidence, absolutely NONE, indicating that the current Adult NP and Acute NP role is “failing” to meet the demands of our patient population and society. In fact, all quality outcomes studies on NPs have indicated that NPs are highly competent providers with excellent patient satisfaction and health outcomes. These studies did not suggest improvements in patient care and outcomes were needed by changing our current role.

The Consensus Model is meant to streamline nursing education and titling and delineate commonalities and differences in roles (not further confuse it). To me, it is sensible to streamline roles and determine that all NP programs are meeting the educational requirements within their respective curriculums. In a study funded by NONPF, it was found that NPs who were credentialed broadly, such as an FNP or ANP, were more marketable in certain areas, such as the Midwest. This is very logical. So why change the most marketable credentials?

The ANCC will throw the baby out with the bath water and dump the well-known Adult NP credential. This is likely the fate of the well-known FNP credential as well. This is very confusing to me, and will likely be equally confusing for our colleagues in health care, and similarly to the public at large. This leaves the impression that nursing does not know what it is doing, and since we are radically changing our credentialing structure, we must not have had it correct in the first place. This is not true, and no studies suggest that the current broadly trained NP role is inadequate.

If nursing wishes to address the aging population in the curriculum, then we should do this head-on. We can do this by changing the graduate school curriculum going forward, and asking the currently credentialed NPs obtain a certain level of continuing education specific to the aged population by their next certification cycle. This is how medicine is approaching this issue. Board certified Family practice physicians are asked to take a 2 to 3 day seminar and complete a few case studies specific to the geriatric population. What family practice physicians are NOT doing is throwing out the family practice board as a whole, and telling their constituents that they are no longer adequate.

Why does this matter? Well, we will have a whole new cadre of alphabet soup, such as ANP, ACNP, and FNP plus the new AGNP, ACGNP, and FGNP. It all seems rather redundant, and makes nursing look bad. As long as the 200,000-ish NPs currently in practice do not allow their credential to lapse, they will be fine. However, if your credential lapses due to any reason, such as taking time off to raise a family, work in quality assurance, perform research, take care of an elderly family member, or have an extended personal illness, you will not have a test to take. Additionally, you will likely be told that your previous formal education is no longer adequate to sit for these new credentials. However, you can go back to school for additional formal education which is more expensive and time consuming than attending re-entry seminar/c.e. and shadowing to address those rusty skills. Colleges benefit from this, but not society and certainly not nurses.

It seems ANCC has already made this change, but all bad decisions can be reversed. Hopefully, AANP will not make the same jump in logic, and will keep the ANP and FNP intact while adjusting credentialing and continuing education to include the elderly population. For those NP programs that are not including geriatric concepts in their curriculum, they should be dealt with individually. In the meantime, all currently credentialed NPs and NP students who plan to graduate and sit for boards soon should contact the ANCC and the AANP group about your concerns. If one group rescinds this absurdity, and the other refuses, then vote with your feet and move to the credentialing board that meets your needs. Please notify your NP friends and colleagues and ask them to object to being relegated to obscurity.

I am starting a Facebook page, called “Occupy ANCC. Say NO to retiring your NP credential.” Please join, and lets become a force to be dealt with…An ANCC official has joined my page. Please come and address your concerns.

ANCC will say, all currently practicing NP will be fine, but the fine print states, as long as you never lose your certification. This means we will have various classes of credentialed NPs, "us" and the new NPs after 2014. Additionally, all credentialed NPs must NEVER allow their certification to lapse for any reason, be it for research, raising a family, caring for an elderly parent, or a personal illness. If your current credential expires, you will not have a test to take, and you cannot take the new exam. You will be required to return to school for a graduate certificate because ANCC has deemed all ANP programs, up to this date, as inadequate for this new credential. This metric will apply to all NP programs as well.

I do not know of any ANP, graduating from a reputable university, who was not trained to care for the elderly client. The adult NP credential, by all logic, is inclusive of geriatric clients. No ANP would refuse to treat an elderly patient. If this new credential is necessary for greater clarity, all current ANP and ACNPs should be rolled into the new credential, even if it meant completing a mandatory educational module on geriatric clients prior to one's next credentialing cycle.

Adult NPs trained at the graduate level should not be required to obtain additional graduate education that could delay re-entry to practice, in the event of a certification lapse. This process could delay re-entry for greater than one year - inclusive of the time to find a program and sequence the application (and you may not gain admission b/c too few faculty/mentors), and then complete one to two terms of academic semesters.

I know many of you feel this does not apply to you, as you will never allow your credential to lapse. No one plans for traumatic life events, but they do occur. This new process, that is not founded on ANY evidence-based data, has the potential to be a huge hindrance to ANY currently credentialed nurse practitioners. All of us are on the chopping block for no good reason, and without any recourse. For those of you close to retirement, and feel this does not apply to you, consider that you will need us younger NPs to meet your health care needs.

I hope AANP does not leave us hanging as ANCC has opted to do.

Come support view the occupy ANCC, say NO to occupying your NP credential!

I appreciate your support,

Rodney Fox, PhD, ANP, BC, NP-C

Specializes in Med-Surg, ER, HIV/AIDS, NP.

I have read that the FNP credential is the best suited credential for working in the ED. Most Emergency NPs ultimately provide non-urgent primary care type cases within fast tracks, and having the pediatric scope is a necessary component. Unless one lives in a large urban area where adult and pediatric EDs are mostly separate entities, and in this case the Adult NP is adequate.

I do foresee an issue, strictly based on the consensus statement, with FNPs providing Emergency care if the scope of practice extends beyond those primary care components. Over time, once the state boards have adopted scope of practice standards, an FNP may find himself/herself in hot water with the nursing boards. Unless the FNP also has the additional ACNP (or ACAGNP) credential - and many schools are combining these credentials (/Emory/etc).

Congrats on finding your perfect job!

Specializes in Nephrology, Cardiology, ER, ICU.

ERs in my area like the combined degrees: ANP/PNP, ACNP/ACPNP.

That was the main reason I went back and did the peds CNS.

Specializes in Med-Surg, ER, HIV/AIDS, NP.

Yes, dianaol1, at the root of this issue is BC/BE - board certification and board eligibility. By retiring the certification, rather than updating it, ANCC is altering board eligibility (BE) with one stroke of a pen. I was speaking to a friend of mine, an NP in academia, who said she had to allow her NP credential to expire due to insufficient clinical hours. Of course, she retook the exam because she was still BE based on her education at the master level.

Now ANCC has decided that the content of that master level degree is no longer valid for BE. Of course, the next step will be that a master level education will not be valid either. It seems this could be a "ploy" to mandate the DNP for entry level practice, as suggested by another poster. Whatever one's thought regarding the DNP, at this point in time, having the degree is a luxury and not a necessity. However, changing the rules of BC/BE make this degree a necessity.

I have heard from many NPs that the DNP degree lacks in clinically relevant content. But from those who complete the degree, they feel the effort was worth it. I believe this is true with any education, but the value of the degree has yet to be validated to the point where it should be mandatory.

I, too, am re-evaluating my support for ANA. I've been a long term member, but I regularly struggle with the feeling that my needs are barely represented. Only recently, APRNs received attention from the ANA. Something to consider. ANCC did stem from ANA, but they are now separate entities.

Disclosure: I did apply to and was accepted to a DNP program, but opted for the PhD route. My rationale was that the DNP was an unknown, and given nursing's history of changing the rules midstream, as in this ANCC BC/BE case, I decided to go with the known. I have no regrets.

I think that people are missing a valid point from ANCC. The reason that the GNP is going away is that another organization is/was offering certification without completing a separate GNP program. Once this happened a number of states dropped the certification as an NP certification due to requirements that NPs demonstrate separate coursework in a specific certification. This left ANCC in a rather untenable position. Since they had a seperate GNP certification (and defined GNP as a domain seperate from ANP) they couldn't say well GNP has been included in adults all along. This led them to fold the domain and the certification into the other certifications. Once they did this they were back in the same situation. If they grandfathered in NPs that didn't have the certification then they risked states not recognizing the certification for the same reasons the GNP stopped being recognized. So they ended up with the current system. Its functionally due to the nursing having multiple competing certification bodies.

Specializes in ACNP-BC, Adult Critical Care, Cardiology.
i think that people are missing a valid point from ancc. the reason that the gnp is going away is that another organization is/was offering certification without completing a separate gnp program. once this happened a number of states dropped the certification as an np certification due to requirements that nps demonstrate separate coursework in a specific certification. this left ancc in a rather untenable position. since they had a seperate gnp certification (and defined gnp as a domain seperate from anp) they couldn't say well gnp has been included in adults all along. this led them to fold the domain and the certification into the other certifications. once they did this they were back in the same situation. if they grandfathered in nps that didn't have the certification then they risked states not recognizing the certification for the same reasons the gnp stopped being recognized. so they ended up with the current system. its functionally due to the nursing having multiple competing certification bodies.

i understand that. but it was ancc itself that had a special gnp certification for fnp's, adult np's, and adult acnp's to gain gnp certification without having to go back to school for a gnp program. the requirements, if i remember them right, were submitting proof of having worked a number of hours as an advanced practice nurse with older adults and completing ceu's in gerontology approved by ancc (see link a and b below). with this current announcement, there's not even a clear guideline stating what would constitute eligibility for acagnp or agnp certification nor instructions on how currently certified anp's and acnp's can transition to the new certification.

it's a given that most ancc certified apn's will renew in a timely fashion even if this change wasn't going to happen. but at the end of the day, who wants to carry a retired credential? it's very irresponsible on np leaders' part (both ancc and nonpf) to not come up with guidelines on the new acagnp curriculum leaving schools with acnp programs in the dark. incidentally, nonpf has guidelines on the new agnp curriculum but not acagnp and yet 2013 is around the corner and a student who starts school for acnp in the fall would expect to graduate around 2013 (see link c below).

and just as a side note, aanp also offer separate anp, gnp, and fnp exams (no acnp though). i do believe that though others here have mentioned taking their certification to aanp instead of ancc, such a move is not as sound as you may think because pretty soon aanp will also get on this bandwagon. after all, they were one of the organizations that signed in to the consensus model together with ancc. i also foresee aacn changing their acnpc certification to conform with the credentials offered in these other certification boards.

a. https://allnurses.com/nurse-practitioners-np/gnp-or-fnp-54503-page4.html

b. http://fhea.com/main/content/newsletter/fheanews_volume10_issue10.pdf.

c. http://www.nonpf.com/associations/10789/files/adult-geropccomps2010.pdf

Specializes in ACNP-BC, Adult Critical Care, Cardiology.

Oh and another thing. I know I sound like I'm just looking out for my ACNP peeps but if you look at ANCC's current certification offerings, the Exam Handook for PNP, ANP, FNP, and GNP all state in the heading that "This is a primary care certification". Truly, ANCC never had an acute care gerontology certification. All along, it seems implied that Adult ACNP's could care for patients who are acutely ill adults to older adults because we never had a separate older adult acute care exam. So now we are supposed to come up with a combined acute care adult and gerontology competency exam?

Specializes in cardiac.

I think someone hinted at this in their post, but why not just alter the test to include more geriatric questions, thus proving our competency. I know my program included geriatric material, does this mean I may be eligible for the new exam? It sounds like the requirements are not even laid out yet, so how are schools adjusting to be ready?

I think I have PTSD from taking my ACNP boards just weeks ago and I don't EVER want to do that again! Nor can I afford to go back to school...probably ever by the time I get my loans paid off!

I also can't believe that I graduated in August and did not hear anything about this during school.

This really makes me crazy.

I am graduating in 2012, from a program that is an A/GNP program. But if the certification exam for A/GNP is not offered until 2013, where does that leave me? Do I wait a year to certify and practice? Or do I certify as a GNP? ANP? both? And then hope to keep my certifications current?

My original plan was to take the GNP from ANCC and the ANP from AANP. I took extra clinical hours to make sure I was qualified to sit for both exams. So...

Now what?

Specializes in Med-Surg, ER, HIV/AIDS, NP.

I had not heard that GNPs were no longer recognized as a valid certification by a state board. In truth, the branches of certifications were getting out of control, we had geriatric and diabetic nurse practitioners. At best, these should have been specializations on top of the primary care NP role rather than a stand alone certification. I would agree, ANCC did create an untenable situation for itself. Unfortunately, this organization has not learned from its past mistakes and moves forward with ill-contrived decisions such as "retiring" the ANP and ACNP credential. I'm never said GNP were always ANPs, I did propose that ANPs (and ACNPs) have always cared for geriatric patients.

If the problems lies with the GNP in certain states, that should be addressed. I'm sure someone, somewhere, had a heads up on this issue.

Specializes in ICU.

My concern is that I just started my program for Adult nurse practitioner and will be graduating in December 2013. As of now, I am not yet in the main courses (for example, I'm still taking theory, pharm, patho, etc., not yet clinicals), and I don't see them adding in any new curriculum. For those graduating in 2013--will our programs that did not change yet allow us to sit for the new certification?? I feel stuck--in the middle of it all!

Oh my goodness....I plan to continue to certify my credential every year and not let it expire. Sometimes, the path of least resistance is the best. Yes, I am an Adult Nurse Practitioner working with Adult patients only in the Intensive Care Unit. My peers are Internal Medicine MD's and they think the whole NP renaming/retiring thing is just plain crazy. The most important part is that I am a credentialed member of the medical staff where I practice and that I am able to bill MediCare/Medicaid and private insurance for my services.

Specializes in Level II Trauma Center ICU.

I'm glad that it is that simple for you, Melanie. It is not that simple for many of us. I am scheduled to graduate in May of 2013 and I don't know if I will be able to certify for either. I don't know if the current certification will still be available by the time I take the exam and I don't know if my program meets the new guidelines for certification.

Also, who in the world wants to carry a retired certification when it has been deemed inferior and the new certification is being touted as the gold standard? And as I've stated before, life happens. Any of us could find ourselves out of the job market for an extended period of time, potentially leaving someone unable to re-certify without returning to school.

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