What problems do you guys see as threats to your profession? Ie- saturation of doctors? decrease in medicade/care reimbursement, nurses taking over, PAs? I don't know much about your field- so I'm just curious.
What problems do you guys see as threats to your profession? Ie- saturation of doctors? decrease in medicade/care reimbursement, nurses taking over, PAs? I don't know much about your field- so I'm just curious.
What problems do you guys see as threats to your profession? Ie- saturation of doctors? decrease in medicade/care reimbursement, nurses taking over, PAs? I don't know much about your field- so I'm just curious.
The decreases in medicare/medicaid reimbursement for sure, which will incidentally contribute to the encroachment of NPs on positions usually occupied by physicians. We can't stop it. The politicians are going to make it happen regardless of how much we lobby and complain. It's a simple matter of dollars and cents to them, and doctors are more expensive than nurses. The best we can hope to do is find specialties that NPs CANT do, at least not for a good long time to come.
This is why being a primary care doc, even if you're passionate about it, may not be the best career move in this day and age. True, you can find niches, and rural areas will always need PCPs, but in most places an NP is the better fiscal move for whoever's fronting the bill, whether it be the taxpayer or a private insurance company.
What problems do you guys see as threats to your profession? Ie- saturation of doctors? decrease in medicade/care reimbursement, nurses taking over, PAs? I don't know much about your field- so I'm just curious.
The decreases in medicare/medicaid reimbursement for sure, which will incidentally contribute to the encroachment of NPs on positions usually occupied by physicians. We can't stop it. The politicians are going to make it happen regardless of how much we lobby and complain. It's a simple matter of dollars and cents to them, and doctors are more expensive than nurses. The best we can hope to do is find specialties that NPs CANT do, at least not for a good long time to come.
This is why being a primary care doc, even if you're passionate about it, may not be the best career move in this day and age. True, you can find niches, and rural areas will always need PCPs, but in most places an NP is the better fiscal move for whoever's fronting the bill, whether it be the taxpayer or a private insurance company.
I agree with most of your post but i think there are things we can do to stop it.
1. educate patients and politicians on the differences on educational background.
2. lobby, politicians dont care about their consitutents, they care when they get money in their pockets.
3. Dont train or hire NPs, obviously if you have to work with them you act professionally.
NPs will be cheaper in the short run (i.e. an office visit), but if they have to refer out more etc. they end up just becoming a middle man.
psychologists and nurse psychotherapists on psychiatry.
This question sounds like a secondary essay prompt.
Considering most PhD psychologists take almost as long as psychiatrists to get that PhD...I trust psychologists much more than psychiatrists any day.
I agree. I'm only a first-year, but I've been to DO Day three times already. 🙂
Trust them to do what, write a dissertation?
I think they are reffering to the fact that pyschologists in some states are attempting/have gotten rights to prescribe medications for pyschiatric issues and not just give therapy. Do you really want people with a very limited fund of real medical knowledge prescribing medications with all of the side effects you have listed above, not to mention the huge amount of interactions they have with other medications that are not related to pysch issues? If you have done your pysch rotation you would also know that pyschiatrists can do both therapy and med management and that those meds you seem to be so against seem to help keep many of those patients functioning on a daily basis and help prevent patients from continuing to spiral out of control. Letting PhD level pychologists prescribe meds is not just expanding their practice, its dangerous to patient health.
I think they are reffering to the fact that pyschologists in some states are attempting/have gotten rights to prescribe medications for pyschiatric issues and not just give therapy.
No, it's not just that. Psychiatrists are generally good at psychotherapy. All evidence shows that they do talk therapy just as well as any other provider. Why wouldn't they? They get far more clinical training. Most psychiatrists just choose not to do talk therapy themselves because of extremely poor reimbursement rates. If they feel a pt could benefit from it, many will refer out to a LCSW or psychologist. I just find it funny that someone would distrust a psych docs for managing medicine and leaving talk therapy for the mid-levels.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/06/health/policy/06doctors.htmlBecause I havent met any psychiatrists that actually do psychotherapy..traditional talk therapy, CBT, DBT what have you....and trust me I met a lot of psychiatrists during my ordeal with lyme and subsequent SSRI reaction. Not a single one did a drop of talk therapy aside from try to convince me that I was mentally ill and would need drugs for the rest of my life (in the early stages before the lyme dx came about). You are entitled to your opinions, I am entitled to mine...but should any of my close family or patients have psych issues they need tx for...I am going to point them in the direction of a psychologist rather than a psychiatrist.
And for what its worth, one of my best friends from growing up is in her 6th year of her PhD psych program at SU working on her research. I would never consider with someone with an equal educational level to me a midlevel. Midlevel=NPs and PAs in my book.
No, it's not just that. Psychiatrists are generally good at psychotherapy. All evidence shows that they do talk therapy just as well as any other provider. Why wouldn't they? They get far more clinical training. Most psychiatrists just choose not to do talk therapy themselves because of extremely poor reimbursement rates. If they feel a pt could benefit from it, many will refer out to a LCSW or psychologist. I just find it funny that someone would distrust a psych docs for managing medicine and leaving talk therapy for the mid-levels.
Sorry to burst your bubble but psychologists are in no way a mid level. That term is relevant to np and pa professions. I my limited clinical experience I have yet to meet a pychiatrist who does talk therapy... I think because of the poor reimbursement rate. In my experience the psychologist are much better in dealing with patients and all that I've talked to are very adamen AGAINST gaining prescription privedges because they don't won't to turn into the psychiatrists who see 20 patients a day and basically act a's a pharmacist managing medication. During my psych rotation I was shocked to learn that not one of the psychiatrists made diagnoses and it was a large practice. Thy referred to physchologist. I had no idea that was common before I experienced this in my clinical rotation
Sorry to burst your bubble but psychologists are in no way a mid level.
One of the things we lobbied about (yes I actually spoke to my rep and one of our PA senators) was healthcare transparency. As in all healthcare staff are to be required to clearly display their role in large print on their hospital id badge. As in PHYSICIAN, RN, LPN, etc....so that nobody is misrepresenting their role to patients...as in DNPs etc.