Attention News Editors:
Researchers examine how nurse practitioners are improving access to the health-care system
TORONTO, May 13 /CNW/ - Beyond headlines about a health-care system
stretched to its limits, there is plenty of evidence about solutions that will
keep Canada's health system strong, viable and accessible to all. But how does
the health-care system change to include those solutions? How does research
get adopted into policies that make a real difference to the public?
Some of those answers were discussed this morning during a virtual
conference, held in conjunction with National Nursing Week, about the latest
research on how nurse practitioners (NPs) improve patients' access to care,
and how to make better use of them throughout the system. Thirty-two
participants, including leaders from across Canada and chief executive
officers of Ontario's Local Health Integration Networks (LHIN), held a lively
discussion on how best to move research into policy, and the urgent need to
increase timely access to primary care services across the province. They
heard from a panel of experts including Alba DiCenso, a nursing researcher at
McMaster University who has examined the NP role for decades; Pamela Pogue,
President of the Nurse Practitioners' Association of Ontario; and Marilyn
Butcher, Clinic Director at the Sudbury District Nurse Practitioner Clinics.
"Nurse Practitioners are the most over-evaluated health professional role
that exists," DiCenso says, adding that it is time to "fast track" action on
this front. During the conference, Pogue shared the role of NPs in primary
health care and acute care, and Butcher discussed the Sudbury NP-led clinic's
experience and the community's high level of support and satisfaction.
"Much research has been done on how nurse practitioners' utilization
improve timely and quality access to our health-care system," says Doris
Grinspun, Executive Director of the Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario,
which co-hosted the event. "By hearing from health-care researchers and LHIN
leaders, we can get a better understanding of how we keep building our
evidence and use it to strengthen Medicare today and for generations to come."
NPs are RNs with advanced education and decision-making skills in
assessment, diagnosis and health-care management. They have legislative
authority to treat common illnesses and injuries, write prescriptions, order
lab tests, X-rays and other diagnostic tests. Last summer, the first NP-led
clinic in Canada opened its doors in Sudbury, and has already taken on 1,300
patients who had nowhere to go for health care except overcrowded emergency
rooms and walk-in clinics. Based in part on Sudbury's success, the government
has committed to opening 25 more NP-led clinics, with at least three of those
to open their doors in 2008.
"NP-led clinics are just one example of how research can build evidence
that will lead to healthier communities," says Nancy Edwards, professor at the
school of nursing at the University of Ottawa, one of the founding members of
the Nursing Best Practice Research Unit. Edwards and Grinspun are Co-Leaders
of a group of several researchers who are examining how large system change
happens. The project is funded by the Canadian Health Service Research
Foundation (CHSRF). The research team plans to continue to tackle this and
other system-wide changes through virtual gatherings between researchers and
policy makers.
The Registered Nurses' Association of Ontario (RNAO) is the professional
association representing registered nurses wherever they practise in Ontario.
Since 1925, RNAO has lobbied for healthy public policy, promoted excellence in
nursing practice, increased nurses' contribution to shaping the health-care
system, and influenced decisions that affect nurses and the public they serve.
For further information: Jill Scarrow, Communications Officer, RNAO, Ph:
(416) 599-1925/1-800-268-7199 ext. 210, E-mail: jscarrow@rnao.org