Many countries are seeking to improve health care delivery by reviewing the roles of health
professionals, including nurses. Developing new and more advanced roles for nurses could improve
access to care in the face of a limited or diminishing supply of doctors. It might also contain costs by
delegating tasks away from more expensive doctors. This paper reviews the development of advanced
practice nurses in 12 countries (Australia, Belgium, Canada, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Finland, France,
Ireland, Japan, Poland, United Kingdom and United States), with a particular focus on their roles in
primary care. It also reviews the evaluations of impacts on patient care and cost.
The development of new nursing roles varies greatly. The United States and Canada established
“nurse practitioners” in the mid-1960s. The United Kingdom and Finland also have a long experience in
using different forms of collaboration between doctors and nurses. Although development in Australia and
Ireland is more recent, these two countries have been very active in establishing higher education
programmes and posts for advanced practice nurses in recent years. In other countries, the formal
recognition of advanced practice nurses is still in its infancy, although unofficial advanced practices may
already exist in reality.
Evaluations show that using advanced practice nurses can improve access to services and reduce
waiting times. Advanced practice nurses are able to deliver the same quality of care as doctors for a range
of patients, including those with minor illnesses and those requiring routine follow-up. Most evaluations
find a high patient satisfaction rate, mainly because nurses tend to spend more time with patients, and
provide information and counselling. Some evaluations have tried to estimate the impact of advanced
practice nursing on cost. When new roles involve substitution of tasks, the impact is either cost reducing
or cost neutral. The savings on nurses’ salaries – as opposed to doctors – can be offset by longer
consultation times, higher patient referrals, and sometimes the ordering of more tests. When new roles
involve supplementary tasks, some studies report that the impact is cost increasing.
Nurses in Advanced Roles
A Description and Evaluation of Experiences in 12 Developed Countries
Working paper
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