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Med Care ; 15(4): 298-310, 1977 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16185

ABSTRACT

A survey to measure physician receptivity to nurse practitioners was conducted in North Carolina in 1973. All North Carolina physicians were asked to rate a list of 35 clinical tasks of varying levels of difficulty and responsibility according to their willingness to delegate these tasks to nurse practitioners. Using eight items from this list that were good discriminants of physician attitudes towards delegating responsibility, task delegation scores were correlated with physician characteristics and their responses to questions about recruitment, training, reimbursement, and willingness to hire nurse practitioners. Thirty-four per cent of the respondents would hire a nurse practitioner, whereas 52% approved of the concept but would not hire one. Physicians who had previously worked with a nurse practitioner were more willing to hire one and had a higher task delegation score. Sixty-eight per cent of respondents would share their load with nurse practitioners in their offices, while 6% would have them work in satellite clinics away from the physicians' offices. Most physicians wanted their own nurse trained as a nurse practitioner in a program that combined a didactic course at a medical center with on-the-job training. The authors conclude that there is a potential demand for nurse practitioners in North Carolina and that the training program must prepare the nurse practitioners for the tasks physicians are willing to delegate to them.


Subject(s)
Attitude of Health Personnel , Nurse Practitioners/statistics & numerical data , Physicians , Economics, Nursing , Education, Nursing, Continuing , Humans , Inservice Training , Medicine , North Carolina , Nurse Practitioners/education , Physician Assistants/statistics & numerical data , Professional Practice , Specialization , Task Performance and Analysis
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