I was recently asked, why allowing advance practice providers to order and supervise patients under homecare services was needed. Here was my response:
First everyone needs to be clear what the Federal Register states:
§ 484.18 Condition of participation: Acceptance of patients, plan of care, and medical supervision states, “Care follows a written plan of care established and periodically reviewed by a doctor of medicine, osteopathy, or podiatric medicine.”
This federal regulation supersedes any state nurse practice acts that would allow nurse practitioners to provide this oversight. There are multiple reasons why H.R. 4993 bill or S. 2814 needs to be passed. Senator Collins (D-Maine) did a wonderful job outlining some of these reasons in her statement in November of 2009. Her statement can be found in one of my previous blogs.
First everyone needs to be clear what the Federal Register states:
§ 484.18 Condition of participation: Acceptance of patients, plan of care, and medical supervision states, “Care follows a written plan of care established and periodically reviewed by a doctor of medicine, osteopathy, or podiatric medicine.”
This federal regulation supersedes any state nurse practice acts that would allow nurse practitioners to provide this oversight. There are multiple reasons why H.R. 4993 bill or S. 2814 needs to be passed. Senator Collins (D-Maine) did a wonderful job outlining some of these reasons in her statement in November of 2009. Her statement can be found in one of my previous blogs.
I see this legislation being a critical first step in reforming home health care and positioning the industry to be a critical player in overall healthcare reform. There are several possible changes that will occur over the next few years as a result of healthcare reform. These changes include value-based purchasing (A.K.A. pay for performance) and post-acute bundling. I envision nurse practitioners as key solutions for these challenges.
I predict that nurse practitioners will be on staff in many home health agencies during the next decade. They will be in charge of disease management programs, case managing complex patients, and providing direct care to patients. The direct care will consist of caring for those patients exhibiting acute exacerbations of their disease. Instead of going to the ER or delaying treatment while waiting for a physician appointment, the NP would see those patients at home and order the appropriate treatment. This would decrease healthcare costs while accelerating patient outcomes and increasing patients’ overall satisfaction.
An example would be a Chronic Congestive Heart Failure patient beginning to experience an acute exacerbation. Currently, most agencies would notify the physician who then would instruct the patient to go to the ER. The ER physician, not knowing this patient feels this patient need to be hospitalized to be diuresed. After the expensive ER visit and several days in the hospital, the patient is diuresed.
Instead say that nurse notified the NP on staff. They see the patient in home and complete an assessment. Complete any necessary lab work then orders diuretics for the patient while at home. The agency increased the visits over the next few days until the patient stabilizes. This would cost a fraction of the ER/hospitalization bill.
In order to achieve this first step towards higher quality patient care, H.R. 4993 needs to be passed now. As health care reform becomes clearer, many groups will be aiming to be on top of the heap. If these bills are not passed now, I worry that physician lobbyist groups will fight much more fiercely in the future to not allow advance practice providers to practice in the homecare setting as is the case now. The home health industry is in a terrific position to become a major player in health reform. In order to situate ourselves to be a major stakeholder with Healthcare Reform, we must pass H.R. 4993.
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