Wheww, this is going to take a minute, but let's see what I can do here ...
Wow, I don't really know what to say to that. We have had numerous thorough conversations about this topic and I do not at all believe that she or her peers are "ruthless and slimy"
Let me rephrase then ... the people who represent your wife's profession are ruthless and slimy. If she doesn't want to be portrayed this way, she should petition for people like Mary Mundinger to step down and show a bit more parity, instead of constantly running a doc smear campaign and depicting nurse practitioners as humble servants who just want to serve in "rural" areas and "fill crucial gaps in Primary Care."
It's all great and good to hear your anecdotal experiences of what individuals NPs tell you, but all I can base my opinions (and yes, they are evidence and researched based thoughts, but they are still opinions and you are free to disagree with them) on is what I hear from the leadership and their goals/thoughts are quite clear.
They are people (not "the enemy"), and they absolutely have their patient's interests at heart. You are obviously approaching this from a very ultra-conservative and narrow point of view and like most ultra-conservatives, your mind is completely made up.
Do they have the patient's best interest at heart? Are individuals who are far, far less trained than physicians playing doctor, running independent practices, pushing into fields like Anesthesiology, Cardiology, Dermatology, Pain Management, etc, really the best thing for an unsuspecting patient?
That is fine with me as I am not here to convince you. You will see when you graduate from medical school and enter your residency, and finally become an attending, how the relationship between APRN's and MD/DO's is diverse, and that contrary to your own belief, they are not "the enemy". Or maybe you should just wed a nurse. Gives you instant compassion for their plight. 🙄
My aunt and grandmother are both RNs - excellent nurses, work well within the team model, and both think the NP/DNP movement is an absolute joke.
Additionally, aren't you a pre-medical student? From your previous posts, it looks like you're still trying to get into medical school, so I'm curious as to what makes you so privy to the world of the APRN: physician relationship???
Is it the fact that you've had it explained to you by an APRN? Because to me, this seems inherent with just a pinch of bias, and I'd love to hear where your inside knowledge of this comes from.
If someone is the enemy, its insurance companies (including medicare/medicaid) because they are the orgs continuously trying to make their costs less. Mid-level practitioners have their place, we've discussed this, they ARE important to the functioning of our clinics and hospitals.
I truthfully don't even want to get into a discussion about insurance costs right now, but I do want to straighten one thing up ...
I'm not anti-midlevel, at all. I'm anti-nursing midlevels who want independent practice. PAs, AAs, etc, bring it on. These individuals not only work within the confines of the board of medicine (which I think is appropriate for someone who wants to practice medicine), but they SUPPORT and play a role in a team-based model which is an EXCELLENT thing.
PAs don't want a takeover, they don't want to be called 'Dr' in a clinical setting, they don't promote smear campaigns, AND, from what I've seen, they are very, very well trained and competent (which is far more than what I've seen in my experience with NPs)
I question whether you have ever worked in or volunteered in a hospital?
No, I've never been in one, but I hope to some day. I'm sure you were able to really hone in on the intricate internal gears of an NPO hospital during your stay as a volunteer, so any info you can give me on 'how it works' would be greatly appreciated.
The mid-levels can take on many cases that are less urgent allowing physicians time to see the more critical patients.
This is how they get a foot in the door - we'll take the less urgent, simpler patients that others don't want to see and let the physicians take on the others. Let me explain why this is false:
1. It's absolutely insulting to patients
2. These 'simpler' patients are the bread and butter of 99% of primary care practices - if you take away all the horses and only let the physicians bill for the 1/100 zebras, you can't stay in business.
3. If the NPs only want to 'help out' and see the 'easier patients' why are they pushing for independent practice? Why are they handling more and more complex Anesthesiology cases? Why are they pushing for injection rights in pain management? Why does the University of South Florida 'nursing dermatology residency' include training in diagnosing skin cancers???
Doesn't sound overtly simple or like they are just 'chipping in' to me. Again though, I've never volunteered in a hospital, so maybe you can fill me in on this too.
They aren't out to 'steal' our (potential) jobs. Viewing them with such disdain can only be a detriment to you Jaggerplate, it will not benefit you. However, being closed-minded rarely helps a person, unless we're talking about hiding our heads in the sand...
Your 'head in the sand' comment is too ironic to even touch.
However, all I can say is hit me up in 10 years and let me know if you feel the same way.
This is TheRunner's wife to add a little bit of perspective. 😉 I was told about this little spat and am here to clear up some things.
Hello Runner's wife
🙂
1) I have absolutely no desire to be called "Dr.". I have no desire to be an MD. My first undergrad is in a "hard" science, not in nursing, so I had this option. Choosing to have kids and a family took precedence over any inklings I had to go to med school. I had absolutely no desire to perform surgery, so I went back to get my RN and then MSN. If I wanted to be called "Dr.", I would have gone to medical school, period.
Sigh ...
1. This is literally a page out of the 'frustrated NP' playbook:
"I could have gone to medical school if I wanted to, but I wanted X instead"
"I majored in HARD science"
"If I wanted to be X I would have gone to medical school"
This type of justification, in my OPINION, is the exact APRN type of mentality that leads to the "I'm just as good as a doctor because I COULD have done this, or I DID this too, so I SHOULD be able to practice medicine without going to medical school; my patients SHOULD call me doctor" etc.
If I were to ever go back to school to get a PhD, I would not allow anyone to call me "Dr." in a hospital setting as it is misleading. Patients should know when they are talking to me that I am not an MD, but a CNM. It would be deceitful for me to make people call me "Dr. X" as that would imply that I'm a medical doctor, which is not the case.
This is great, but unfortunately, and like I said earlier, the people who represent YOU (and by you I'm referring to a general APRN, NP, DNP situation - vague, but eh) portray the EXACT opposite. Why else would they push for independent practice rights and insist their graduates have doctorate degrees?
Additionally, in regards to white coats, if you haven't noticed, everyone in the hospital is wearing a white coat nowadays. The nutritionist, the pharmacist, the interpreter, the nurse manager, everyone is wearing a white coat. IMO, only those with prescription privileges should wear white coats, but that's just me. I have no special attachment to my white coat, and neither will you after you've been in practice for several years. It's an accessory and has nothing to do with my job. Who I am and what I do are what commands respect, not any piece of clothing that I wear.
So ...
1. You do wear a white coat. Is this a requirement? BTW, I don't give a crap at all about the white coats. I use them to add a little 'spice' to my NP rantings. I'm only a medical student and I already can't wait until the day when I never have to wear another one of those damn things again.
2. Thanks for telling me how it's going to be when I'm in practice, didn't know we were entering the same field.
🙄
3. I find it funny that you still draw a line of distinction with regard to the white coat even though you allegedly dislike it - "oh this ole thing, just part of the territory."
So only people with prescription rights should be able to wear it? So cut the techs, cut the nutritionist, cut almost every one else you'd see in a clinical setting and just put ... OH, the DO/MDs AND mid-level nurses in white coats. Totally. Ugh.
2) The DNP degree is ridiculous. It's just degree inflation. NP's are making it mandatory and I think it's bizarre. What is the purpose of the degree? It doesn't make any sense. Is this going to increase their pay? Increase their autonomy? Both answers are no, and so it's a pointless degree. Keep it a master's and be done with it. CNM's aren't requiring DNP's. There are very few CNM DNP's. The terminal degree should be a PhD which is a research doctorate, not a practice doctorate as it's irrelevant.
I'd bet a 100 bucks that the CNMs and various other nursing groups are planning to do the exact same thing. Also, I agree, it's an absolute joke. You can literally get it online.
3) The previous poster is right- If you want someone to hate, hate the insurance company. I don't want your job. I want *my* job- and my job is not your job. It's my opinion that a system in the US similar to that in Europe would be a superior system, where low-risk patients see midwives and higher risk patients see OB's. What's prohibiting this from happening? Insurance companies.
I don't want to discuss the insurance companies and I'd really, really prefer not to discuss specific European (I don't know what country you're even referring to) health service systems.
However, I'm curious as to a certain scenario here:
From my knowledge, CNMs pushed really, really hard to get equal reimbursements (at OB/GYN) levels for deliveries in states like New York. If you don't want the physician's job, the physicians' job responsibilities, the physician's payments (which are an inherent part of the job), why would you push for this?
If I went into family practice and lobbied congress for years to allow me to obtain malpractice and hospital privileges equivalent to that of Neurosurgeons, do you think the NS guys would believe me when I say I wanted MY job and not THEIR job???
In order to understand why, you would have to understand billing and coding, and as MickJagger here has not yet even graduated from medical school, much less had to learn anything about billing and coding, he wouldn't really understand this. I'll try to dumb it down for you, but if you still don't get it, maybe ask your professors. There are levels in billing/coding dependent upon what you do- examination, write a script, procedure, level of acuity of the patient, etc. Problem is that once a patient reaches a certain level of acuity (Level 5), it doesn't really matter how complicated that patient is, you still can't really bill for anything higher, in other words there is no Level 6. So, let's say in one given hour I can knock out 3 Level 4 patients, and can bill for all of those patients. But my partner gets hung up on 1 Level 5 patient who is very complicated, and it takes him the whole hour with that patient. He can only bill for that patient for that hour, and the Level 5 billing is only somewhat higher than the Level 4 billing. So, it looks like I'm taking the "easy" patients and leaving him the "hard" patients, and he's generating less revenue than I am.
1. ROFL
2. I'm about 80% done with my Masters in Health Admin, so, despite what you may think about my 'noobness,' I've had quite a bit of classroom based exposure to these types of matters - but thanks for 'dumbing it down' for me
3. I don't want to blatantly insult you here, but your binary code description of insurance policies represent a big, big difference in the mindset, training, and thought process between a physician and nurse:
Frankly, while you're taking course in how insurance codes work (not sure if you take these exact courses, but you're route memorization of this 'concept' leads me to believe that you've either taken some type of masters course in it during your nursing training, or you've done quite a bit of billing paperwork during your clinical work) and learning that 'pushing X medication produces Y result,' medical students and residents are studying the biochemical basis of the disease; learning how to review, comprehend, analyze, and diagnose; recalling knowledge from Path, Physio, Gross Anatomy, information learning during the 3-7 years of residency, the 15,000 hours of clinical rotations, etc, etc, etc.
Frankly, you can bash me all you want for only being a 'medical student,' but from what I've seen, heard, and can definitely believe, unless you want to go back (because we all know you could - you told us straight up), you'll 'never know what you don't know,' and this is where the big differences between the training of a physician and nurse shine through.
Why don't you handle the most complex cases? Why do CNMs deliver the uncomplicated births and call for the OBs when **** hits the fan? If you can answer these questions and not blather back some pseudo-clinical, insurance drivel, then maybe I'll change my mind as to why I take issue with NPs telling me they are 'just as good as physicians, but get paid less'
I can see that argument as being a valid one, but I still don't think that's a very convincing reason why a practice shouldn't utilize mid-level providers. The goal of the practice/hospital is to be as productive as possible in the most cost-efficient way possible, and if I can churn out the "easier" patients fast for cheaper pay thereby freeing up the MD to see the more difficult patients, then I'm of benefit to the practice as a whole.
See above ... and, like I said before, I'd fully support this model with PAs who work with physicians and under the BOM
4) I am surprised by the lack of respect from several posters (including MickJagger) given to mid-levels. Many CNM's teach medical students (MD students) and are associate professors and faculty at medical (MD) schools. (I am not familiar with DO schools, but this could be the case at DO schools as well.) Additionally, if you go into OB, you will likely need an attending at each of your intern deliveries. In these academic hospitals that employ CNMs, many times CNMs have the authority to act as an attending at your delivery. It is in your best interests to foster positive relationships with the CNMs in this situation. While we are "mere nurses" (how juvenile), we are very knowledgeable, especially those of us who have been practicing for 25-30+ years. A wise medical student would glean information off of the academic CNM, as her knowledge-base, at that point in your education, will be superior. Just a little piece of advice from me to you. 😉 Good luck in your pursuits.
Respect is earned and reciprocal. NPs, DNPs, etc, have 0 respect for physicians, so don't act surprised when you (not you specifically, but, again, the NP-esque individuals) crap all over them and they don't thank you for 'chipping in.'
Additionally, thank you again for the odd inferiority complex, but I've never once said there isn't something I can learn from a CNM who has been doing deliveries for 30 years. However, because I'm training to be a physician, I'd, no offense, want to be taught and trained by physicians ... I'm sure you understand.
Altogether, I hope this doesn't insult any of you on a personal level too greatly, though I'm sure it will. I don't know if I'll reply, or much less read, any further responses, but let me just state that I didn't come to this opinion overnight. I've followed this mid-level encroachment issue for YEARS, and definitely tried to see it from various different ways before forging my thoughts on the matter.