Redbook Magazine article slams NPs - docs warn public to stay away from NPs

Published

press release:

ANA Reacts to Redbook Article Disparaging NPs

ANA President Barbara Blakeney, MS, RN, CS, ANP, has written a letter in response to an article in the November 2002 issue of Redbook Magazine, ("Advice docs give their own families"), that contains a section warning patients not be "brushed off" onto a nurse practitioiner (NP).

October 18, 2002

Letters

Redbook

224 West 57th St.

New York, NY 10019

Dear Editor:

The American Nurses Association takes exception to the suggestion "Don't let yourself be brushed off onto a nurse practitioner" included in "Advice Docs Give Their Own Families" (November 2002, pg. 64). While we agree that patients should always be able to access their physicians, we are disappointed that the doctors Redbook interviewed chose to make that point by impugning the quality of care delivered by advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs), specifically nurse practitioners (NPs).

APRNs have been providing primary and preventive care to patients for more than 35 years. All APRNs must meet rigorous education, certification and continuing education requirements. Today, there are more than 160,000 APRNs, including 70,000 NPs, in the United States, and research dating back to the mid-1980s demonstrates that in terms of quality of care, patient satisfaction and cost-effectiveness, NPs are among the best values in health care. A 1986 federal government report (Office of Technology Assessment) concluded that APRN care is of equivalent quality to that provided by physicians and that in areas of communication and preventive care, APRNs are more adept than physicians. A 1993 study conducted for the ANA found that NPs deliver primary health care as competently as physicians and provide more health promotion activities, such as patient education, than physicians. The patients of the APRNs reported being more satisfied with their health care provider, complied with their treatment programs and were very knowledgeable about their health status.

More recent research also bears out the high quality of care provided by NPs. A study in the May 2000 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association concluded that in an ambulatory care setting in which patients were randomly assigned to either nurse practitioners or physicians, patients' outcomes were comparable. In the July 20, 2002, edition of the British Medical Journal, a study found that patients were satisfied with NP care and that no differences in health status existed. In fact, the study indicated that NPs took more time in consultations and used that time to investigate more about the health concern or illness than did doctors, and concluded that increasing availability of NPs in primary care is likely to lead to high levels of patient satisfaction and high quality care.

Both the federal government and Congress have taken action recognizing the high quality of care provided by NPs. In 1998, the Federal Department of Veterans Affairs decided to formally accept NPs without links to physicians. And on Jan. 1 of that year, a federal law went into affect allowing Medicare to reimburse NPs directly in all geographic areas. In communities across the United States, NPs provide care in clinics and other community settings that help reduce the number of emergency room visits and keep frail elderly in their homes. Furthermore, in all 50 states and the District of Columbia, NPs have some authority to write prescriptions for their patients.

Implying that NPs provide a lesser quality of care is a disservice to your many readers who could benefit from the excellent care they provide and from the increased time that NPs spend answering their questions and reviewing their overall health.

Sincerely,

Barbara A. Blakeney, MS, APRN,BC, ANP

President, American Nurses Association

202-651-7011 >>>>>

Nice, Debbie. Thanks for sharing. :)

Nice, Debbie. Thanks for sharing. :)

Originally posted by sjoe

blueeyes--looks ok, but you left out the phrase "bunch of b*tth*l*s"

LMAO! Next letter sjoe. Next letter ;)

Heather

Originally posted by sjoe

blueeyes--looks ok, but you left out the phrase "bunch of b*tth*l*s"

LMAO! Next letter sjoe. Next letter ;)

Heather

Blueyes....you did great!....l wrote a letter too, didn't save it though. Guess l did pretty good till the end when l suggested they stick to orgasm advice for blond bimbos...(appologies to all blonds ..including me).......................LR

Blueyes....you did great!....l wrote a letter too, didn't save it though. Guess l did pretty good till the end when l suggested they stick to orgasm advice for blond bimbos...(appologies to all blonds ..including me).......................LR

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

ROFL l.rae. Thanks for your support, guys. sometimes, we need to put our $$$ where our mouths are and get ACTIVE. I will NEVER sit still for this malignment of NP's by physicians in such a public and influential forum.:(

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

ROFL l.rae. Thanks for your support, guys. sometimes, we need to put our $$$ where our mouths are and get ACTIVE. I will NEVER sit still for this malignment of NP's by physicians in such a public and influential forum.:(

Way to go! Beautifully written. You captured the sentiments of many of us.

I always want to see the NP at my doctor's office-she is so much more approachable and she treats the pt. Docs I had had are like how are you what's the problem ok i will have the nurse bla bla.."My mom and I ask for her specifically.

I can't say I'm surprised that a group of docs would impugn NP's in this way...they are a self serving bunch as a whole. :(

The fact that more and more doc groups are employing NP's speaks more to the truth here. If they didn't feel they were competent they would not be hiring them...

SmilingBlueEyes - excellent letter! You did us proud, girl!

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