Nurse-led clinic

A nurse-led clinic can be considered an umbrella term which describes any outpatient clinic that is run or managed by Registered nurses, usually nurse practitioners. Nurse-led clinics have assumed distinct roles over the years, and examples exist within hospital outpatient departments,[1] public health clinics[2] and independent practice environments.[3]

Contents

Definition

A broad definition of a nurse-led clinic defines these clinics based on what nursing activities are performed at the site.[4] Nurses within a nurse-led clinic assume their own patient case-loads, provide an educative role to patients to promote health, provide psychological support, monitor the patient's condition and perform nursing interventions.[4] Advanced practice registered nurses, usually nurse practitioners, may have expanded roles within these clinics, depending on the scope of practice defined by their state, provincial or territorial government.

Overview

The recent growth of nurse-led clinics is considered an emerging area of nursing practice; they were originally discussed in nursing journals in the 1980s, and developed over the 1990s into practice areas that have generated financial, legal and professional challenges over the years.[4] There has been recent growth of nurse-led clinics both within hospitals and in the community.[4] However, that growth has been unequal across different legislative regions. As an example, Canada's only known nurse-led clinics exist in Ontario.[5] Unlike many clinics which exist in the United States, Ontario's clinics have been met with some criticism from the Ontario Medical Association and some family physicians who view nurse-led clinics to be unproven innovations in primary care.[5]

Nurse-led clinics typically focus on chronic disease management: conditions where regular follow-up and expertise is required, but also where a patient may not necessarily need to see a physician at every visit.[4] Most nurse-led clinics use nursing theory and knowledge to educate patients and form care plans to manage their conditions.[4]

Review of Evidence

Nurse-led clinics have a brief history of evaluation in scientific literature.[4] Not only is there a large amount of heterogeneity between nurse-led clinics, but there are also different educational backgrounds for nurses who wish to enter these roles.

In a partially-blind randomized controlled trial, adult patients with Type II Diabetes were found to have better control of hypertension and hyperlipidemia in a nurse-led clinic when compared to conventional follow-up care.[6] A related study also found that nurse-led clinics were more effective than conventional care in controlling hypertension for adult patients with Type II Diabetes and uncontrolled hypertension.[7] Generally, it was found that most patients experienced improved outcomes following nurse-led clinic consultation, with the best improvement rates found for wound care and continence clinics.[8]

Many nurse-led clinics have also been associated with enhanced patient satisfaction with care.[8] A nurse-led clinic for intractable constipation in pediatric populations was compared to a pediatric gastroenterology clinic, illustrating that parent satisfaction was significantly higher for those who attended the nurse-led clinic.[9]

In areas where nursing practice may require additional support to maintain patient safety, some nurse-led clinics have implemented decision support tools, computerized systems and evidence-based algorithms to support their practice. Nurse-led clinics which utilize computerized decision support tools to manage oral anticoagulation dosages were found be to as effective as hospital-based clinics for INR control and stability.[10]

References

  1. ^ Rudra, N. (2009, May). Heat on nurse-led clinic to succeed, in Canberra Times [1]
  2. ^ Sussex County, New Jersey (2002). Public Health Nursing Page
  3. ^ Ontario Ministry of Health and Long-Term Care (2009, June). Introduction to nurse practitioner-led clinics. [2]
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Hatchett, R. (2003). Nurse-Led Clinics: Practice Issues. New York, NY: Routledge.
  5. ^ a b Hodges, D. (2009, July). Ontario docs concerned by nurse-led clinics. Retrieved from www.everbetter.ca, originally published in The Medical Post. [3]
  6. ^ New, J.P.; Mason, J.M.; Freemantle, N.; Teasdale, S; Wong, LM; Bruce, NJ; Burns, JA; Gibson, JM (2003). "Specialist nurse-led intervention to treat and control hypertension and hyperlipidemia in diabetes (SPLINT): a randomized controlled trial". Diabetes Care 26 (8): 2250–2255. doi:10.2337/diacare.26.8.2250. PMID 12882844. 
  7. ^ Denver, E.A.; Barnard, M.; Woolfson, R.G.; Earle, K.A. (2003). "Management of uncontrolled hypertension in a nurse-led clinic compared with conventional care for patients with type 2 diabetes". Diabetes Care 26 (8): 2256–2260. doi:10.2337/diacare.26.8.2256. PMID 12882845. 
  8. ^ a b Wong, F.K.; Chung, L.C. (2006). "Establishing a definition for a nurse-led clinic: structure, process, and outcome". Journal of Advanced Nursing 3 (3): 358–369. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2648.2006.03730.x. PMID 16441541. 
  9. ^ Sullivan, P.B.; Burnett, C.A.; Juszczak, E. (2006). "Parent satisfaction in a nurse led clinic compared with a paediatric gastroenterology clinic for the management of intractable, functional constipation". Archives of Disease in Childhood 6 (6): 499–501. doi:10.1136/adc.2005.087486. PMC 2082804. PMID 16531455. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=2082804. 
  10. ^ Fitzmaurice, D.A.; Hobbs, F.D.; Murray, E.T.; Holder, RL; Allan, TF; Rose, PE (2000). "Oral anticoagulation management in primary care with the use of computerized decision support and near-patient testing: a randomized, controlled trial". Archives of Internal Medicine 60 (15): 2343–2348. doi:10.1001/archinte.160.15.2343. PMID 10927732.