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The Acute Care Nurse Practitioner Role in Canada

Authors :
Nancy Carter
Faith Donald
Ruth Martin-Misener
Sharon Kaasalainen
Patricia Harbman
Alba DiCenso
Ivy Lynn Bourgeault
Kelley Kilpatrick
Denise Bryant-Lukosius
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Longwoods Publishing, 2010.

Abstract

The acute care nurse practitioner (ACNP) role was developed in Canada in the late 1980s to offset rapidly increasing physician workloads in acute care settings and to address the lack of continuity of care for seriously ill patients and increased complexity of care delivery. These challenges provided an opportunity to develop an advanced practice nursing role to care for critically ill patients with the intent of improving continuity of care and patient outcomes. For this paper, we drew on the ACNP-related findings of a scoping review of the literature and key informant interviews conducted for a decision support synthesis on advanced practice nursing. The synthesis revealed that ACNPs are working in a range of clinical settings. While ACNPs are trained at the master's level, there is a gap in specialty education for ACNPs. Important barriers to the full integration of ACNP roles into the Canadian healthcare system include lack of full utilization of role components, limitations to scope of practice, inconsistent team acceptance and funding issues. Facilitators to ACNP role implementation include clear communication about the role, with messages tailored to the specific information needs of various stakeholder groups; supportive leadership of healthcare managers; and stable and predictable funding. The status of ACNP roles continues to evolve across Canada. Ongoing leadership and continuing research are required to enhance the integration of these roles into our healthcare system.

Details

ISSN :
19296355
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nursing Leadership
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....37af058cacdce55bddfe4e3465f21eed