July 31, 2020

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Rural nurse practitioners work with more autonomy than urban nurse practitioners

Credit: CC0 Public Domain
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Credit: CC0 Public Domain

Nurse practitioners (NPs) represent 1-in-5 primary care clinicians and their ranks are growing faster than doctors particularly in rural areas, where nearly half of all primary care practices employ at least one NP. Some have speculated that one attraction of rural practice locations for NPs may be the ability to practice autonomously and fully use their training and licensure. In a new study, researchers from the University of Minnesota School of Public Health (SPH), Urban Institute, and athenahealth, Inc. show that rural NPs do indeed practice with greater autonomy than their urban counterparts.

The study—in collaboration with the University of Minnesota Rural Health Research Center— was led by SPH Assistant Professor Hannah Neprash and published in the journal Medical Care Research and Review.

In their analysis, the researchers used a novel combination of all-payer insurance claims and electronic health record data from athenahealth, Inc., a health care information technology company that provides cloud-based medical billing, electronic record (EHR) and practice management software to clinicians across the United States. Researchers constructed measures of NP practice autonomy by examining three aspects of independence: the percentage of patients NPs treat as their primary care provider, their independence from supervision and their authority to prescribe medications.

The research team studied 2,590 primary care practices and found:

"Our findings are striking," said Neprash. "Along every dimension we can measure, have greater practice autonomy in ."

Neprash added that practice autonomy correlates strongly with job satisfaction in surveys of NPs. And a growing body of research shows that NPs provide high-quality primary care, similar to physicians.

"Combine these facts with our results, and it suggests a win-win situation," said Neprash. "When NPs practice in rural areas, they get the professional satisfaction of practicing at the top of their license, while meeting the primary care needs of rural communities that may struggle to attract physicians."

More information: Hannah T. Neprash et al. Nurse Practitioner Autonomy and Complexity of Care in Rural Primary Care, Medical Care Research and Review (2020). DOI: 10.1177/1077558720945913

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