Keywords

Advanced practice nurse, credentialing, critical care, nurse practitioners, pediatric, policy, privileging, regulation, research

 

Authors

  1. Gigli, Kristin Hittle MSN, RN, CPNP-AC (PhD Candidate)

Abstract

Purpose: To describe the extent to which organizational regulation of pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) nurse practitioner (NP) practice and prescriptive authority aligns with state scope-of-practice (SSOP) regulations, to examine differences between PICU medical directors' and NPs' report of regulation, and to describe organizational-level restriction of PICU NP practice.

 

Methods: A 34-item national, quantitative cross-sectional descriptive survey of US PICU medical directors and NPs included demographic, institutional characteristics, and PICU NP regulation and role-related questions. Invitations to participate were sent between October 2016 and January 2017.

 

Results: Respondents (n = 121, 60 PICU NPs and 61 PICU medical directors) reported that 30% of PICU NPs have additional organizational restrictions beyond their SSOP practice authority and 11% have prescriptive authority regulations that exceed those required by the SSOP regulations. Medical directors and lead NPs showed agreement in reports of NP practice regulation. Variation in organizational-level restrictions of privileging, billing, and reporting structure practices were identified.

 

Implications for practice: As more states move to full SSOP regulatory environments, organizational regulation of NP practice can impede attainment of full practice authority. Future research is needed to determine whether variations in regulation of PICU NP practice influence patient outcomes, interdisciplinary collaboration, and NP role actualization.