The evolving role of the nurse practitioner in neurosurgery

1980 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 802-807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca W. Rimel ◽  
Thomas W. Langfitt

✓ The authors examine the many important roles for the nurse practitioner in neurosurgery, including patient care in academic departments and private practice, and research and scholarship. The responsibilities of nurse practitioners in a hospital can be varied: they may take some responsibility for all patients on the neurosurgery service, or their assignment may be more specific, such as to the intensive care unit; or they may be assigned to all patients with a specified neurosurgical disorder, such as head injury or intractable pain. Nurse practitioners can become coordinators of clinical research programs, with responsibility for collecting and collating the data and assisting in data analysis and manuscript preparation. Detailed clinical protocols must be developed for nurse practitioners, and those protocols then become the basis for their employment and legal status. Licensure requirements vary greatly among states, and are continuing to change.

2013 ◽  
Vol 37 (5) ◽  
pp. 594 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shannon Clark ◽  
Rhian Parker ◽  
Brenton Prosser ◽  
Rachel Davey

Aim To consider evidence surrounding the emerging role of nurse practitioners in Australia with a particular focus on the provision of healthcare to older people. Methods Methods used included keyword, electronic database and bibliographic searches of international literature, as well as review of prominent policy reports in relation to aged care and advanced nursing roles. Results This paper reports on evidence from systematic reviews and international studies that show that nurse practitioners improve healthcare outcomes, particularly for hard to service populations. It also maps out the limited Australian evidence on the impact of nurse practitioners’ care in aged care settings. Conclusions If Australia is to meet the health needs of its ageing population, more evidence on the effectiveness, economic viability and sustainability of models of care, including those utilising nurse practitioners, is required. What is known about the topic? Australia, like many industrialised countries, faces unprecedented challenges in the provision of health services to an ageing population. Attempts to respond to these challenges have resulted in changing models of healthcare and shifting professional boundaries, including the development of advance practice roles for nurses. One such role is that of the nurse practitioner. There is international evidence that nurse practitioners provide high-quality healthcare. Despite being established in the United States for nearly 50 years, nurse practitioners are a relatively recent addition to the Australian health workforce. What does this paper add? This paper positions a current Australian evaluation of nurse practitioners in aged care against the background of the development of the role of nurse practitioners internationally, evidence for the effectiveness of the role, and evidence for nurse practitioners in aged care. Recent legislative changes in Australia now mean that private nurse practitioner roles can be fully implemented and hence evaluated. In the face of the increasing demands of an ageing population, the paper highlights limitations in current Australian evidence for nurse practitioners in aged care and identifies the importance of a national evaluation to begin to address these limitations. What are the implications for practitioners? The success of future healthcare planning and policy depends on implementing effective initiatives to address the needs of older Australians. Mapping the terrain of contemporary evidence for nurse practitioners highlights the need for more research into nurse practitioner roles and their effectiveness across Australia. Understanding the boundaries and limitations to current evidence is relevant for all involved with health service planning and delivery.


2019 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 260-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgit Hagen ◽  
Antonella Zucchella ◽  
Pervez Nasim Ghauri

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to conceptualize strategic agility in entrepreneurial internationalization and highlight the role of marketing “under particular conditions” – those of early and fast internationalizers.Design/methodology/approachThe study is based on in-depth case studies of four entrepreneurial internationalizers using an inductive approach. The role of marketing is studied along a set of four key business processes, i.e. sensing through selective customer/partner intimacy; business development through selective experimentation and testing; coordination and harmonization of multiple stakeholders; and creative extension of resources.FindingsStrategic agility is a composite of flexibility and selective responsiveness. Marketing thought, mainly through customer and partner interaction, plays a prominent role in achieving strategic agility. Customer- and market-centric thinking needs to be built in a key set of business processes. Marketing’s contribution to strategic agility means an ability to cope with time, relationship and functional dependencies. Strategic agility helps improve the risk profile of the entrepreneurial internationalizer. Entrepreneurial internationalizers are particularly suited to compete on and benefit from strategic agility.Practical implicationsThe findings show managers and entrepreneurs in early and fast internationalizing ventures a path to strategic agility which helps to overcome the many parallel challenges that come with firm foundation and internationalization.Originality/valueStrategic agility is a novel explanation for entrepreneurial internationalization. The study explains the prominent role played by marketing in achieving strategic agility and growth. Strategic agility is reconceptualized in the context of the young and small internationalizing firm.


2015 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather Bradley

Nurse practitioners should be aware that societal changes could lead to their being asked to actively assist terminally ill patients who wish to end their lives, as opposed to their current supportive role in palliative care. With physician staff shortages and the need for nurse practitioners to fill the gaps, end-of-life responsibilities could be placed in the hands of nurse practitioners, rather than being reserved for physicians alone (Sagon, 2013). End-of-life matters raise uncertainties about the nurse practitioner role because it differs state by state, relates to ethics, reflects the religious beliefs of those involved, and concerns the conflict of nurses simultaneously caring for their patients while advocating for their right to self-determination in choosing to end their lives.


2014 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 182-187
Author(s):  
Clare Southall

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the changing role of OD practitioners. Given the many significant challenges faced by organisations and their leaders, never has the role of OD been more important; it is vital that OD practitioners are able to identify the paradigm shift that is required if they are to provide the relevant challenge and support that organisations and leaders need. Design/methodology/approach – The OD role is explored through the Challenger pattern of behaviour known as Witnessing the Establishment – the ability, and the willingness, to see things as they really are, not as we wish them to be. The authors are often so much a part of the organisational system ourselves that the underpinning assumptions, beliefs, routines and rituals that exist are so transparent we can not see them for what they are. Findings – This paper focuses on one of the six patterns of behaviour identified in Challenger leaders in the book “Challenger Spirit: Organisations that disturb the status quo” by Khurshed Dehnugara and Claire Genkai Breeze, LID Publishing, 2011. Research limitations/implications – This is not an academic paper but instead a consultant/practitioner perspective grounded in day-to-day work with leaders and OD professionals in client organisations. Originality/value – A number of suggestions are given for applying the perspectives discussed, through a series of questions, diagnostic processes and models. These are directly applicable to OD practitioners themselves and can also form the basis of further conversations with the leaders and colleagues.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1972 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 927-928
Author(s):  
Walter Pick

Thank you for permitting debate on the important issue of the role of the nurse practitioner in pediatrics. Dr. A. H. Matlin comes to the surprising conclusion that nurse practitioners often practice better anticipatory guidance than physicians and "their services should, if anything, be worth more." If Dr. Matlin is serious in his view, he should experiment by referring physicians' children to the nurse practitioners for this "better guidance" and observe the subsequent reaction. In our society, a professional man is compensated for his service on the basis of his training and the responsibility he takes.


2017 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 161-166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel M. Gordon ◽  
Corwin A. Robertson

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to describe the role of the vaccine manufacturer in the global vaccine enterprise. Design/methodology/approach Narrative review. Findings Pharmaceutical companies involved in the vaccine enterprise play critical and often unrecognized roles in the global health management arena. In addition to the obvious role of vaccine production and distribution, companies are often involved in the identification of infectious agents for which vaccines may be of benefit, basic and applied research, process development, pre-clinical and clinical evaluations of vaccine candidates, as well as continuous post-licensure safety monitoring efforts. Vaccine manufacturers interact with health and regulatory agencies, academia and agencies interested in supporting cost-effective means of vaccine distribution to areas most in need of life-saving vaccines. Originality/value This review provides the reader with an understanding of the many roles of the manufacturer in the global vaccine enterprise.


2009 ◽  
Vol 7 (4) ◽  
pp. 39
Author(s):  
Brenda Marshall, EdD, MSN, PMHNP-BC

Nurses have responded to, and prepared for disasters from the time of Florence Nightingale and Harriet Werley. Nurses are the largest group of professional healthcare providers in America with more than 2.4 million registered nurses, a quarter of a million of whom are Nurse Practitioners capable of diagnosing, prescribing, and treating patients. Psychiatric Nurse Practitioners are in a position to understand the unique cultural nuances and needs of a community in all phases of the disaster life cycle.


1979 ◽  
Vol 50 (6) ◽  
pp. 798-801 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert A. Moody

✓ A training program for neurosurgical nurse practitioners is described. The goals and alternative methods of training are described. The curriculum selected is explained in detail and the results are briefly considered, along with some remaining problems.


2018 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liz Warren ◽  
Martin Quinn ◽  
Gerhard Kristandl

Purpose This paper aims to explore the increasing role of financialisation on investment decisions in the power generation industry in Great Britain (GB). Such decisions affect society, and the relative role of financialisation in these macro-levels decisions has not been explored from a historical perspective. Design/methodology/approach The paper draws on historical material and interview data. Specifically, we use an approach inspired by institutional sociology drawing on elements of Scott’s (2014) pillars of institutions. Applying concepts stemming from regulative and normative pressures, we explore changes in investments over the analysis period to determine forces which institutionalised practices – such as accounting – into investment in power generation. Findings Investments in electricity generation have different levels of public and private participation. However, the common logics that underpin such investment practices provide an important understanding of political-economics and institutional change in the UK. Thus, the heightened use of accounting in investment has been, to some extent, a contributory factor to the power supply problems now faced by the British public. Originality/value This paper contributes to prior literature on the effects of financialisation on society, adding power generation/energy supply to the many societal level issues already explored. It also provides brief but unique insights into the changing nature of the role of accounting in an industry sector over an extended timeframe.


2007 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 108 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jenny Carryer ◽  
Glenn Gardner ◽  
Sandra Dunn ◽  
Anne Gardner

Nurse practitioners will become a vital component of the health workforce because of the growing need to manage chronic illness, to deliver effective primary health services, and to manage workforce challenges effectively. In addition, the role of nurse practitioner is an excellent example of increased workforce flexibility and changes to occupational boundaries. This paper draws on an Australasian research project which defined the core role of nurse practitioners, and identified capability as the component of their level of practice that makes their service most useful. We argue that any tendency to write specific protocols to define the limits of nurse practitioner practice will reduce the efficacy of their contribution. The distinction we wish to make in this paper is between guidelines aiming to support practice, and protocols which aim to control practice.


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