1 / 32

TRANSITIONS to PRACTICE

TRANSITIONS to PRACTICE. Christine Armstrong, MSN, CNP, ACHPN ,. What’s Next. You chose a certification exam. You joined a professional organization. AACN/AANP You apply to take the exam online. Submit transcripts electronically. Wait (patiently) for your OK to test. While you wait….

johana
Download Presentation

TRANSITIONS to PRACTICE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TRANSITIONS to PRACTICE Christine Armstrong, MSN, CNP, ACHPN ,

  2. What’s Next • You chose a certification exam. • You joined a professional organization. • AACN/AANP • You apply to take the exam online. • Submit transcripts electronically. • Wait (patiently) for your OK to test.

  3. While you wait… • You apply for your APRN License • APRN Modernization Bill went into effect April 4, 2017. • You only need to apply for APRN license. • OBN site states that all applications and payments must be on line. • Can apply before you graduate and before you test. OBN will keep on file for 1 year.

  4. Application • Ohio Board of Nursing web site. • Apply on Line • Pay fees on line. • Submit Electronic Transcripts to the OBN • As there is no CTP or CTP externship, the Board will be paying close attention to your 45 hours of Pharmacology in the last 5 years.

  5. Application • The Certifying Agency must submit your test results directly to the Board. • There is no fee to submit results to Board. • New law states that you will then be granted a license as an APRN. • You will be designated a CNP, CRNA, CNM, CNS with automatic prescriptive authority with licensure. Lucky Ducks!

  6. Congratulations! • You passed your certification exam. • You have been granted a License to Practice as an APRN. • Now you have to find a job! • Where you worked as an RN. • Networking • Speciality

  7. Common Mistakes • License expiration • You must be an RN to be an APRN • ANCC/AANP certification expiration • Lapsed, terminated, or inadequate SCA • Exceeding scope of practice • OBN is NOT your Friend! • OBN is to protect the consumer!

  8. Practice • Compensation for services rendered. • Contract negotiation. • Standard Care Arrangement • National Provider Number. • DEA number. • Medicare Number. • Medicaid Number.

  9. Compensation • The average Nurse Practitioner salary in Ohio is $101,126 as of January 31, 2019 according to salary.com. • the range typically falls between $93,836 and $109,856. • Salary ranges vary widely depending on the city, education, certifications, additional skills, the number of years you have spent in your profession.

  10. Compensation/Contract • Vacation/PTO • Continuing Ed – Time/Expenses • Malpractice • Licensure Fees • Hospital Staff Fees • Health Insurance • Legal Fees • Disability

  11. Compensation/Contract • Life Insurance • Car • Phone/Pager • Subscriptions • Retirement Plans • Moving Expenses • Maternity Leave • OAAPN, AANP, ACNP – dues

  12. Post Contract • Non-Compete Clause • Time • Geography • Non-Solicitation • Patients • Employees

  13. SCA • Standard Care Arrangement • Written, formal guide for planning and evaluating a patient’s health care that is developed by a collaborating physician/s and an APRN. • All APRN’s must have SCA even if not Prescribing per Modernization Bill. • Must submit to OBN within 30 days of practice or change in collaborator.

  14. APRN Modernization • Collaborating: now 5 APRN’s to one Physician. Ambiguous. ????? • Collaborating Physician/s: SCA with APRN and is continuously available to communicate with APRN in person or with technology. • Psych NP can now collaborate with Psychiatrist or Primary Care Physician.

  15. APRN Modernization • SCA review and resign every 2 years • No longer required to have a procedure for regular review of referrals by the nurse to other health care professionals and the care outcomes for a random sample of all patients seen by the nurse.

  16. APRN Modernization • No longer need a policy for care of infants up to age one and recommendations for collaborating physician visits for children from birth to age three, if the nurse regularly provides services to infants. • APRN verifies collaborator’s license ever 2 years; Can use e-license site • Formulary of Exclusion

  17. APRN Modernization • A Certified Nurse Practitioner, Clinical Nurse Specialist and Certified Nurse Midwife shall not prescribe any drug in violation of Federal or Ohio law. • No Schedule I. No Medical Marijuana • The prescriptive authority shall not exceed the prescriptive authority of the collaborating physician or podiatrist.

  18. National Provider Identification • NPI number is a 10 digit numeric identifier to be used on claim forms submitted to payors. • Must have it to bill for services. • Medicare, Medicaid and private insurances. • Must update when changing practices. • Must have NPI to Apply for Medicare and Medicaid number.

  19. Schedule II • Need to have a DEA number to Prescribe Schedule II • DEA $730.00. Employer cover cost? • www.deadiversion.usdoj.gov • Need to inform OBN of DEA number. • OARRS Registration. • www.ohiopmp.gov

  20. Schedule II • 2012 law and rule changes allow APRNs to prescribe schedule II controlled substances. • Must Review OAARS. • Chronic Pain: 80mg Morphine Equivalent daily dose. • New Acute Pain limits. 7 day supply. • Can only prescribe schedule II drugs from select locations.

  21. Schedule II Sites • NOTE: APRNs cannot prescribe schedule II controlled substances from a convenience care clinic even if it is owned/operated by one of the select locations listed on the next slides (with the exception of prescriptions limited to a 24 hours supply as set forth in pre-existing law) • Hospital

  22. Schedule II Sites • Entity owned or controlled by a hospital or by an entity that owns or controls 1 or more hospitals • Health care facility operated by the Dept. of Mental Health or Dept. of Developmental Disabilities • Nursing home • County home or district home certified under Medicare or Medicaid

  23. Schedule II Sites • Community mental health facility • Ambulatory surgical facility • Freestanding birthing center • Federally qualified health center or look-alike • Health care facility operated by board of health or an authority having duties of a board of health

  24. Schedule II Sites • Medical practice, ONLY IF, practice has 1 or more physicians who are also owners of practice, practice provides direct patient care, and APRN has SCA and collaborates with at least 1 of the physician owners who practices primarily at that site

  25. Medicare Number • Internet-based: Provider Enrollment, Chain and Ownership System. (PECOS) • Different for each Employer. • Submit the current version of the Medicare enrollment application (CMS-855) • Submit the correct application for your provider to the Medicare contactor servicing your state. (Palmetto)

  26. Medicaid Number • Apply on Line. MITTS • Check list of documentation you need to even start application on line. • Must have NPI before you can apply. • Can apply for Medicare and Medicaid simultaneously. • CAQH https://proview.caqh.org

  27. Practice • Professional organizations. • AANP • OAAPN • NEONP • Mentorship/Preceptorship. • Pay it Forward.

  28. Nurse Practitioner History • Early 1960’s PCP recruited RN’s with clinical expertise and began collaborating to provide Primary Care. • 1965 Loretta Ford and Dr. Silver founded the first NP program at the University of Colorado. • 1967 first Master’s Program for NP and Ohio was using NP’s in Public Health

  29. Nurse Practitioner History • By 1979 there were 15,000 NP programs in the US. • Ohio, especially Northeast Ohio, had a high number of programs. • Marymount Hospital, Lutheran Hospital and St. Joseph’s Hospital in Lorain, Ohio • 1980 Northeast Ohio Nurse Practitioner Group was founded.

  30. Nurse Practitioner History • Goal of NEONP was to organize for NP’s. • Legislation for certification and licensure. • Fought to be recognized as a health care provider. • Out of NEONP, founding members went on to establish OAAPN. • This brought together all Advanced Practice. CNS, CNP, Midwife, CRNA

  31. Nurse Practitioner History • 1997 Title Protection: gave NP’s the right to be paid for their Advanced Practice by Insurance Companies. • 2000 Ohio was the last State to obtain Prescriptive Authority. • 2008 APRN could prescribe Schedule II • 2017 APRN Modernization Act, removed some limits on practice.

  32. Practice • Questions???

More Related