
Opinion | VA Goes Too Far on NP Independence
Doctors' morale suffers, and patient care may follow suit
How do you propose that we get this data?I'd like to see some real data on patient safety, and not a single anecdote as was in the article. The bulk of the article is about how much the MDs at the VA hated the idea.
Retrospective data. How many adverse events for pts with NPs vs those with doctors?How do you propose that we get this data?
Through a RCT assigning patients to physician care vs NP/PA care? Not sure if that's ethical or if any patient would agree to that.
If NP/PAs can provide equivalent care as a primary care physician (based on current studies), do we really need medical schools or 3 year residencies training primary care physicians? If outcomes are truly equivalent, we need to take a hard look at the medical school and residency model.
I agree the article didn't provide any data and is the same opinion that many physicians have. But I don't think there's anything wrong with an opinion like that. Simply because it's not feasible to do a study to support that opinion.
I'd like to see some real data on patient safety, and not a single anecdote as was in the article. The bulk of the article is about how much the MDs at the VA hated the idea.
Retrospective data. How many adverse events for pts with NPs vs those with doctors?
Also amount of scripts filled?Good news, Goro! The VA logs patient data quite well and has a fairly uniform population. We can now assess morbidity and mortality data by looking at VAs in the area providing NP autonomy vs those requiring physician supervision. Should make a solid NEJM or JAMA paper
Look at adverse outcomes, rehospitalization rates, cost of care per episode, etc.
Retrospective data. How many adverse events for pts with NPs vs those with doctors?
I agree that the current model makes 0 sense, but if you're having the doctor see the patient first, is the midlevel's role even justified then (not to say that it's justified now)? Couldn't the doctor just spend another minute with them and the rest be handled by a good scribe and competent nurse at that point?I believe we use mid level practitioners incorrectly. Patients should see the physician first, evaluated, and then make a determination as to whether the patient should follow up with the physician or midlevel. Seeing the midlevel first to make these decisions doesnt make sense to me.
We see the CRNAs make the same claims. Just because a patient survives a mediocre anesthetic by an independently practicing CRNA, doesnt mean they did the right thing, it just means they got away with it.
I see what you are saying. I was thinking the midlevel could follow up at a later visit, freeing the doc up to see more new cases. My sister in law saw the PA and they missed a navicular fracture and nearly had a non union, was casted for months. I would hope an orthopedist would have a higher index of suspicion and have ordered an MRI with a negative plain film.
That is exactly right..We see the CRNAs make the same claims. Just because a patient survives a mediocre anesthetic by an independently practicing CRNA, doesnt mean they did the right thing, it just means they got away with it.
That's true and a very testable hypothesis. We'd still need to look at the data to see what it says. The VA allows for three data sets: clinician, NP with Clinician consult, and independent NPIssue you run into with that potentially is that they consult a lot. So they will just grab a doc or other NPs and ask questions and then go treat. So their care may not be totally independent.
That's true and a very testable hypothesis. We'd still need to look at the data to see what it says. The VA allows for three data sets: clinician, NP with Clinician consult, and independent NP
I'd like to see some real data on patient safety, and not a single anecdote as was in the article. The bulk of the article is about how much the MDs at the VA hated the idea.
Ryan also says that he felt treated "by a cookie-cutter algorithm or protocol,"
This article reviews a pretty fair amount of studies. It was 6 years ago but I really doubt there's been some big study showing that patients are in grave danger because of NPs, they just aren't.
Another thing:
Yeah, that happened.
Retrospective data. How many adverse events for pts with NPs vs those with doctors?
This article reviews a pretty fair amount of studies. It was 6 years ago but I really doubt there's been some big study showing that patients are in grave danger because of NPs, they just aren't.
Another thing:
Yeah, that happened.
I just accepted my reality that applying to medical school wasn't going to happen this year today. I rescheduled for July, applied to community college to improve my dog[scizor] GPA, and am just going to apply next year. Sorry for your luck bois, I feel ya. :/
In all of the cases, there have to be similar ones.The issue is that NPs get straight-forward cases and MD/DOs get complex cases.
The NPs I've worked with typically get straight forward depression/anxiety or grief while I get agitated delirium in the ICU with QTc of 530 or neurocognitive dysfunction in setting of GBM or advanced MS. They just don't know their medicine, don't understand their drugs, and aren't able to manage more complex patients. I think the worst thing that happened to NPs is specialization. There programs are so short, they don't actually learn medicine. They just learn barely learn their own specialty by algorithm and if any medical component is added in, they either ignore it or don't understand it.
In all of the cases, there have to be similar ones.
C'mon Mass...you're starting to sound like some of my True Believer DO colleagues, who find every excuse possible to not test out their precious techniques and see if they are actually efficacious.Few and far between.
In all of the cases, there have to be similar ones.
Few and far between.
C'mon Mass...you're starting to sound like some of my True Believer DO colleagues, who find every excuse possible to not test out their precious techniques and see if they are actually efficacious.
C'mon Mass...you're starting to sound like some of my True Believer DO colleagues, who find every excuse possible to not test out their precious techniques and see if they are actually efficacious.
I'd like to see some real data on patient safety, and not a single anecdote as was in the article. The bulk of the article is about how much the MDs at the VA hated the idea.
the whole idea is to compare a vs beat. You guys work out the details, I've given you the solution . I refuse to believe these are not testable hypothesesTaking a punch biopsy when unnecessary, is that patient safety?
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Biopsy Use in Skin Cancer Diagnosis
Histopathologic evaluation is the criterion standard for diagnosis of skin cancer. Underuse of biopsies may promote misdiagnosis, and overuse will increase cost and morbidity. There is no benchmark with which to quantitatively compare health care professionals’ diagnostic accuracy and biopsy use....jamanetwork.com
Wasting an institution’s resources, is that patient safety?
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Comparison of the quality of patient referrals from physicians, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners - PubMed
The quality of referrals to an academic medical center was higher for physicians than for NPs and PAs regarding the clarity of the referral question, understanding of pathophysiology, and adequate prereferral evaluation and documentation.pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Not the VA, but I don’t know why it would be different there.
The trouble with retrospective data is that NPs frequently end up with less ill patients and have smaller patient loads compared to physicians. The on molly way to get a fair comparison would be to assign patients randomly of equal acuity in equal number to equally experienced (say, fresh out the gate attending vs fresh out the gate NP) providers. A network like Kaiser could probably make something like this happenRetrospective data. How many adverse events for pts with NPs vs those with doctors?
Why? If you have informed consent and you have two treatment arms, the newer of which is claiming equality or superiority, the only way to sort things out is with a RCT. We have done sham surgery for orthopedic procedures, we can certainly do thisIt is unethical to conduct such studies.
Color me surprised!Everyone always clamoring for these studies! But the cynic in me thinks they'd just come out a wash, and be spun as proof that 7+ years of medical education and training is overkill for managing most of the easy primary measures (DM control, HTN control, etc).
Like, it'd be great if they prove an MD/DO is better than an independent midlevel, but seems like a proper study would carry a big risk of showing non-inferiority instead.
If it showed non-inferiority then I would be satisfied that NPs are safe providers. I believe in evidence, and if that is what comes out after a proper RCT then hey, my education was a waste after all.Everyone always clamoring for these studies! But the cynic in me thinks they'd just come out a wash, and be spun as proof that 7+ years of medical education and training is overkill for managing most of the easy primary measures (DM control, HTN control, etc).
Like, it'd be great if they prove an MD/DO is better than an independent midlevel, but seems like a proper study would carry a big risk of showing non-inferiority instead.
What's going to happen to all those professors and administrators of all those medical schools if the study turns out in the Mid-Levels aka. (advanced Nursing) favor. Huge disruption, all the bureaucrats, and professors will have to actually work for a living.. LOLIf it showed non-inferiority then I would be satisfied that NPs are safe providers. I believe in evidence, and if that is what comes out after a proper RCT then hey, my education was a waste after all.
I'll just go and join the faculty of a PA or NP schools.What's going to happen to all those professors and administrators of all those medical schools if the study turns out in the Mid-Levels aka. (advanced Nursing) favor. Huge disruption, all the bureaucrats, and professors will have to actually work for a living.. LOL
You can't! Have to be a PA or a NP to do that. You would be working at the Car Wash. Which wouldn't be a bad thingI'll just go and join the faculty of a PA or NP schools.
Everyone always clamoring for these studies! But the cynic in me thinks they'd just come out a wash, and be spun as proof that 7+ years of medical education and training is overkill for managing most of the easy primary measures (DM control, HTN control, etc).
Like, it'd be great if they prove an MD/DO is better than an independent midlevel, but seems like a proper study would carry a big risk of showing non-inferiority instead.
Definitely not true:You can't! Have to be a PA or a NP to do that. You would be working at the Car Wash. Which wouldn't be a bad thing
I disagree. I think if everything was actually equal, it would definitely show huge gaps in knowledge and skill among midlevels. They're likely equal in terms of DM, HTN, HLD, and common derm presentations, but give them a patient a bit more complicated, especially in something other than primary care, and I bet the studies would be very different.
What's going to happen to all those professors and administrators of all those medical schools if the study turns out in the Mid-Levels aka. (advanced Nursing) favor. Huge disruption, all the bureaucrats, and professors will have to actually work for a living.. LOL
ThisI'll just go and join the faculty of a PA or NP schools.
Not true at all. Plenty of non-PA or NP faculty on board at these schools. You don't even have to be a NP or PA to be a preceptor.You can't! Have to be a PA or a NP to do that. You would be working at the Car Wash. Which wouldn't be a bad thing
What's going to happen to all those professors and administrators of all those medical schools if the study turns out in the Mid-Levels aka. (advanced Nursing) favor. Huge disruption, all the bureaucrats, and professors will have to actually work for a living.. LOL
I think we need to come to grips on how much we will tolerate mid levels missing, like in the example I used above for my sister in law. Like the old saying, medicine is expensive, but bad medicine is REALLY expensive. AMCs look only at labor costs but not the total costs. I would be in favor of looking at costs of complications, over testing, delayed surgeries, A1C levels, excessive referrals, etc.If it showed non-inferiority then I would be satisfied that NPs are safe providers. I believe in evidence, and if that is what comes out after a proper RCT then hey, my education was a waste after all.
I disagree. I think if everything was actually equal, it would definitely show huge gaps in knowledge and skill among midlevels. They're likely equal in terms of DM, HTN, HLD, and common derm presentations, but give them a patient a bit more complicated, especially in something other than primary care, and I bet the studies would be very different.
I don't believe there is much of a compensation difference between seeing a complex patient for 30 minutes vs seeing 3 patients with sore throats or hypertension med refills in the same 30 minutes...
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At the same time-this can extend to every single field. Not all cardiology patients are challenging to see. Neither are all the procedures that complex. PA/NPs can learn the basic bread and butter procedures in every field including general surgery, orthopedic surgery, urology, opthalmology etc as long as someone is training them.
If we let PCPs be segregated in the above manner, are we going to start allowing all fields to start following that?
Some of you guys really oversimplify what primary care does. Controlling DM or HTN with 1-2 drugs and limited comorbidities is easy, sure. More complex patients, comorbidities, added limitations to many medications due to coverage or adherence, and you have to get creative and it can get very not easy quickly. The issue with measuring outcomes in primary care is that they're either relatively long-term or by the time outcomes occur, they've already be referred to the appropriate specialty. Much of primary care is about prevention afterall. Eventually, most people get diagnosed and hopefully treated, but actually being able to collect data that shows that they were diagnosed earlier or with less testing/referral is a bit difficult.
I do agree that the poor outcomes would likely be more obvious in other specialties. I usually can tell when I get a patient from an PNP. Benzos, stimulants, an atypical and a mood stabilizer with a patient with a diagnosis list of adult ADHD, anxiety, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia who screams cluster B and history of substance induced psychosis.
Some of you guys really oversimplify what primary care does. Controlling DM or HTN with 1-2 drugs and limited comorbidities is easy, sure. More complex patients, comorbidities, added limitations to many medications due to coverage or adherence, and you have to get creative and it can get very not easy quickly. The issue with measuring outcomes in primary care is that they're either relatively long-term or by the time outcomes occur, they've already be referred to the appropriate specialty. Much of primary care is about prevention afterall. Eventually, most people get diagnosed and hopefully treated, but actually being able to collect data that shows that they were diagnosed earlier or with less testing/referral is a bit difficult.
I do agree that the poor outcomes would likely be more obvious in other specialties. I usually can tell when I get a patient from an PNP. Benzos, stimulants, an atypical and a mood stabilizer with a patient with a diagnosis list of adult ADHD, anxiety, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia who screams cluster B and history of substance induced psychosis.
There absolutely is a difference. The midlevel is generating way more RVUs with those 3 pts than the physician with the 1 complex patient.
Yeah that ship has already sailed. All of those fields have tons of midlevels right now doing exactly what you described.
agreed on all counts. but problem is what is going to be done
1) in terms of reimbursement, i think it's a pretty big issue that often gets ignored in these forums. corporations will likely transition to employing PCPs only to see these complex patients and you can only bill so much for seeing these types of patients. they will be happy to have the np see the 3 sore throats and keep a greater margin of profit. i mean can't they bill like 80% of what a physician bills.
2) yes. i think they do a lot of stuff but still haven't come for the bread and butter of procedural specialities. once they do, i am sure the proceduralists will start fighting back. for now most proceduralists see PAs/NPs managing clinics and floors and giving them more time in the OR or interventional suites ultimately increasing their $$$. for now it's mainly non-procedural specialities and primary care that are screwed
ultimately, as i read more, i doubt anything will ever be done. the only solution is for MDs to stop training mid-levels but that won't happen.
PAs/NPs will both likely get full independent practice in the near future and we have to see what happens when the system reaches a new equilibrium. as much as PAs/NPs outcome data gets spewed on these forums, i don't think mid-levels and physicians will ever have the same outcomes on all patients (not just your sore throats, dm, htn). it is just not possible for a pa or np without residency and less schooling to be the same as a 3yr trained pcp. it is like me practicing without a day of residency. even with 2 more years of schooling than an np/pa, i will still suck in primary care if i don't do a residency. how do i measure this? idk
New study out showing the difference in opoid prescribing rates between mid-levels and physicians. pretty astounding.
what bothers me more is the reimbursement. i didn't train to be a physician just to see the complex patients. no thanks. i will take higher pay any day by seeing simple sore throats, dm, htn management than be stuck seeing complex patients and be reimbursed poorly....seems like from my brief experience this is what happens in academic settings? PAs/NPs see all the easy patients and the MDs see the tougher patients. both have like a 100k-150k difference in pay? 3 yrs of residency and 2 extra yrs of schooling for a 100k-150k pay difference?
i think they are np's/pa's are greatly helpful as long as they work for a physician. each physician defines the scope of practice and either the np/pa works under that scope or gets fired. but the problem is that their scope of practice is starting to be controlled by corporations. it is anyone's guess how far they will take that scope.
none of this is scientific data. pure anecdotal and hypothetical opinion. if i am wrong and what i said is all BS, someone can correct me