Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study

Maier CB, Aiken LH (2016)
The European Journal of Public Health 26(6): 927-934.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Autor*in
Maier, Claudia BettinaUniBi ; Aiken, Linda H.
Abstract / Bemerkung
Background: Primary care is in short supply in many countries. Task shifting from physicians to nurses is one strategy to improve access, but international research is scarce. We analysed the extent of task shifting in primary care and policy reforms in 39 countries. Methods: Cross-country comparative research, based on an international expert survey, plus literature scoping review. A total of 93 country experts participated, covering Europe, USA, Canada, Australia and New Zealand (response rate: 85.3%). Experts were selected according to pre-defined criteria. Survey responses were triangulated with the literature and analysed using policy, thematic and descriptive methods to assess developments in country-specific contexts. Results: Task shifting, where nurses take up advanced roles from physicians, was implemented in two-thirds of countries (N = 27, 69%), yet its extent varied. Three clusters emerged: 11 countries with extensive (Australia, Canada, England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales, Finland, Ireland, Netherlands, New Zealand and USA), 16 countries with limited and 12 countries with no task shifting. The high number of policy, regulatory and educational reforms, such as on nurse prescribing, demonstrate an evolving trend internationally toward expanding nurses’ scope-of-practice in primary care. Conclusions: Many countries have implemented task-shifting reforms to maximise workforce capacity. Reforms have focused on removing regulatory and to a lower extent, financial barriers, yet were often lengthy and controversial. Countries early on in the process are primarily reforming their education. From an international and particularly European Union perspective, developing standardised definitions, minimum educational and practice requirements would facilitate recognition procedures in increasingly connected labour markets.
Erscheinungsjahr
2016
Zeitschriftentitel
The European Journal of Public Health
Band
26
Ausgabe
6
Seite(n)
927-934
ISSN
1101-1262
eISSN
1464-360X
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2982300

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Maier CB, Aiken LH. Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study. The European Journal of Public Health. 2016;26(6):927-934.
Maier, C. B., & Aiken, L. H. (2016). Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study. The European Journal of Public Health, 26(6), 927-934. https://doi.org/10.1093/eurpub/ckw098
Maier, Claudia Bettina, and Aiken, Linda H. 2016. “Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study”. The European Journal of Public Health 26 (6): 927-934.
Maier, C. B., and Aiken, L. H. (2016). Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study. The European Journal of Public Health 26, 927-934.
Maier, C.B., & Aiken, L.H., 2016. Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study. The European Journal of Public Health, 26(6), p 927-934.
C.B. Maier and L.H. Aiken, “Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study”, The European Journal of Public Health, vol. 26, 2016, pp. 927-934.
Maier, C.B., Aiken, L.H.: Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study. The European Journal of Public Health. 26, 927-934 (2016).
Maier, Claudia Bettina, and Aiken, Linda H. “Task shifting from physicians to nurses in primary care in 39 countries: a cross-country comparative study”. The European Journal of Public Health 26.6 (2016): 927-934.
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