1 / 25

Development of Nursing Roles – The UK Experience

Development of Nursing Roles – The UK Experience. Christine Norton PhD, MA, RN Associate Dean (Research) & Professor of Gastrointestinal Nursing, King’s College London & Nurse Consultant, St Mark’s Hospital. Nurse Specialists. Rapid expansion of numbers

knut
Download Presentation

Development of Nursing Roles – The UK Experience

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. Development of Nursing Roles – The UK Experience Christine Norton PhD, MA, RN Associate Dean (Research) & Professor of Gastrointestinal Nursing, King’s College London & Nurse Consultant, St Mark’s Hospital

  2. Nurse Specialists • Rapid expansion of numbers • Mini doctor? Cheaper doctor? More available than doctors? • Pressures: junior doctors hours, demand for services (e.g. screening), political pressure, nurses more popular than doctors (??) • Quality of service • What is in the patients’ interests?

  3. What is a quality service? • Different stakeholders • Patients: quality of clinical care, wait times, consultation length, respect & dignity, participate in decisions, information improves outcomes, informed choice, reassurance, enabled to cope • Managers: costs, audit, wait times • Colleagues: consultancy, shared care

  4. Decision to expand nurse specialists • Cost? • Shortage of doctors? • Nurses – job satisfaction and promotion prospects • Improve patient care pathway (availability, wait times), quality of care, or patients satisfaction, ability to self-care

  5. Confusing range of titles • Clinical Nurse Specialist • Nurse Practitioner • Advanced Nurse Practitioner • Nurse Consultant • At present in UK no central regulation, no defining qualification or training • “Not a specialist just because specialising” • If you are starting a new system, worth thinking about before you start • What education is required?

  6. Training for Specialists • USA - Masters level preparation for Nurse Specialists • Problem for first pioneers • UK- some degree level courses / modules • UK: Masters (MSc) growing – will be required in future • Guidelines in a few situations e.g. BSG endoscopists - same training as doctors - 150 procedures.

  7. Issues • Scope of roles • Training • Management • Audit / research • Costs • Ethical & legal issues • Interdisciplinary collaboration

  8. Scope of nurse specialists • Clinical caseload • Clinical leadership and role model • Consultancy, policies, procedures etc • Education • patients, nurses, other professionals, public • Management • Research

  9. Scope - Clinical • Assessment / history taking • Investigations (doing or ordering) • Patient teaching • Treatment: huge range of possibilities • Prescribing • Practical coping • Ongoing support • Patient’s advocate, service organisation

  10. Nurse specialist – critical care • Increasingly nurse-run critical care units • Formalised roles (always did teach junior doctors what to do, now formally a nursing role) • Titration of drugs (open prescriptions) • Protocols – based on patient goals – nurse has discretion over drugs and fluid challenges • Central line insertion & IV drug administration

  11. Nurse specialist – critical care • Set up technology: eg Ventilator set up & settings • Manage technology (eg haemofiltration) • Interpret data from technology (eg blood gases, ECG) and take action • Outreach for critically ill patient in general wards or emergency care (especially at night) – Site Practitioner typically assesses and decides if need to transfer to ITU or HDU

  12. “Realising the potential of critical care nurses” (2002) • Shortage of nurses • Technological advancement: increased complexity of care • Levels of care (rather than location): • 0 = no risk • 1 = general ward, risk of deterioration • 2 = high dependency unit • 3 = intensive care

  13. Critical care nurses • Often excessive workload • Increased infection risk • Increased mortality risk • Increased costs and length of stay • Geographical layout a big influence on nursing effectiveness • Level 2 may need more nursing time than level 3 (not unconscious) • Attributes of nurses (coping with unpredictability) crucial to patient outcomes

  14. Effective practice: Endoscopy • 1975: Mayo clinic - nurse sigmoidoscopy • 1992: Flexible Sigmoidoscopy: doctors = nurses (Disario & Sanowski) • 1994: Nurses as accurate & safe in screening (and more returned for re-screen) (Maule, NEJM) • Only one prospective RCT (Schoenfeld, 1999): 20/21% polyps missed, depth insertion same • No study has found major differences doctors / nurses in performance or safety

  15. Nurse Specialists in UK • All areas of care: • Primary care: first consult, prescribers, screening, much routine care • Accident and Emergency: nurse triage • Peri-operative nurse practitioners (especially role in enhanced recovery) • Procedures and tests (eg endoscopy – diagnostic and surveillance) • Chronic disease management

  16. Nurse Consultants • Department of Health 1999 • “ Establishing consultant posts is intended to help provide better outcomes for patients by improving services and quality, to strengthen leadership and to provide a new career opportunity to help retain experienced and expert nurses in practice” • Responsibility for total patient care

  17. Four core functions of nurse consultants • Expert practice (50%) • Professional leadership and consultancy • Education, training and development • Practice and service development, research and evaluation • No so different from nurse specialist?

  18. My role as Nurse Consultant • Patients referred to me from surgeons, physicians, family doctors, nurses • I read letter, order tests, decide on treatment • My team of 5 nurse specialists assess and report back to me • I see “difficult” cases • No medical care or responsibility for my patients unless I decide to refer

  19. Possible differences specialist / consultant • Ultimate clinical responsibility for care • Expert advice to outside bodies & individuals • New services and new ways of doing things • Spectrum from junior nurse specialist to senior consultant – continuum – career progression

  20. Legal & ethical issues • Few legal limitations on what nurses can do • NMC (Code of professional conduct & Scope of professional practice) • Professionally accountable • Reasonable practice as judged by peers • Employers liability : for extended role (normally doctor): written job description & protocols, proof of competency, clear with clinical risk manager, must follow protocol if have one.

  21. Dangers / drawbacks • Fragmentation of care • De-skill others • Generalists abdicate responsibility • Acceptance / overlap / resentments / ownership • Easy to spread too thin and be ineffective • Lack of career structure • Lack research base for practice and lack of evaluation

  22. Evaluation - does Nurse Specialist make a difference? • Research / audit crucial • Patient numbers, waiting times • Patient clinical outcomes • Patient understanding • Patient satisfaction • Bed days, consultations, costs • Difficult to evaluate quality, care, coping • Outcomes multifactorial

  23. Management • Corporate resource • Catalyst for change • Cross-boundary working / liaison • Protocols, guidelines, pathways for care • Need defined role in nursing structure to be effective • Need strong nursing management ownership & support

  24. Problems • Lack of clarity in role • Lack of coherence and admin support • Expected to do too much (scope) • Difficult for existing colleagues to see you differently + “ownership” of patients • Lack of management support • Career structure

  25. Conclusions • Evidence is consistent that nurses can take over many functions of doctors, as effectively and often with greater patient satisfaction • Opportunity to re-think and improve service • Think why, consult widely, plan carefully • Improve quality, not save costs • Keep patient as focus • Cope with dehumanising technology • Not a panacea! Cannot do everything! (Norton & Kamm, J. Royal Soc. Medicine, 2002)

More Related