LWestenhofer said:
I know at least 15 NPs who are in current practice- avg salary of $45000. When compared to the hundreds of physicians in my area- only including PCPs- the avg salary is somewhere around $120000. How is that 85%?
Also, I have yet to meet an NP who behaves as obnoxiously as you have on this blog. You make valued assets to the healthcare system sound like leeches who are somehow absorbing your profits. Where I work NPs, PCPs, and specialists collaborate together exquisitely. They work together- not against each other and if anyone has these huge issues with each other- they have not been voiced in three years.
My suggestion to you is to learn to get along with others or you are really in for it in the real world of healthcare.
First of all, I don't think I've been "obnoxious" one bit. I think you're just angry that I'm pointing out some serious issues facing medicine imposed by the radical nursing agenda. This is a typical response used by politicians to foster their agendas. First, have the wordsmiths slowly change the language and meaning of words of the discussion, "supervision" "collaboration," "nursing practice" vs. "medical practice" etc. Next, raise personal attacks against anyone that challenges you.
Onto the salary thing. $45,000 per year? The average salary for an NP now exceeds $70,000 with many making a lot more than that. This does not differ much for the average salary of a FP physician.
http://www.nurse.net/cgi-bin/start.cgi/salary/index.html
Next, do you really think that all (most) NPs want to work and "collaborate" together with physicians in blissful harmony? Wrong! There is a huge push for complete autonomy. That is not working together. That is, by definition, directly in
competition with doctors.
"formulate and influence healthcare policy to remove barriers to Nurse Practitioner practice"
http://www.nurse.org/acnp/leg/antitrust.shtml
Which includes "Promoting the recognition of nurse practitioners as licensed, autonomous providers."
http://www.nurse.org/acnp/news/2005publicpolicy.pdf
Or all the "research" (done by nurses) as to why NPs are as good as or better than physicians:
http://www.nurse.org/acnp/facts/outcome.studies.shtml
LWestenhofer said:
First of all, I do not endorse receiving a degree of any form or fashion online-particularly one in the incredibly complex field of healthcare. However, I do believe a little research should be performed before an opinion is shared regarding nursing education. All NP candidates are required to perform hands on training- typically a lengthy round of clinical on-site training similar to the third year of medical school- even the ones online. Basically the only difference is that lectures are not taught inperson.
So NP school requires "a lengthy round of clinical on-site training similar to the third year of medical school" huh?
You're from Alabama? Let's see:
http://www.uab.edu/images/uabmagazine/soncatalog/2006-2008/msn_options_factsheet.pdf
It says there that:
"650 hours of clinical practice with a preceptor, who may be a FNP or a physician, are required for completion."
Did anyone elses third year consist of 650 hours? I'm pretty sure mine was more like 4,000 (plus fourth year, internship, residency, etc.).
What does the curriculum look like at an Ivy league school?
http://www.mc.vanderbilt.edu/nursing/msn/familynpp.html
Three semesters and 39 hours. And, after all of that you can:
Advanced Practice Nurses perform these general functions:
Obtain health histories and perform comprehensive physical examinations, including psychosocial, functional, and developmental assessment
Order and interpret lab results and other diagnostic studies
Develop differential diagnoses
Develop/order therapeutic plan of care
Maintain patient records
Evaluate patients response to plan of care and modify as needed
Provide patient/family counseling and education
Arrange for patient referrals/consultations
Participate in research studies
Additional functions specific to the Family Nurse Practitioner:
Preconception and prenatal care
Well-woman and illness care
Well-child and illness care
Episodic care for acute conditions for all ages, including minor acute injuries
Management of chronic conditions such as HTN, diabetes, asthma
Monitoring and case management/consultation of more acute conditions such as cardiac diseases and neuromuscular conditions
Case management for any long term illness or condition
Call me what you will. The truth is I have no problem with nurses being nurses, respiratory therapists being respiratory therapists or whatever else. I appreciate the role that everyone in healthcare has.
But, it's a slap in the face to me and everyone here when groups of people with a fraction of our education and training try to obtain equal practice rights, roles and reimbursement.
I don't care if you live in rural Alabama or in NYC, lowering the standards of medicine to help underserved population is NOT the right answer. If we could take the millions of dollars that are being spent on these peoples political aspirations and ivory tower nursing dreams on opening some more medical schools and paying generalists more than a paltry wage after all their schooling and debt, then we would be making progress.