Affiliations
Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR) at the VA Boston Healthcare System
Department of Operations and Technology Management, Boston University School of Management, Boston, Massachusetts
Given name(s)
Anand
Family name
Kartha
Degrees
MD, MS

NP and PA Scope of Practice

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Nurse practitioner and physician assistant scope of practice in 118 acute care hospitals

Nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) provide healthcare in numerous environments internationally and in the United States.[1, 2] However, their role in the inpatient medicine setting is not well described.[2] In the United States, there are more than 157,000 NPs and 85,000 PAs with projected increases.[3, 4] Although both professions provide direct medical care, there are key differences.[1, 3, 4, 5] NPs typically complete a master's or doctoral degree with advanced clinical training beyond nursing. PAs complete at least 2 years of college courses similar to premedical school requirements. PA programs use a medical school‐based curriculum and train for about 2 years before awarding a master's degree. NPs are regulated through state nursing boards, whereas PAs are regulated through state licensing or medical boards. NPs and PAs have different, yet overlapping scopes of practice. A key difference is that PAs can only practice collaborating with a physician.[5, 6] Overall, both have been shown to provide healthcare that is similar in quality to physicians in specific primary care and surgical settings.[2]

NPs and PAs, often referred to as advanced practice providers (APPs), are employed primarily in outpatient clinic settings providing direct patient care. Most APP studies have focused on the outpatient setting, despite nearly a third of US healthcare expenditure for hospital care.[2, 7] Little is known about APP involvement, specific roles, or impact on outcomes in inpatient medicine settings where they are often referred to as NP or PA hospitalists.[2, 8, 9, 10]

The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) is 1 of the largest employers of APPs, with 3.6% of all NPs and 2.1% of all PAs reported to practice in the VHA.[11, 12, 13] As the largest fully integrated healthcare system in the US, the VHA had 8.8 million veterans enrolled and 703,500 inpatient admissions in 2012.[14] Although this makes the VHA an ideal environment to study the role of APPs, few studies have done so.[13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19] Although studies have compared NPs and PAs to physicians, very little is known about how NPs differ from PAs when practicing in the same environment.

Our objective was to describe the scope of practice, defined as activities that an individual healthcare practitioner is licensed to perform, of NPs and PAs in the inpatient medicine setting and in the VHA. A secondary objective was to explore important outcomes that could potentially be affected by the presence of NPs and PAs on inpatient medicine.

METHODS

The Organizational Factors and Inpatient Medical Care Quality and Efficiency (OFIM) study provides a basis for this study with detail published elsewhere.[20] The OFIM study was conducted between 2010 and 2011 to evaluate quality of care in VHA inpatient medicine surveying chiefs of medicine (COM), inpatient medicine nurse managers (NM), attending physicians, and extant VHA survey data. The COM is the senior attending physician in charge of departments of medicine that include most medical subspecialties within the VHA medical centers. We used the subset of questions specific to NPs and PAs from the COM and NM surveys. Both COMs and NMs answered identical questions for NPs and PAs in 2 separate sections to avoid overlap of responses. NM survey responses were only used for the coordination of care regression model. Surveys were conducted by e‐mail with up to 4 reminders and a subsequent paper mailing. The inpatient medicine service included adult general internal medicine, medical subspecialties, and critical care. The study was approved by the institutional review boards of the VA Boston Healthcare System, the University of Iowa, and the Iowa City VA Healthcare System.

Measurements

To create our primary variable of interestNP and PA employmentwe used the COM survey. Respondents indicated the number and full‐time employee equivalent (FTEE) values for APPs on inpatient medicine. Based on responses, we created a categorical variable with 4 options: (1) facilities with NPs only, (2) facilities with PAs only, (3) facilities with both NPs and PAs, and (4) facilities with neither NPs nor PAs. We selected 3 outcomes that could potentially be affected by the presence of NPs and PAs on inpatient medicine: patient satisfaction, registered nurse (RN) satisfaction, and coordination of care. Patient satisfaction has been shown to improve with NPs and PAs in prior studies, and improving coordination of care has been a stated goal of medical centers in hiring NPs and PAs.[2, 9] Based on our personal experience and previous studies that have shown that nurses report better communication with NPs than physicians,[21] and that NPs retain a visible nursing component in their NP role,[22] we hypothesized that nurse satisfaction on inpatient medicine would improve with the presence of NPs and PAs.

Patient satisfaction was obtained from the 2010 VHA Survey of Healthcare Experiences of Patients (SHEP).[23] The average response rate was 45%. Approximately half the questions on the SHEP are identical to the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey (HCAHPS).[24] We examined 2 items: an overall rating and willingness to recommend the facility. For the overall rating, patients rated their hospitalization on a scale from 0 (worst hospital possible) to 10 (best hospital possible). Following HCAHPS guidelines, responses of either 9 or 10 were coded as positive and all other nonmissing responses were coded 0. For willingness to recommend, patients were asked Would you recommend this hospital to your friends and family? using a 4‐point response scale. Responses of definitely and probably no were coded as 0, and probably and definitely yes were coded as 1.

Nurse satisfaction was obtained from the 2011 Veterans Administration Nursing Outcomes Database, an annual survey of VHA nurses that includes demographic, work environment and satisfaction data.[25] The survey, a modified version of the Practice Environment Scale,[26] had a response rate of 52.9% (out of 51,870). For this analysis, we selected only inpatient medicine RNs. We used 2 measures: overall job satisfaction and collegial RN/MD (physician) relations. The former was assessed using the item Compared to what you think it should be, what is your current overall level of satisfaction with your job? The RN/MD relations scale had 3 items, including Physicians and nurses have good working relationships. Both items were evaluated on a similar 5‐point response scale.

Coordination of care was assessed from COM and NM surveys. Overall coordination was evaluated from the COM survey using 1 of 8 items in a question about care coordination, In the past month, how would you rate the following aspects of coordination of patient care inpatient coordination overall. Overall coordination was also evaluated from the NM survey using a similar item. Discharge coordination was evaluated only from the NM survey using 1 of 8 items, Thinking about your experiences during the past month, how would you rate the following aspects of the coordination of patient care related to the discharge process on your inpatient medicine unit discharge coordination overall. When a service had more than 1 response from the NM survey, we took an average of responses to represent the mean score. Responses for all questions ranged from 1 for poor to 5 for excellent (for all of the questions see Supporting Information, Appendix 1, in the online version of this article).

Last, we modeled for several contextual features that could influence outcomes: geographic region as a 4‐item categorical variable; teaching affiliation as a dichotomous variable based on whether the hospital was a member of the Council of Teaching Hospitals, urban or rural status, and facility size as a continuous variable using the number of inpatient medicine service beds.

Statistical Analysis

Descriptive bivariate analyses used t tests, 2, or 2‐tailed Fisher tests when appropriate to compare NP and PA autonomy, tasks, location of care, work schedule, clinical workload, organizational characteristics (ie, academic, urban, facility complexity, inpatient medicine team structure), and performance evaluations.

Next, we examined whether any of the contextual characteristics were associated with use of NPs or PAs using inferential statistics. For patient satisfaction, we developed a hierarchical linear model (HLM) that nested patients within facilities. We controlled for patient age, sex, health status, and length of stay. For nurse satisfaction, individual responses of RNs also were analyzed using the HLM. We controlled for whether the nurse had a leadership position, worked during the daily shift, and job tenure. Ordinary least squares regression was used to examine the 3 measures of coordination from the COM and NM surveys. All analyses were performed using Stata version 12 (StataCorp, College Station, TX) and SAS version 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

Of 123 inpatient medicine services that we surveyed, we included responses from the COMs of 118 services (response rate 95.2%); 5 responses were incomplete. Across 123 inpatient medicine services, we surveyed 264 nurse managers and received 198 responses (75.0%) from 114 inpatient medicine services. In the only model using NM responsesthe care coordination model104 inpatient medicine services had responses from both COM and NM surveys.

Of 118 VHA inpatient medicine services, 56 (47.5%) had APPs, of which 27 (48.2%) had NPs only, 15 (26.8%) had PAs only, and 14 (25.0%) had both NPs and PAs. FTEEs for NPs ranged from 0.5 to 7 (mean=2.22) and for PAs from 1 to 9 (mean=2.23) on the inpatient medicine service per hospital.

There were no significant differences on use of NPs and PAs by teaching affiliation, urban or rural setting, and geography. A significant difference was observed based on bed size (F[3,109]=5.13, P<0.001); facilities with both NPs and PAs had, on average, a larger number of inpatient beds (mean=79.0, standard deviation [SD]=32.3) compared to those without NPs or PAs (mean=50.1, SD=29.4) or with PAs only (mean=44.2, SD=20.5) using Tukey post hoc analysis.

The most common staffing model used staff (attending) physicians only working directly with APPs (N=29, 24.6%). Next most common was an academic model with staff physicians, housestaff, and APPs working together in teams (N=16, 13.4%). For performance evaluations, COMs contributed for both NPs (60.2%) and PAs (56.4%); in fewer cases, COMs completed evaluations of NPs (12.9%) and of PAs (29.0%) without input from other service managers (P=0.02).

Table 1 shows the differences reported by COMs between NPs and PAs scope of practice. Overall, 58.9% of NPs and 65.4% of PAs functioned somewhat or completely autonomously; 23.1% of NPs and 30.8% of PAs worked in a role closer to a ward assistant (eg, work directly with a physician, cowriting orders, and making care decisions with physician oversight). Tasks frequently performed by the majority of NPs and PAs included writing orders (87.9%), coordinating discharge plans (86.7%), communicating with consultants (83.1%), performing history and physicals (82.5%), writing daily progress notes (80.7%), communicating with primary care providers (73.5%), and working directly with hospitalists (72.8%). Less common tasks included serving on committees (46.4%), championing quality improvement activities (40.6%), and research (2.9%). There were no statistically significant differences between tasks, except for a higher proportion of services reporting PAs rather than NPs performing procedures (50.0% vs 22.0%, P=0.02) and teaching nonphysicians (50.0% vs 24.4%, P=0.04).

Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Hospital‐Based Scopes of Practice
 Services With NPs,Services With PAs,P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants.

  • *Of 41 services with NPs, 14 had PAs too. Of 29 services with PAs, 14 had NPs too.

  • Numbers may vary between items because all respondents may not have answered all items on survey questions. Percentages do not add up to 100% because respondents may have more than 1 response to multiple response questions.

How do NPs and PAs function in conjunction with inpatient medicine staff (attending) physicians in the day‐to‐day care of patients (ie, scope of practice)?N=39 (%)*N=26 (%)* 
Autonomously, in a manner similar to physicians10 (25.6%)5 (19.2%)0.77
Somewhat autonomously, but with limitations13 (33.3%)12 (46.2%)0.31
In a role closer to a ward assistant9 (23.1%)8 (30.8%)0.57
Administrative2 (5.1%)0 (0.0%)0.51
Other6 (15.4%)1 (3.8%)0.23
What types of tasks do NPs and PAs perform?N=41 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Write orders34 (82.9%)26 (92.9%)0.29
Coordinate discharge plans33 (80.5%)26 (92.9%)0.18
Communicate with consultants33 (80.5%)24 (85.7%)0.75
History and physicals31 (75.6%)25 (89.3%)0.22
Daily progress notes31 (75.6%)24 (85.7%)0.37
Communicate with primary care providers31 (75.6%)20 (71.4%0.78
Work directly with hospitalists26 (63.4%)23 (82.1%)0.18
Committees16 (39.0%)16 (57.1%)0.15
Champion quality improvement activities14 (34.1%)14 (50.0%)0.22
Teach nonphysician students10 (24.4%)14 (50.0%)0.04
Perform procedures9 (22.0%)14 (50.0%)0.02
Research1 (2.4%)1 (3.6%)1.00
Other6 (14.6%)0 (0.0%)0.04

Table 2 reports location of practice in the hospital and workload. There were no significant differences in locations where NPs and PAs provided care. Overall, 81.9% of APPs worked in inpatient wards, 23.1% in step‐down units, 18.6% in intensive care units, 13.8% in skilled care units, and 4.9% in other locations. In addition, 97.4% of NPs and 89.3% of PAs worked weekdays, whereas only 7.9% of NPs and 17.9% of PAs worked nights. More PAs than NPs worked federal holidays (32.1% vs 7.9%, P=0.02) and weekends (32.1% vs 13.2%, P=0.08). Most NPs and PAs handled a caseload of 4 to 10 patients with a mean of 6.5, with no difference between the 2. The minority, 27.0% of NPs and 23.1% of PAs, were not assigned specific patients.

Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Hospital Location of Care and Workload
 Services With NPsServices With PAsP Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: N/A, not assigned specific patients; NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants.

  • *Of 41 services with NPs, 14 had PAs too. Of 29 services with PAs, 14 had NPs too.

  • Numbers may vary between items because all respondents may not have answered all items on survey questions. Percentages do not add up to 100% because respondents may have more than 1 response to multiple response questions.

Where do NPs and PAs provide care?N=38 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Wards31 (81.6%)23 (82.1%)1.00
Step‐down unit8 (21.1%)7 (25.0%)0.77
Intensive care unit6 (15.8%)6 (21.4%)0.75
Skilled care units5 (13.2%)4 (14.3%)1.00
Other1 (2.6%)2 (7.1%)0.57
What are NPs and PAs tours of duty?N=38 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Weekdays37 (97.4%)25 (89.3%)0.30
Weekends5 (13.2%)9 (32.1%)0.08
Nights3 (7.9%)5 (17.9%)0.27
Federal holidays3 (7.9%)9 (32.1%)0.02
Other2 (5.3%)1 (3.6%)1.00
What is the average clinical workload for NPs and PAs?N=37 (%)*N=26 (%)* 
Mean no. of patients6.816.180.45
N/A10 (27.0%)6 (23.1%)0.56
Other1 (2.7%)0 (0.0%) 

In multivariable adjusted analyses evaluating the association between patient satisfaction and use of APPs (Table 3), no significant differences were observed for patients' rating of the hospital (F[3,95]=0.19; P=0.90) or willingness to recommend the hospital (F[3,95]=0.54; P=0.65). Similarly, no significant differences were observed based on use of APPs for nurse overall job satisfaction (F[3,101]=1.85; P=0.14) or collegial relations with physicians (F[3,101]=0.96; P=0.41).

Adjusted Regression Model Examining Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Association with Patient Satisfaction, Nurse Satisfaction, and Coordination of Care
 Patient SatisfactionNurse SatisfactionCoordination of Care
Overall RatingWillingness to RecommendRN Overall Job SatisfactionRN/MD RelationsChief of Medicine: Inpatient CoordinationNurse Manager: Inpatient CoordinationNurse Manager: Discharge Coordination
  • NOTE: Model shows parameter estimates (standard error). All models adjust for geographic region, teaching hospital affiliation, urban or rural hospital‐based setting, and inpatient medicine operating beds. Models for patient satisfaction adjust for patient age, health status, length of stay, and sex. Models for nurse satisfaction adjust for leadership position, working regular schedule, and job tenure. Abbreviations: MD, physician; NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants; RN, registered nurse. *P<0.05.

Intercept0.67 (0.14)10.20 (0.15)30.41 (0.13)20.89 (0.07)30.78 (0.26)30.67 (0.24)30.23 (0.26)
Facilities with NPs only0.06 (0.10)0.12 (0.09)0.14 (0.09)0.02 (0.05)10.63 (0.91)0.00 (0.19)0.42 (0.20)*
Facilities with PAs only0.06 (0.09)0.10 (0.11)0.10 (0.10)0.06 (0.05)10.08 (0.87)0.41 (0.22)0.36 (0.25)
Facilities with both NPs and PAs0.02 (0.12)0.11 (0.1300.17 (0.11)0.00 (0.00)0.31 (0.92)0.03 (0.27)0.21 (0.30)
Facilities with neither NPs nor PAs       

COM ratings of overall inpatient coordination were also nonsignificant (F[3, 100]=2.01; P=0.12), but their ratings of coordination were higher in facilities with NPs only than in those without either NPs or PAs (=1.63, P=0.08). Nurse manager ratings of overall inpatient coordination were not associated with APP use (F[3,91]=1.24; P=0.30), but were marginally lower with facilities using only PAs (=1.48; P=0.06). Nurse manager ratings of discharge coordination showed a significant effect for APP use (F[3,90]=3.30; P=0.02) with facilities having NPs only significantly higher than places without either NPs or PAs (=1.84, P=0.04).

DISCUSSION

Little evidence exists regarding the role of APPs in the inpatient medicine setting,[2] and important deficit concerns in medical knowledge, technical skills, and clinical experience have been raised.[27, 28] These concerns have called into question the appropriateness of involving APPs in the care of medical inpatients with extensive differential diagnoses and complex care requirements.[27, 28] In spite of these concerns, we found widespread use of APPs with almost half of the VHA inpatient medicine services reporting use, which stands in contrast to prior research.[9, 10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35] APPs practice in a variety of acute and subacute inpatient medicine settings including academic, community, rural, and urban settings without many discernable differences. The spectrum of activities performed by APPs in the VHA is similar to those reported in these inpatient medicine studies, although their scope of practice appears to be much broader than in these few small single academic center studies.[10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36] For example, only 11% of hospitalist PAs did procedures in a 2006 Society of Hospital Medicine survey, whereas 50% did in our study.[36]

Interestingly, we found that VHA NPs and PAs perform very similar tasks with similar caseloads despite differences in their background, training, regulation, reimbursement, and the longstanding observation that nurse practitioners are not physician assistants.[1, 3, 4, 5] These findings may reflect that APP scope can be more extensive in the VHA. For example, PAs in the VHA practice under federal jurisdiction and can bypass state legislation of scope of practice.[13] It also may reflect ongoing expansion of the role of APPs in the healthcare system since prior studies.[33, 36]

We did, however, note a few significant differences in NP and PA scope. PAs are twice as likely to perform procedures as NPs in inpatient medicine. It is unclear why PAs may do more procedures, as acute care NPs also are commonly taught and perform similar procedures.[33] We also found that PAs teach nonphysician students twice as often as NPs. This may reflect the deep commitment shown by the VHA to PA education dating back to the 1960s.[13] Finally, we found that PAs were significantly more likely to work weekends and federal holidays, a finding that may have implications for inpatient medicine services hiring APPs. Although not statistically significant, PAs, in general, performed more clinically oriented tasks like history and physicals and more often worked directly with hospitalists.

We found no difference in patient satisfaction or nurse satisfaction related to the presence of APPs, consistent with prior studies, where higher levels of satisfaction with APPs are observed in primary care but not hospital settings.[2, 10] However, it is surprising that no differences were observed for nurse satisfaction. NPs traditionally have a nursing focus, which might foster better relationships with nurses.[22] Expecting changes in either patient or nurse satisfaction with just the addition of APPs in the inpatient medicine setting without addressing other factors may be unrealistic. Patient satisfaction is a complex amalgam of various factors including patient expectations, sociodemographics, emotional and physical state, quality of care, and physician communication.[24] Similarly, nurse satisfaction depends on many factors including job stress, nursephysician collaboration, autonomy, staffing, and support.[37]

Finally, we found higher perception of both overall coordination of inpatient care and discharge coordination on services with NPs. A primary reason stated by medical centers to hire APPs is to improve continuity of care.[9] Prior research has shown better communication and collaboration between nurses, physicians, and NPs on inpatient medicine services.[21] NPs may feel that coordination of care is a major focus for their profession and may spend more time than physicians on care coordination activities.[38] Moreover, their background in both nursing and medicine may better lend itself to coordinating care between disciplines.[39] However, we were surprised to find that services with PAs had lower ratings of overall coordination by nurse managers given that care coordination also is a core competency of PA practice and a primary reason for medical centers to employ them.[9] The lack of a nursing background for PAs and potentially less overall medical experience than NPs possibly may contribute to this finding. However, our study does not suggest a direct explanation for this finding, and we had no measure of prior clinical experience, and thus it should be an area for further research.

There are a number of limitations to our study. First, findings from the VHA may not be generalizable to other healthcare systems.[39] However, VHA inpatient medicine services are, in general, structured similarly to non‐VHA settings and are often affiliated with academic medical centers. Further, this is the largest study to our knowledge to look at the specific roles and perceptions of care provided by both NPs and PAs in inpatient medicine. Second, we did not measure other outcomes of care that may be affected by the use of APPs, such as clinical outcomes, process of care measures, or cost‐effectiveness, some of which have been shown in small studies to be impacted by APPs in inpatient medicine.[10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35] Third, we are unable to attribute causality to our findings and may not have accounted for all the differences between services. Ideally, a randomized controlled trial of APPs in inpatient medicine would be helpful to address these concerns, but no such trials have been conducted. Finally, we did not survey APPs directly, but surveyed the chiefs of their service instead. The chiefs, however, are directly responsible for the scope of practice of all providers on their service and were directly involved in performance evaluations of most of these practitioners.

In conclusion, we found that NPs and PAs, functioning as APP hospitalists are more widely used and have a broader scope of practice on inpatient medicine than previously known or appreciated, at least in the VHA. In spite of their different backgrounds, training, regulations, and reimbursements, they appear to have a similar scope of practice with few differences in roles or perceived impact. Their impact on inpatient healthcare should be a subject of future research. In the meantime, inpatient medicine services should factor these findings into their decision making as they rapidly expand the use of APPs to provide better care to their patients and to address challenges in healthcare reform.[3, 27, 28, 40]

Acknowledgments

Disclosures: The work reported here was supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Health Services Research and Development Service (IIR 08067) and the Comprehensive Access & Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE) Center at the Iowa City VAMC (CIN 13412), and the Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR) at the Boston VA Healthcare System (HFP 04145). The funders did not play any role in the design and conduct of the study; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; and in preparation, review, and approval of the manuscript. The authors do not have any conflicts of interest or financial relationships related to the content of this manuscript. The authors had full access to and take full responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

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Nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) provide healthcare in numerous environments internationally and in the United States.[1, 2] However, their role in the inpatient medicine setting is not well described.[2] In the United States, there are more than 157,000 NPs and 85,000 PAs with projected increases.[3, 4] Although both professions provide direct medical care, there are key differences.[1, 3, 4, 5] NPs typically complete a master's or doctoral degree with advanced clinical training beyond nursing. PAs complete at least 2 years of college courses similar to premedical school requirements. PA programs use a medical school‐based curriculum and train for about 2 years before awarding a master's degree. NPs are regulated through state nursing boards, whereas PAs are regulated through state licensing or medical boards. NPs and PAs have different, yet overlapping scopes of practice. A key difference is that PAs can only practice collaborating with a physician.[5, 6] Overall, both have been shown to provide healthcare that is similar in quality to physicians in specific primary care and surgical settings.[2]

NPs and PAs, often referred to as advanced practice providers (APPs), are employed primarily in outpatient clinic settings providing direct patient care. Most APP studies have focused on the outpatient setting, despite nearly a third of US healthcare expenditure for hospital care.[2, 7] Little is known about APP involvement, specific roles, or impact on outcomes in inpatient medicine settings where they are often referred to as NP or PA hospitalists.[2, 8, 9, 10]

The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) is 1 of the largest employers of APPs, with 3.6% of all NPs and 2.1% of all PAs reported to practice in the VHA.[11, 12, 13] As the largest fully integrated healthcare system in the US, the VHA had 8.8 million veterans enrolled and 703,500 inpatient admissions in 2012.[14] Although this makes the VHA an ideal environment to study the role of APPs, few studies have done so.[13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19] Although studies have compared NPs and PAs to physicians, very little is known about how NPs differ from PAs when practicing in the same environment.

Our objective was to describe the scope of practice, defined as activities that an individual healthcare practitioner is licensed to perform, of NPs and PAs in the inpatient medicine setting and in the VHA. A secondary objective was to explore important outcomes that could potentially be affected by the presence of NPs and PAs on inpatient medicine.

METHODS

The Organizational Factors and Inpatient Medical Care Quality and Efficiency (OFIM) study provides a basis for this study with detail published elsewhere.[20] The OFIM study was conducted between 2010 and 2011 to evaluate quality of care in VHA inpatient medicine surveying chiefs of medicine (COM), inpatient medicine nurse managers (NM), attending physicians, and extant VHA survey data. The COM is the senior attending physician in charge of departments of medicine that include most medical subspecialties within the VHA medical centers. We used the subset of questions specific to NPs and PAs from the COM and NM surveys. Both COMs and NMs answered identical questions for NPs and PAs in 2 separate sections to avoid overlap of responses. NM survey responses were only used for the coordination of care regression model. Surveys were conducted by e‐mail with up to 4 reminders and a subsequent paper mailing. The inpatient medicine service included adult general internal medicine, medical subspecialties, and critical care. The study was approved by the institutional review boards of the VA Boston Healthcare System, the University of Iowa, and the Iowa City VA Healthcare System.

Measurements

To create our primary variable of interestNP and PA employmentwe used the COM survey. Respondents indicated the number and full‐time employee equivalent (FTEE) values for APPs on inpatient medicine. Based on responses, we created a categorical variable with 4 options: (1) facilities with NPs only, (2) facilities with PAs only, (3) facilities with both NPs and PAs, and (4) facilities with neither NPs nor PAs. We selected 3 outcomes that could potentially be affected by the presence of NPs and PAs on inpatient medicine: patient satisfaction, registered nurse (RN) satisfaction, and coordination of care. Patient satisfaction has been shown to improve with NPs and PAs in prior studies, and improving coordination of care has been a stated goal of medical centers in hiring NPs and PAs.[2, 9] Based on our personal experience and previous studies that have shown that nurses report better communication with NPs than physicians,[21] and that NPs retain a visible nursing component in their NP role,[22] we hypothesized that nurse satisfaction on inpatient medicine would improve with the presence of NPs and PAs.

Patient satisfaction was obtained from the 2010 VHA Survey of Healthcare Experiences of Patients (SHEP).[23] The average response rate was 45%. Approximately half the questions on the SHEP are identical to the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey (HCAHPS).[24] We examined 2 items: an overall rating and willingness to recommend the facility. For the overall rating, patients rated their hospitalization on a scale from 0 (worst hospital possible) to 10 (best hospital possible). Following HCAHPS guidelines, responses of either 9 or 10 were coded as positive and all other nonmissing responses were coded 0. For willingness to recommend, patients were asked Would you recommend this hospital to your friends and family? using a 4‐point response scale. Responses of definitely and probably no were coded as 0, and probably and definitely yes were coded as 1.

Nurse satisfaction was obtained from the 2011 Veterans Administration Nursing Outcomes Database, an annual survey of VHA nurses that includes demographic, work environment and satisfaction data.[25] The survey, a modified version of the Practice Environment Scale,[26] had a response rate of 52.9% (out of 51,870). For this analysis, we selected only inpatient medicine RNs. We used 2 measures: overall job satisfaction and collegial RN/MD (physician) relations. The former was assessed using the item Compared to what you think it should be, what is your current overall level of satisfaction with your job? The RN/MD relations scale had 3 items, including Physicians and nurses have good working relationships. Both items were evaluated on a similar 5‐point response scale.

Coordination of care was assessed from COM and NM surveys. Overall coordination was evaluated from the COM survey using 1 of 8 items in a question about care coordination, In the past month, how would you rate the following aspects of coordination of patient care inpatient coordination overall. Overall coordination was also evaluated from the NM survey using a similar item. Discharge coordination was evaluated only from the NM survey using 1 of 8 items, Thinking about your experiences during the past month, how would you rate the following aspects of the coordination of patient care related to the discharge process on your inpatient medicine unit discharge coordination overall. When a service had more than 1 response from the NM survey, we took an average of responses to represent the mean score. Responses for all questions ranged from 1 for poor to 5 for excellent (for all of the questions see Supporting Information, Appendix 1, in the online version of this article).

Last, we modeled for several contextual features that could influence outcomes: geographic region as a 4‐item categorical variable; teaching affiliation as a dichotomous variable based on whether the hospital was a member of the Council of Teaching Hospitals, urban or rural status, and facility size as a continuous variable using the number of inpatient medicine service beds.

Statistical Analysis

Descriptive bivariate analyses used t tests, 2, or 2‐tailed Fisher tests when appropriate to compare NP and PA autonomy, tasks, location of care, work schedule, clinical workload, organizational characteristics (ie, academic, urban, facility complexity, inpatient medicine team structure), and performance evaluations.

Next, we examined whether any of the contextual characteristics were associated with use of NPs or PAs using inferential statistics. For patient satisfaction, we developed a hierarchical linear model (HLM) that nested patients within facilities. We controlled for patient age, sex, health status, and length of stay. For nurse satisfaction, individual responses of RNs also were analyzed using the HLM. We controlled for whether the nurse had a leadership position, worked during the daily shift, and job tenure. Ordinary least squares regression was used to examine the 3 measures of coordination from the COM and NM surveys. All analyses were performed using Stata version 12 (StataCorp, College Station, TX) and SAS version 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

Of 123 inpatient medicine services that we surveyed, we included responses from the COMs of 118 services (response rate 95.2%); 5 responses were incomplete. Across 123 inpatient medicine services, we surveyed 264 nurse managers and received 198 responses (75.0%) from 114 inpatient medicine services. In the only model using NM responsesthe care coordination model104 inpatient medicine services had responses from both COM and NM surveys.

Of 118 VHA inpatient medicine services, 56 (47.5%) had APPs, of which 27 (48.2%) had NPs only, 15 (26.8%) had PAs only, and 14 (25.0%) had both NPs and PAs. FTEEs for NPs ranged from 0.5 to 7 (mean=2.22) and for PAs from 1 to 9 (mean=2.23) on the inpatient medicine service per hospital.

There were no significant differences on use of NPs and PAs by teaching affiliation, urban or rural setting, and geography. A significant difference was observed based on bed size (F[3,109]=5.13, P<0.001); facilities with both NPs and PAs had, on average, a larger number of inpatient beds (mean=79.0, standard deviation [SD]=32.3) compared to those without NPs or PAs (mean=50.1, SD=29.4) or with PAs only (mean=44.2, SD=20.5) using Tukey post hoc analysis.

The most common staffing model used staff (attending) physicians only working directly with APPs (N=29, 24.6%). Next most common was an academic model with staff physicians, housestaff, and APPs working together in teams (N=16, 13.4%). For performance evaluations, COMs contributed for both NPs (60.2%) and PAs (56.4%); in fewer cases, COMs completed evaluations of NPs (12.9%) and of PAs (29.0%) without input from other service managers (P=0.02).

Table 1 shows the differences reported by COMs between NPs and PAs scope of practice. Overall, 58.9% of NPs and 65.4% of PAs functioned somewhat or completely autonomously; 23.1% of NPs and 30.8% of PAs worked in a role closer to a ward assistant (eg, work directly with a physician, cowriting orders, and making care decisions with physician oversight). Tasks frequently performed by the majority of NPs and PAs included writing orders (87.9%), coordinating discharge plans (86.7%), communicating with consultants (83.1%), performing history and physicals (82.5%), writing daily progress notes (80.7%), communicating with primary care providers (73.5%), and working directly with hospitalists (72.8%). Less common tasks included serving on committees (46.4%), championing quality improvement activities (40.6%), and research (2.9%). There were no statistically significant differences between tasks, except for a higher proportion of services reporting PAs rather than NPs performing procedures (50.0% vs 22.0%, P=0.02) and teaching nonphysicians (50.0% vs 24.4%, P=0.04).

Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Hospital‐Based Scopes of Practice
 Services With NPs,Services With PAs,P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants.

  • *Of 41 services with NPs, 14 had PAs too. Of 29 services with PAs, 14 had NPs too.

  • Numbers may vary between items because all respondents may not have answered all items on survey questions. Percentages do not add up to 100% because respondents may have more than 1 response to multiple response questions.

How do NPs and PAs function in conjunction with inpatient medicine staff (attending) physicians in the day‐to‐day care of patients (ie, scope of practice)?N=39 (%)*N=26 (%)* 
Autonomously, in a manner similar to physicians10 (25.6%)5 (19.2%)0.77
Somewhat autonomously, but with limitations13 (33.3%)12 (46.2%)0.31
In a role closer to a ward assistant9 (23.1%)8 (30.8%)0.57
Administrative2 (5.1%)0 (0.0%)0.51
Other6 (15.4%)1 (3.8%)0.23
What types of tasks do NPs and PAs perform?N=41 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Write orders34 (82.9%)26 (92.9%)0.29
Coordinate discharge plans33 (80.5%)26 (92.9%)0.18
Communicate with consultants33 (80.5%)24 (85.7%)0.75
History and physicals31 (75.6%)25 (89.3%)0.22
Daily progress notes31 (75.6%)24 (85.7%)0.37
Communicate with primary care providers31 (75.6%)20 (71.4%0.78
Work directly with hospitalists26 (63.4%)23 (82.1%)0.18
Committees16 (39.0%)16 (57.1%)0.15
Champion quality improvement activities14 (34.1%)14 (50.0%)0.22
Teach nonphysician students10 (24.4%)14 (50.0%)0.04
Perform procedures9 (22.0%)14 (50.0%)0.02
Research1 (2.4%)1 (3.6%)1.00
Other6 (14.6%)0 (0.0%)0.04

Table 2 reports location of practice in the hospital and workload. There were no significant differences in locations where NPs and PAs provided care. Overall, 81.9% of APPs worked in inpatient wards, 23.1% in step‐down units, 18.6% in intensive care units, 13.8% in skilled care units, and 4.9% in other locations. In addition, 97.4% of NPs and 89.3% of PAs worked weekdays, whereas only 7.9% of NPs and 17.9% of PAs worked nights. More PAs than NPs worked federal holidays (32.1% vs 7.9%, P=0.02) and weekends (32.1% vs 13.2%, P=0.08). Most NPs and PAs handled a caseload of 4 to 10 patients with a mean of 6.5, with no difference between the 2. The minority, 27.0% of NPs and 23.1% of PAs, were not assigned specific patients.

Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Hospital Location of Care and Workload
 Services With NPsServices With PAsP Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: N/A, not assigned specific patients; NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants.

  • *Of 41 services with NPs, 14 had PAs too. Of 29 services with PAs, 14 had NPs too.

  • Numbers may vary between items because all respondents may not have answered all items on survey questions. Percentages do not add up to 100% because respondents may have more than 1 response to multiple response questions.

Where do NPs and PAs provide care?N=38 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Wards31 (81.6%)23 (82.1%)1.00
Step‐down unit8 (21.1%)7 (25.0%)0.77
Intensive care unit6 (15.8%)6 (21.4%)0.75
Skilled care units5 (13.2%)4 (14.3%)1.00
Other1 (2.6%)2 (7.1%)0.57
What are NPs and PAs tours of duty?N=38 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Weekdays37 (97.4%)25 (89.3%)0.30
Weekends5 (13.2%)9 (32.1%)0.08
Nights3 (7.9%)5 (17.9%)0.27
Federal holidays3 (7.9%)9 (32.1%)0.02
Other2 (5.3%)1 (3.6%)1.00
What is the average clinical workload for NPs and PAs?N=37 (%)*N=26 (%)* 
Mean no. of patients6.816.180.45
N/A10 (27.0%)6 (23.1%)0.56
Other1 (2.7%)0 (0.0%) 

In multivariable adjusted analyses evaluating the association between patient satisfaction and use of APPs (Table 3), no significant differences were observed for patients' rating of the hospital (F[3,95]=0.19; P=0.90) or willingness to recommend the hospital (F[3,95]=0.54; P=0.65). Similarly, no significant differences were observed based on use of APPs for nurse overall job satisfaction (F[3,101]=1.85; P=0.14) or collegial relations with physicians (F[3,101]=0.96; P=0.41).

Adjusted Regression Model Examining Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Association with Patient Satisfaction, Nurse Satisfaction, and Coordination of Care
 Patient SatisfactionNurse SatisfactionCoordination of Care
Overall RatingWillingness to RecommendRN Overall Job SatisfactionRN/MD RelationsChief of Medicine: Inpatient CoordinationNurse Manager: Inpatient CoordinationNurse Manager: Discharge Coordination
  • NOTE: Model shows parameter estimates (standard error). All models adjust for geographic region, teaching hospital affiliation, urban or rural hospital‐based setting, and inpatient medicine operating beds. Models for patient satisfaction adjust for patient age, health status, length of stay, and sex. Models for nurse satisfaction adjust for leadership position, working regular schedule, and job tenure. Abbreviations: MD, physician; NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants; RN, registered nurse. *P<0.05.

Intercept0.67 (0.14)10.20 (0.15)30.41 (0.13)20.89 (0.07)30.78 (0.26)30.67 (0.24)30.23 (0.26)
Facilities with NPs only0.06 (0.10)0.12 (0.09)0.14 (0.09)0.02 (0.05)10.63 (0.91)0.00 (0.19)0.42 (0.20)*
Facilities with PAs only0.06 (0.09)0.10 (0.11)0.10 (0.10)0.06 (0.05)10.08 (0.87)0.41 (0.22)0.36 (0.25)
Facilities with both NPs and PAs0.02 (0.12)0.11 (0.1300.17 (0.11)0.00 (0.00)0.31 (0.92)0.03 (0.27)0.21 (0.30)
Facilities with neither NPs nor PAs       

COM ratings of overall inpatient coordination were also nonsignificant (F[3, 100]=2.01; P=0.12), but their ratings of coordination were higher in facilities with NPs only than in those without either NPs or PAs (=1.63, P=0.08). Nurse manager ratings of overall inpatient coordination were not associated with APP use (F[3,91]=1.24; P=0.30), but were marginally lower with facilities using only PAs (=1.48; P=0.06). Nurse manager ratings of discharge coordination showed a significant effect for APP use (F[3,90]=3.30; P=0.02) with facilities having NPs only significantly higher than places without either NPs or PAs (=1.84, P=0.04).

DISCUSSION

Little evidence exists regarding the role of APPs in the inpatient medicine setting,[2] and important deficit concerns in medical knowledge, technical skills, and clinical experience have been raised.[27, 28] These concerns have called into question the appropriateness of involving APPs in the care of medical inpatients with extensive differential diagnoses and complex care requirements.[27, 28] In spite of these concerns, we found widespread use of APPs with almost half of the VHA inpatient medicine services reporting use, which stands in contrast to prior research.[9, 10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35] APPs practice in a variety of acute and subacute inpatient medicine settings including academic, community, rural, and urban settings without many discernable differences. The spectrum of activities performed by APPs in the VHA is similar to those reported in these inpatient medicine studies, although their scope of practice appears to be much broader than in these few small single academic center studies.[10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36] For example, only 11% of hospitalist PAs did procedures in a 2006 Society of Hospital Medicine survey, whereas 50% did in our study.[36]

Interestingly, we found that VHA NPs and PAs perform very similar tasks with similar caseloads despite differences in their background, training, regulation, reimbursement, and the longstanding observation that nurse practitioners are not physician assistants.[1, 3, 4, 5] These findings may reflect that APP scope can be more extensive in the VHA. For example, PAs in the VHA practice under federal jurisdiction and can bypass state legislation of scope of practice.[13] It also may reflect ongoing expansion of the role of APPs in the healthcare system since prior studies.[33, 36]

We did, however, note a few significant differences in NP and PA scope. PAs are twice as likely to perform procedures as NPs in inpatient medicine. It is unclear why PAs may do more procedures, as acute care NPs also are commonly taught and perform similar procedures.[33] We also found that PAs teach nonphysician students twice as often as NPs. This may reflect the deep commitment shown by the VHA to PA education dating back to the 1960s.[13] Finally, we found that PAs were significantly more likely to work weekends and federal holidays, a finding that may have implications for inpatient medicine services hiring APPs. Although not statistically significant, PAs, in general, performed more clinically oriented tasks like history and physicals and more often worked directly with hospitalists.

We found no difference in patient satisfaction or nurse satisfaction related to the presence of APPs, consistent with prior studies, where higher levels of satisfaction with APPs are observed in primary care but not hospital settings.[2, 10] However, it is surprising that no differences were observed for nurse satisfaction. NPs traditionally have a nursing focus, which might foster better relationships with nurses.[22] Expecting changes in either patient or nurse satisfaction with just the addition of APPs in the inpatient medicine setting without addressing other factors may be unrealistic. Patient satisfaction is a complex amalgam of various factors including patient expectations, sociodemographics, emotional and physical state, quality of care, and physician communication.[24] Similarly, nurse satisfaction depends on many factors including job stress, nursephysician collaboration, autonomy, staffing, and support.[37]

Finally, we found higher perception of both overall coordination of inpatient care and discharge coordination on services with NPs. A primary reason stated by medical centers to hire APPs is to improve continuity of care.[9] Prior research has shown better communication and collaboration between nurses, physicians, and NPs on inpatient medicine services.[21] NPs may feel that coordination of care is a major focus for their profession and may spend more time than physicians on care coordination activities.[38] Moreover, their background in both nursing and medicine may better lend itself to coordinating care between disciplines.[39] However, we were surprised to find that services with PAs had lower ratings of overall coordination by nurse managers given that care coordination also is a core competency of PA practice and a primary reason for medical centers to employ them.[9] The lack of a nursing background for PAs and potentially less overall medical experience than NPs possibly may contribute to this finding. However, our study does not suggest a direct explanation for this finding, and we had no measure of prior clinical experience, and thus it should be an area for further research.

There are a number of limitations to our study. First, findings from the VHA may not be generalizable to other healthcare systems.[39] However, VHA inpatient medicine services are, in general, structured similarly to non‐VHA settings and are often affiliated with academic medical centers. Further, this is the largest study to our knowledge to look at the specific roles and perceptions of care provided by both NPs and PAs in inpatient medicine. Second, we did not measure other outcomes of care that may be affected by the use of APPs, such as clinical outcomes, process of care measures, or cost‐effectiveness, some of which have been shown in small studies to be impacted by APPs in inpatient medicine.[10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35] Third, we are unable to attribute causality to our findings and may not have accounted for all the differences between services. Ideally, a randomized controlled trial of APPs in inpatient medicine would be helpful to address these concerns, but no such trials have been conducted. Finally, we did not survey APPs directly, but surveyed the chiefs of their service instead. The chiefs, however, are directly responsible for the scope of practice of all providers on their service and were directly involved in performance evaluations of most of these practitioners.

In conclusion, we found that NPs and PAs, functioning as APP hospitalists are more widely used and have a broader scope of practice on inpatient medicine than previously known or appreciated, at least in the VHA. In spite of their different backgrounds, training, regulations, and reimbursements, they appear to have a similar scope of practice with few differences in roles or perceived impact. Their impact on inpatient healthcare should be a subject of future research. In the meantime, inpatient medicine services should factor these findings into their decision making as they rapidly expand the use of APPs to provide better care to their patients and to address challenges in healthcare reform.[3, 27, 28, 40]

Acknowledgments

Disclosures: The work reported here was supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Health Services Research and Development Service (IIR 08067) and the Comprehensive Access & Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE) Center at the Iowa City VAMC (CIN 13412), and the Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR) at the Boston VA Healthcare System (HFP 04145). The funders did not play any role in the design and conduct of the study; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; and in preparation, review, and approval of the manuscript. The authors do not have any conflicts of interest or financial relationships related to the content of this manuscript. The authors had full access to and take full responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) provide healthcare in numerous environments internationally and in the United States.[1, 2] However, their role in the inpatient medicine setting is not well described.[2] In the United States, there are more than 157,000 NPs and 85,000 PAs with projected increases.[3, 4] Although both professions provide direct medical care, there are key differences.[1, 3, 4, 5] NPs typically complete a master's or doctoral degree with advanced clinical training beyond nursing. PAs complete at least 2 years of college courses similar to premedical school requirements. PA programs use a medical school‐based curriculum and train for about 2 years before awarding a master's degree. NPs are regulated through state nursing boards, whereas PAs are regulated through state licensing or medical boards. NPs and PAs have different, yet overlapping scopes of practice. A key difference is that PAs can only practice collaborating with a physician.[5, 6] Overall, both have been shown to provide healthcare that is similar in quality to physicians in specific primary care and surgical settings.[2]

NPs and PAs, often referred to as advanced practice providers (APPs), are employed primarily in outpatient clinic settings providing direct patient care. Most APP studies have focused on the outpatient setting, despite nearly a third of US healthcare expenditure for hospital care.[2, 7] Little is known about APP involvement, specific roles, or impact on outcomes in inpatient medicine settings where they are often referred to as NP or PA hospitalists.[2, 8, 9, 10]

The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) is 1 of the largest employers of APPs, with 3.6% of all NPs and 2.1% of all PAs reported to practice in the VHA.[11, 12, 13] As the largest fully integrated healthcare system in the US, the VHA had 8.8 million veterans enrolled and 703,500 inpatient admissions in 2012.[14] Although this makes the VHA an ideal environment to study the role of APPs, few studies have done so.[13, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19] Although studies have compared NPs and PAs to physicians, very little is known about how NPs differ from PAs when practicing in the same environment.

Our objective was to describe the scope of practice, defined as activities that an individual healthcare practitioner is licensed to perform, of NPs and PAs in the inpatient medicine setting and in the VHA. A secondary objective was to explore important outcomes that could potentially be affected by the presence of NPs and PAs on inpatient medicine.

METHODS

The Organizational Factors and Inpatient Medical Care Quality and Efficiency (OFIM) study provides a basis for this study with detail published elsewhere.[20] The OFIM study was conducted between 2010 and 2011 to evaluate quality of care in VHA inpatient medicine surveying chiefs of medicine (COM), inpatient medicine nurse managers (NM), attending physicians, and extant VHA survey data. The COM is the senior attending physician in charge of departments of medicine that include most medical subspecialties within the VHA medical centers. We used the subset of questions specific to NPs and PAs from the COM and NM surveys. Both COMs and NMs answered identical questions for NPs and PAs in 2 separate sections to avoid overlap of responses. NM survey responses were only used for the coordination of care regression model. Surveys were conducted by e‐mail with up to 4 reminders and a subsequent paper mailing. The inpatient medicine service included adult general internal medicine, medical subspecialties, and critical care. The study was approved by the institutional review boards of the VA Boston Healthcare System, the University of Iowa, and the Iowa City VA Healthcare System.

Measurements

To create our primary variable of interestNP and PA employmentwe used the COM survey. Respondents indicated the number and full‐time employee equivalent (FTEE) values for APPs on inpatient medicine. Based on responses, we created a categorical variable with 4 options: (1) facilities with NPs only, (2) facilities with PAs only, (3) facilities with both NPs and PAs, and (4) facilities with neither NPs nor PAs. We selected 3 outcomes that could potentially be affected by the presence of NPs and PAs on inpatient medicine: patient satisfaction, registered nurse (RN) satisfaction, and coordination of care. Patient satisfaction has been shown to improve with NPs and PAs in prior studies, and improving coordination of care has been a stated goal of medical centers in hiring NPs and PAs.[2, 9] Based on our personal experience and previous studies that have shown that nurses report better communication with NPs than physicians,[21] and that NPs retain a visible nursing component in their NP role,[22] we hypothesized that nurse satisfaction on inpatient medicine would improve with the presence of NPs and PAs.

Patient satisfaction was obtained from the 2010 VHA Survey of Healthcare Experiences of Patients (SHEP).[23] The average response rate was 45%. Approximately half the questions on the SHEP are identical to the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems survey (HCAHPS).[24] We examined 2 items: an overall rating and willingness to recommend the facility. For the overall rating, patients rated their hospitalization on a scale from 0 (worst hospital possible) to 10 (best hospital possible). Following HCAHPS guidelines, responses of either 9 or 10 were coded as positive and all other nonmissing responses were coded 0. For willingness to recommend, patients were asked Would you recommend this hospital to your friends and family? using a 4‐point response scale. Responses of definitely and probably no were coded as 0, and probably and definitely yes were coded as 1.

Nurse satisfaction was obtained from the 2011 Veterans Administration Nursing Outcomes Database, an annual survey of VHA nurses that includes demographic, work environment and satisfaction data.[25] The survey, a modified version of the Practice Environment Scale,[26] had a response rate of 52.9% (out of 51,870). For this analysis, we selected only inpatient medicine RNs. We used 2 measures: overall job satisfaction and collegial RN/MD (physician) relations. The former was assessed using the item Compared to what you think it should be, what is your current overall level of satisfaction with your job? The RN/MD relations scale had 3 items, including Physicians and nurses have good working relationships. Both items were evaluated on a similar 5‐point response scale.

Coordination of care was assessed from COM and NM surveys. Overall coordination was evaluated from the COM survey using 1 of 8 items in a question about care coordination, In the past month, how would you rate the following aspects of coordination of patient care inpatient coordination overall. Overall coordination was also evaluated from the NM survey using a similar item. Discharge coordination was evaluated only from the NM survey using 1 of 8 items, Thinking about your experiences during the past month, how would you rate the following aspects of the coordination of patient care related to the discharge process on your inpatient medicine unit discharge coordination overall. When a service had more than 1 response from the NM survey, we took an average of responses to represent the mean score. Responses for all questions ranged from 1 for poor to 5 for excellent (for all of the questions see Supporting Information, Appendix 1, in the online version of this article).

Last, we modeled for several contextual features that could influence outcomes: geographic region as a 4‐item categorical variable; teaching affiliation as a dichotomous variable based on whether the hospital was a member of the Council of Teaching Hospitals, urban or rural status, and facility size as a continuous variable using the number of inpatient medicine service beds.

Statistical Analysis

Descriptive bivariate analyses used t tests, 2, or 2‐tailed Fisher tests when appropriate to compare NP and PA autonomy, tasks, location of care, work schedule, clinical workload, organizational characteristics (ie, academic, urban, facility complexity, inpatient medicine team structure), and performance evaluations.

Next, we examined whether any of the contextual characteristics were associated with use of NPs or PAs using inferential statistics. For patient satisfaction, we developed a hierarchical linear model (HLM) that nested patients within facilities. We controlled for patient age, sex, health status, and length of stay. For nurse satisfaction, individual responses of RNs also were analyzed using the HLM. We controlled for whether the nurse had a leadership position, worked during the daily shift, and job tenure. Ordinary least squares regression was used to examine the 3 measures of coordination from the COM and NM surveys. All analyses were performed using Stata version 12 (StataCorp, College Station, TX) and SAS version 9.2 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).

RESULTS

Of 123 inpatient medicine services that we surveyed, we included responses from the COMs of 118 services (response rate 95.2%); 5 responses were incomplete. Across 123 inpatient medicine services, we surveyed 264 nurse managers and received 198 responses (75.0%) from 114 inpatient medicine services. In the only model using NM responsesthe care coordination model104 inpatient medicine services had responses from both COM and NM surveys.

Of 118 VHA inpatient medicine services, 56 (47.5%) had APPs, of which 27 (48.2%) had NPs only, 15 (26.8%) had PAs only, and 14 (25.0%) had both NPs and PAs. FTEEs for NPs ranged from 0.5 to 7 (mean=2.22) and for PAs from 1 to 9 (mean=2.23) on the inpatient medicine service per hospital.

There were no significant differences on use of NPs and PAs by teaching affiliation, urban or rural setting, and geography. A significant difference was observed based on bed size (F[3,109]=5.13, P<0.001); facilities with both NPs and PAs had, on average, a larger number of inpatient beds (mean=79.0, standard deviation [SD]=32.3) compared to those without NPs or PAs (mean=50.1, SD=29.4) or with PAs only (mean=44.2, SD=20.5) using Tukey post hoc analysis.

The most common staffing model used staff (attending) physicians only working directly with APPs (N=29, 24.6%). Next most common was an academic model with staff physicians, housestaff, and APPs working together in teams (N=16, 13.4%). For performance evaluations, COMs contributed for both NPs (60.2%) and PAs (56.4%); in fewer cases, COMs completed evaluations of NPs (12.9%) and of PAs (29.0%) without input from other service managers (P=0.02).

Table 1 shows the differences reported by COMs between NPs and PAs scope of practice. Overall, 58.9% of NPs and 65.4% of PAs functioned somewhat or completely autonomously; 23.1% of NPs and 30.8% of PAs worked in a role closer to a ward assistant (eg, work directly with a physician, cowriting orders, and making care decisions with physician oversight). Tasks frequently performed by the majority of NPs and PAs included writing orders (87.9%), coordinating discharge plans (86.7%), communicating with consultants (83.1%), performing history and physicals (82.5%), writing daily progress notes (80.7%), communicating with primary care providers (73.5%), and working directly with hospitalists (72.8%). Less common tasks included serving on committees (46.4%), championing quality improvement activities (40.6%), and research (2.9%). There were no statistically significant differences between tasks, except for a higher proportion of services reporting PAs rather than NPs performing procedures (50.0% vs 22.0%, P=0.02) and teaching nonphysicians (50.0% vs 24.4%, P=0.04).

Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Hospital‐Based Scopes of Practice
 Services With NPs,Services With PAs,P Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants.

  • *Of 41 services with NPs, 14 had PAs too. Of 29 services with PAs, 14 had NPs too.

  • Numbers may vary between items because all respondents may not have answered all items on survey questions. Percentages do not add up to 100% because respondents may have more than 1 response to multiple response questions.

How do NPs and PAs function in conjunction with inpatient medicine staff (attending) physicians in the day‐to‐day care of patients (ie, scope of practice)?N=39 (%)*N=26 (%)* 
Autonomously, in a manner similar to physicians10 (25.6%)5 (19.2%)0.77
Somewhat autonomously, but with limitations13 (33.3%)12 (46.2%)0.31
In a role closer to a ward assistant9 (23.1%)8 (30.8%)0.57
Administrative2 (5.1%)0 (0.0%)0.51
Other6 (15.4%)1 (3.8%)0.23
What types of tasks do NPs and PAs perform?N=41 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Write orders34 (82.9%)26 (92.9%)0.29
Coordinate discharge plans33 (80.5%)26 (92.9%)0.18
Communicate with consultants33 (80.5%)24 (85.7%)0.75
History and physicals31 (75.6%)25 (89.3%)0.22
Daily progress notes31 (75.6%)24 (85.7%)0.37
Communicate with primary care providers31 (75.6%)20 (71.4%0.78
Work directly with hospitalists26 (63.4%)23 (82.1%)0.18
Committees16 (39.0%)16 (57.1%)0.15
Champion quality improvement activities14 (34.1%)14 (50.0%)0.22
Teach nonphysician students10 (24.4%)14 (50.0%)0.04
Perform procedures9 (22.0%)14 (50.0%)0.02
Research1 (2.4%)1 (3.6%)1.00
Other6 (14.6%)0 (0.0%)0.04

Table 2 reports location of practice in the hospital and workload. There were no significant differences in locations where NPs and PAs provided care. Overall, 81.9% of APPs worked in inpatient wards, 23.1% in step‐down units, 18.6% in intensive care units, 13.8% in skilled care units, and 4.9% in other locations. In addition, 97.4% of NPs and 89.3% of PAs worked weekdays, whereas only 7.9% of NPs and 17.9% of PAs worked nights. More PAs than NPs worked federal holidays (32.1% vs 7.9%, P=0.02) and weekends (32.1% vs 13.2%, P=0.08). Most NPs and PAs handled a caseload of 4 to 10 patients with a mean of 6.5, with no difference between the 2. The minority, 27.0% of NPs and 23.1% of PAs, were not assigned specific patients.

Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Hospital Location of Care and Workload
 Services With NPsServices With PAsP Value
  • NOTE: Abbreviations: N/A, not assigned specific patients; NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants.

  • *Of 41 services with NPs, 14 had PAs too. Of 29 services with PAs, 14 had NPs too.

  • Numbers may vary between items because all respondents may not have answered all items on survey questions. Percentages do not add up to 100% because respondents may have more than 1 response to multiple response questions.

Where do NPs and PAs provide care?N=38 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Wards31 (81.6%)23 (82.1%)1.00
Step‐down unit8 (21.1%)7 (25.0%)0.77
Intensive care unit6 (15.8%)6 (21.4%)0.75
Skilled care units5 (13.2%)4 (14.3%)1.00
Other1 (2.6%)2 (7.1%)0.57
What are NPs and PAs tours of duty?N=38 (%)*N=28 (%)* 
Weekdays37 (97.4%)25 (89.3%)0.30
Weekends5 (13.2%)9 (32.1%)0.08
Nights3 (7.9%)5 (17.9%)0.27
Federal holidays3 (7.9%)9 (32.1%)0.02
Other2 (5.3%)1 (3.6%)1.00
What is the average clinical workload for NPs and PAs?N=37 (%)*N=26 (%)* 
Mean no. of patients6.816.180.45
N/A10 (27.0%)6 (23.1%)0.56
Other1 (2.7%)0 (0.0%) 

In multivariable adjusted analyses evaluating the association between patient satisfaction and use of APPs (Table 3), no significant differences were observed for patients' rating of the hospital (F[3,95]=0.19; P=0.90) or willingness to recommend the hospital (F[3,95]=0.54; P=0.65). Similarly, no significant differences were observed based on use of APPs for nurse overall job satisfaction (F[3,101]=1.85; P=0.14) or collegial relations with physicians (F[3,101]=0.96; P=0.41).

Adjusted Regression Model Examining Nurse Practitioner and Physician Assistant Association with Patient Satisfaction, Nurse Satisfaction, and Coordination of Care
 Patient SatisfactionNurse SatisfactionCoordination of Care
Overall RatingWillingness to RecommendRN Overall Job SatisfactionRN/MD RelationsChief of Medicine: Inpatient CoordinationNurse Manager: Inpatient CoordinationNurse Manager: Discharge Coordination
  • NOTE: Model shows parameter estimates (standard error). All models adjust for geographic region, teaching hospital affiliation, urban or rural hospital‐based setting, and inpatient medicine operating beds. Models for patient satisfaction adjust for patient age, health status, length of stay, and sex. Models for nurse satisfaction adjust for leadership position, working regular schedule, and job tenure. Abbreviations: MD, physician; NPs, nurse practitioners; PAs, physician assistants; RN, registered nurse. *P<0.05.

Intercept0.67 (0.14)10.20 (0.15)30.41 (0.13)20.89 (0.07)30.78 (0.26)30.67 (0.24)30.23 (0.26)
Facilities with NPs only0.06 (0.10)0.12 (0.09)0.14 (0.09)0.02 (0.05)10.63 (0.91)0.00 (0.19)0.42 (0.20)*
Facilities with PAs only0.06 (0.09)0.10 (0.11)0.10 (0.10)0.06 (0.05)10.08 (0.87)0.41 (0.22)0.36 (0.25)
Facilities with both NPs and PAs0.02 (0.12)0.11 (0.1300.17 (0.11)0.00 (0.00)0.31 (0.92)0.03 (0.27)0.21 (0.30)
Facilities with neither NPs nor PAs       

COM ratings of overall inpatient coordination were also nonsignificant (F[3, 100]=2.01; P=0.12), but their ratings of coordination were higher in facilities with NPs only than in those without either NPs or PAs (=1.63, P=0.08). Nurse manager ratings of overall inpatient coordination were not associated with APP use (F[3,91]=1.24; P=0.30), but were marginally lower with facilities using only PAs (=1.48; P=0.06). Nurse manager ratings of discharge coordination showed a significant effect for APP use (F[3,90]=3.30; P=0.02) with facilities having NPs only significantly higher than places without either NPs or PAs (=1.84, P=0.04).

DISCUSSION

Little evidence exists regarding the role of APPs in the inpatient medicine setting,[2] and important deficit concerns in medical knowledge, technical skills, and clinical experience have been raised.[27, 28] These concerns have called into question the appropriateness of involving APPs in the care of medical inpatients with extensive differential diagnoses and complex care requirements.[27, 28] In spite of these concerns, we found widespread use of APPs with almost half of the VHA inpatient medicine services reporting use, which stands in contrast to prior research.[9, 10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35] APPs practice in a variety of acute and subacute inpatient medicine settings including academic, community, rural, and urban settings without many discernable differences. The spectrum of activities performed by APPs in the VHA is similar to those reported in these inpatient medicine studies, although their scope of practice appears to be much broader than in these few small single academic center studies.[10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36] For example, only 11% of hospitalist PAs did procedures in a 2006 Society of Hospital Medicine survey, whereas 50% did in our study.[36]

Interestingly, we found that VHA NPs and PAs perform very similar tasks with similar caseloads despite differences in their background, training, regulation, reimbursement, and the longstanding observation that nurse practitioners are not physician assistants.[1, 3, 4, 5] These findings may reflect that APP scope can be more extensive in the VHA. For example, PAs in the VHA practice under federal jurisdiction and can bypass state legislation of scope of practice.[13] It also may reflect ongoing expansion of the role of APPs in the healthcare system since prior studies.[33, 36]

We did, however, note a few significant differences in NP and PA scope. PAs are twice as likely to perform procedures as NPs in inpatient medicine. It is unclear why PAs may do more procedures, as acute care NPs also are commonly taught and perform similar procedures.[33] We also found that PAs teach nonphysician students twice as often as NPs. This may reflect the deep commitment shown by the VHA to PA education dating back to the 1960s.[13] Finally, we found that PAs were significantly more likely to work weekends and federal holidays, a finding that may have implications for inpatient medicine services hiring APPs. Although not statistically significant, PAs, in general, performed more clinically oriented tasks like history and physicals and more often worked directly with hospitalists.

We found no difference in patient satisfaction or nurse satisfaction related to the presence of APPs, consistent with prior studies, where higher levels of satisfaction with APPs are observed in primary care but not hospital settings.[2, 10] However, it is surprising that no differences were observed for nurse satisfaction. NPs traditionally have a nursing focus, which might foster better relationships with nurses.[22] Expecting changes in either patient or nurse satisfaction with just the addition of APPs in the inpatient medicine setting without addressing other factors may be unrealistic. Patient satisfaction is a complex amalgam of various factors including patient expectations, sociodemographics, emotional and physical state, quality of care, and physician communication.[24] Similarly, nurse satisfaction depends on many factors including job stress, nursephysician collaboration, autonomy, staffing, and support.[37]

Finally, we found higher perception of both overall coordination of inpatient care and discharge coordination on services with NPs. A primary reason stated by medical centers to hire APPs is to improve continuity of care.[9] Prior research has shown better communication and collaboration between nurses, physicians, and NPs on inpatient medicine services.[21] NPs may feel that coordination of care is a major focus for their profession and may spend more time than physicians on care coordination activities.[38] Moreover, their background in both nursing and medicine may better lend itself to coordinating care between disciplines.[39] However, we were surprised to find that services with PAs had lower ratings of overall coordination by nurse managers given that care coordination also is a core competency of PA practice and a primary reason for medical centers to employ them.[9] The lack of a nursing background for PAs and potentially less overall medical experience than NPs possibly may contribute to this finding. However, our study does not suggest a direct explanation for this finding, and we had no measure of prior clinical experience, and thus it should be an area for further research.

There are a number of limitations to our study. First, findings from the VHA may not be generalizable to other healthcare systems.[39] However, VHA inpatient medicine services are, in general, structured similarly to non‐VHA settings and are often affiliated with academic medical centers. Further, this is the largest study to our knowledge to look at the specific roles and perceptions of care provided by both NPs and PAs in inpatient medicine. Second, we did not measure other outcomes of care that may be affected by the use of APPs, such as clinical outcomes, process of care measures, or cost‐effectiveness, some of which have been shown in small studies to be impacted by APPs in inpatient medicine.[10, 22, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35] Third, we are unable to attribute causality to our findings and may not have accounted for all the differences between services. Ideally, a randomized controlled trial of APPs in inpatient medicine would be helpful to address these concerns, but no such trials have been conducted. Finally, we did not survey APPs directly, but surveyed the chiefs of their service instead. The chiefs, however, are directly responsible for the scope of practice of all providers on their service and were directly involved in performance evaluations of most of these practitioners.

In conclusion, we found that NPs and PAs, functioning as APP hospitalists are more widely used and have a broader scope of practice on inpatient medicine than previously known or appreciated, at least in the VHA. In spite of their different backgrounds, training, regulations, and reimbursements, they appear to have a similar scope of practice with few differences in roles or perceived impact. Their impact on inpatient healthcare should be a subject of future research. In the meantime, inpatient medicine services should factor these findings into their decision making as they rapidly expand the use of APPs to provide better care to their patients and to address challenges in healthcare reform.[3, 27, 28, 40]

Acknowledgments

Disclosures: The work reported here was supported by the Department of Veterans Affairs, Veterans Health Administration, Health Services Research and Development Service (IIR 08067) and the Comprehensive Access & Delivery Research and Evaluation (CADRE) Center at the Iowa City VAMC (CIN 13412), and the Center for Healthcare Organization and Implementation Research (CHOIR) at the Boston VA Healthcare System (HFP 04145). The funders did not play any role in the design and conduct of the study; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; and in preparation, review, and approval of the manuscript. The authors do not have any conflicts of interest or financial relationships related to the content of this manuscript. The authors had full access to and take full responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the Department of Veterans Affairs.

References
  1. Cox CL. Advanced nurse practitioners and physician assistants: what is the difference? Comparing the USA and UK. Hosp Med. 2001;62:169171.
  2. Laurant M, Harmsen M, Wollersheim H, Grol R, Faber M, Sibbald B. The impact of nonphysician clinicians: do they improve the quality and cost‐effectiveness of health care services? Med Care Res Rev. 2009;66(6 suppl):36S89S.
  3. Auerbach DI. Will the NP workforce grow in the future? New forecasts and implications for healthcare delivery. Med Care. 2012;50(7):606610.
  4. Danielsen RD, Lathrop J, Arbet S. The certified physician assistant iin the United States: a 2011 snapshot. JAAPA. 2012;25(4):58.
  5. Gershengorn HB, Johnson MP, Factor P. The use of nonphysician providers in adult intensive care units. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2012;185(6):600605.
  6. American Academy of Physician Assistants. State law issues: supervision of PAs: access and excellence in patient care. October 2011. Available at: http://www.aapa.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=632. Accessed on June 22, 2014.
  7. Centers for Medicare 5(2):99102.
  8. Moote M, Krsek C, Kleinpell R, Todd B. Physician assistant and nurse practitioner utilization in academic medical centers. Am J Med Qual. 2011;26(6):452460.
  9. Roy CL, Liang CL, Lund M, et al. Implementation of a physician assistant/hospitalist service in an academic medical center: impact on efficiency and patient outcomes. J Hosp Med. 2008;3(5):361368.
  10. American Academy of Physician Assistants. 2010 AAPA Physician Assistant Census. Alexandria, VA, 2011. Available at: http://www.aapa.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=838. Accessed on June 22, 2014.
  11. Goolsby MJ. 2009–2010 AANP national nurse practitioner sample survey: an overview. J Am Acad Nurse Pract. 2011;23(5):266268.
  12. Woodmansee DJ, Hooker RS. Physician assistants working in the Department of Veterans Affairs. JAAPA 2010;23(11):4144.
  13. National Center for Veterans Analysis and Statistics. Selected Veterans Health Administration Characteristics: FY2002 to FY2012. 2013; http://www.va.gov/vetdata/docs/Utilization/VHAStats.xls. Accessed January 7, 2014.
  14. Brock DM, Wick KH, Evans TC, Gianola FJ. The physician assistant profession and military veterans. Mil Med. 2011;176(2):197203.
  15. Budzi D, Lurie S, Singh K, Hooker R. Veterans' perceptions of care by nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and physicians: a comparison from satisfaction surveys. J Am Acad Nurse Pract. 2010;22(3):170176.
  16. Fletcher CE, Copeland LA, Lowery JC, Reeves PJ. Nurse practitioners as primary care providers within the VA. Mil Med. 2011;176(7):791797.
  17. Hooker RS. Federally employed physician assistants. Mil Med. 2008;173(9):895899.
  18. Huang PY, Yano EM, Lee ML, Chang BL, Rubenstein LV. Variations in nurse practitioner use in Veterans Affairs primary care practices. Health Serv Res. 2004;39(4 pt 1):887904.
  19. Restuccia J, Mohr D, Meterko M, Stolzmann K, Kaboli P. The association of hospital characteristics and quality improvement activities in inpatient medical services. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29(5):715722.
  20. Vazirani S, Hays RD, Shapiro MF, Cowan M. Effect of a multidisciplinary intervention on communication and collaboration among physicians and nurses. Am J Crit Care. 2005;14(1):7177.
  21. Stetler CB, Effken J, Frigon L, Tiernan C, Zwingman‐Bagley C. Utilization‐focused evaluation of acute care nurse practitioner role. Outcomes Manag Nurs Pract. 1998;2(4):152160; quiz 160–151.
  22. Davies EA, Meterko MM, Charns MP, Seibert ME, Cleary PD. Factors affecting the use of patient survey data for quality improvement in the Veterans Health Administration. BMC Health Serv Res. 2011;11:334.
  23. Jha AK, Orav EJ, Zheng J, Epstein AM. Patients' perception of hospital care in the United States. N Engl J Med. 2008;359(18):19211931.
  24. Sales AE, Sharp ND, Li YF, et al. Nurse staffing and patient outcomes in Veterans Affairs hospitals. J Nurs Adm. 2005;35(10):459466.
  25. Lake ET. Development of the practice environment scale of the Nursing Work Index. Res Nurs Health. 2002;25(3):176188.
  26. Fairman JA, Rowe JW, Hassmiller S, Shalala DE. Broadening the scope of nursing practice. N Engl J Med. 2011;364(3):193196.
  27. Iglehart JK. Expanding the role of advanced nurse practitioners—risks and rewards. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(20):19351941.
  28. Cowan MJ, Shapiro M, Hays RD, et al. The effect of a multidisciplinary hospitalist/physician and advanced practice nurse collaboration on hospital costs. J Nurs Adm. 2006;36(2):7985.
  29. Goksel D, Harrison CJ, Morrison RE, Miller ST. Description of a nurse practitioner inpatient service in a public teaching hospital. J Gen Intern Med. 1993;8(1):2930.
  30. Howie JN, Erickson M. Acute care nurse practitioners: creating and implementing a model of care for an inpatient general medical service. Am J Crit Care. 2002;11(5):448458.
  31. Myers JS, Bellini LM, Rohrbach J, Shofer FS, Hollander JE. Improving resource utilization in a teaching hospital: development of a nonteaching service for chest pain admissions. Acad Med. 2006;81(5):432435.
  32. Rudy EB, Davidson LJ, Daly B, et al. Care activities and outcomes of patients cared for by acute care nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and resident physicians: a comparison. Am J Crit Care. 1998;7(4):267281.
  33. Singh S, Tarima S, Rana V, et al. Impact of localizing general medical teams to a single nursing unit. J Hosp Med. 2012;7(7):551556.
  34. Rhee J, Ritchie J, Eward AM. Resource use by physician assistant services versus teaching services. JAAPA 2002;15(1):3338, 40, 42.
  35. MaHaffy HW. Physician assistants in hospital medicine. In: Ballweg R, Sullivan EM, Brown D, Vetrosky D, eds. Physician Assistant: A Guide to Clinical Practice. 5th ed. Philadelphia, PA: W.B. Saunders; 2013:450455.
  36. Hayes B, Bonner A, Pryor J. Factors contributing to nurse job satisfaction in the acute hospital setting: a review of recent literature. J Nurs Manage. 2010;18(7):804814.
  37. Hoffman LA, Tasota FJ, Zullo TG, Scharfenberg C, Donahoe MP. Outcomes of care managed by an acute care nurse practitioner/attending physician team in a subacute medical intensive care unit. Am J Crit Care. 2005;14(2):121130; quiz 131–132.
  38. Offenbeek MA, Knip M. The organizational and performance effects of nurse practitioner roles. J Adv Nurs. 2004;47(6):672681.
  39. Sargen M, Hooker RS, Cooper RA. Gaps in the supply of physicians, advance practice nurses, and physician assistants. J Am Coll Surg. 2011;212(6):991999.
References
  1. Cox CL. Advanced nurse practitioners and physician assistants: what is the difference? Comparing the USA and UK. Hosp Med. 2001;62:169171.
  2. Laurant M, Harmsen M, Wollersheim H, Grol R, Faber M, Sibbald B. The impact of nonphysician clinicians: do they improve the quality and cost‐effectiveness of health care services? Med Care Res Rev. 2009;66(6 suppl):36S89S.
  3. Auerbach DI. Will the NP workforce grow in the future? New forecasts and implications for healthcare delivery. Med Care. 2012;50(7):606610.
  4. Danielsen RD, Lathrop J, Arbet S. The certified physician assistant iin the United States: a 2011 snapshot. JAAPA. 2012;25(4):58.
  5. Gershengorn HB, Johnson MP, Factor P. The use of nonphysician providers in adult intensive care units. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2012;185(6):600605.
  6. American Academy of Physician Assistants. State law issues: supervision of PAs: access and excellence in patient care. October 2011. Available at: http://www.aapa.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=632. Accessed on June 22, 2014.
  7. Centers for Medicare 5(2):99102.
  8. Moote M, Krsek C, Kleinpell R, Todd B. Physician assistant and nurse practitioner utilization in academic medical centers. Am J Med Qual. 2011;26(6):452460.
  9. Roy CL, Liang CL, Lund M, et al. Implementation of a physician assistant/hospitalist service in an academic medical center: impact on efficiency and patient outcomes. J Hosp Med. 2008;3(5):361368.
  10. American Academy of Physician Assistants. 2010 AAPA Physician Assistant Census. Alexandria, VA, 2011. Available at: http://www.aapa.org/WorkArea/DownloadAsset.aspx?id=838. Accessed on June 22, 2014.
  11. Goolsby MJ. 2009–2010 AANP national nurse practitioner sample survey: an overview. J Am Acad Nurse Pract. 2011;23(5):266268.
  12. Woodmansee DJ, Hooker RS. Physician assistants working in the Department of Veterans Affairs. JAAPA 2010;23(11):4144.
  13. National Center for Veterans Analysis and Statistics. Selected Veterans Health Administration Characteristics: FY2002 to FY2012. 2013; http://www.va.gov/vetdata/docs/Utilization/VHAStats.xls. Accessed January 7, 2014.
  14. Brock DM, Wick KH, Evans TC, Gianola FJ. The physician assistant profession and military veterans. Mil Med. 2011;176(2):197203.
  15. Budzi D, Lurie S, Singh K, Hooker R. Veterans' perceptions of care by nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and physicians: a comparison from satisfaction surveys. J Am Acad Nurse Pract. 2010;22(3):170176.
  16. Fletcher CE, Copeland LA, Lowery JC, Reeves PJ. Nurse practitioners as primary care providers within the VA. Mil Med. 2011;176(7):791797.
  17. Hooker RS. Federally employed physician assistants. Mil Med. 2008;173(9):895899.
  18. Huang PY, Yano EM, Lee ML, Chang BL, Rubenstein LV. Variations in nurse practitioner use in Veterans Affairs primary care practices. Health Serv Res. 2004;39(4 pt 1):887904.
  19. Restuccia J, Mohr D, Meterko M, Stolzmann K, Kaboli P. The association of hospital characteristics and quality improvement activities in inpatient medical services. J Gen Intern Med. 2014;29(5):715722.
  20. Vazirani S, Hays RD, Shapiro MF, Cowan M. Effect of a multidisciplinary intervention on communication and collaboration among physicians and nurses. Am J Crit Care. 2005;14(1):7177.
  21. Stetler CB, Effken J, Frigon L, Tiernan C, Zwingman‐Bagley C. Utilization‐focused evaluation of acute care nurse practitioner role. Outcomes Manag Nurs Pract. 1998;2(4):152160; quiz 160–151.
  22. Davies EA, Meterko MM, Charns MP, Seibert ME, Cleary PD. Factors affecting the use of patient survey data for quality improvement in the Veterans Health Administration. BMC Health Serv Res. 2011;11:334.
  23. Jha AK, Orav EJ, Zheng J, Epstein AM. Patients' perception of hospital care in the United States. N Engl J Med. 2008;359(18):19211931.
  24. Sales AE, Sharp ND, Li YF, et al. Nurse staffing and patient outcomes in Veterans Affairs hospitals. J Nurs Adm. 2005;35(10):459466.
  25. Lake ET. Development of the practice environment scale of the Nursing Work Index. Res Nurs Health. 2002;25(3):176188.
  26. Fairman JA, Rowe JW, Hassmiller S, Shalala DE. Broadening the scope of nursing practice. N Engl J Med. 2011;364(3):193196.
  27. Iglehart JK. Expanding the role of advanced nurse practitioners—risks and rewards. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(20):19351941.
  28. Cowan MJ, Shapiro M, Hays RD, et al. The effect of a multidisciplinary hospitalist/physician and advanced practice nurse collaboration on hospital costs. J Nurs Adm. 2006;36(2):7985.
  29. Goksel D, Harrison CJ, Morrison RE, Miller ST. Description of a nurse practitioner inpatient service in a public teaching hospital. J Gen Intern Med. 1993;8(1):2930.
  30. Howie JN, Erickson M. Acute care nurse practitioners: creating and implementing a model of care for an inpatient general medical service. Am J Crit Care. 2002;11(5):448458.
  31. Myers JS, Bellini LM, Rohrbach J, Shofer FS, Hollander JE. Improving resource utilization in a teaching hospital: development of a nonteaching service for chest pain admissions. Acad Med. 2006;81(5):432435.
  32. Rudy EB, Davidson LJ, Daly B, et al. Care activities and outcomes of patients cared for by acute care nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and resident physicians: a comparison. Am J Crit Care. 1998;7(4):267281.
  33. Singh S, Tarima S, Rana V, et al. Impact of localizing general medical teams to a single nursing unit. J Hosp Med. 2012;7(7):551556.
  34. Rhee J, Ritchie J, Eward AM. Resource use by physician assistant services versus teaching services. JAAPA 2002;15(1):3338, 40, 42.
  35. MaHaffy HW. Physician assistants in hospital medicine. In: Ballweg R, Sullivan EM, Brown D, Vetrosky D, eds. Physician Assistant: A Guide to Clinical Practice. 5th ed. Philadelphia, PA: W.B. Saunders; 2013:450455.
  36. Hayes B, Bonner A, Pryor J. Factors contributing to nurse job satisfaction in the acute hospital setting: a review of recent literature. J Nurs Manage. 2010;18(7):804814.
  37. Hoffman LA, Tasota FJ, Zullo TG, Scharfenberg C, Donahoe MP. Outcomes of care managed by an acute care nurse practitioner/attending physician team in a subacute medical intensive care unit. Am J Crit Care. 2005;14(2):121130; quiz 131–132.
  38. Offenbeek MA, Knip M. The organizational and performance effects of nurse practitioner roles. J Adv Nurs. 2004;47(6):672681.
  39. Sargen M, Hooker RS, Cooper RA. Gaps in the supply of physicians, advance practice nurses, and physician assistants. J Am Coll Surg. 2011;212(6):991999.
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Address for correspondence and reprint requests: Anand Kartha, MD, Veterans Administration Boston Healthcare System, 1400 VFW Parkway, Mail Stop 111, West Roxbury, MA 02132; Telephone: 857‐203‐6361; Fax: 857‐203‐5549; E‐mail: anand.kartha@va.gov
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Hospitalists & the Veterans Health Administration

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Hospitalists & the Veterans Health Administration

If you are a hospitalist working for Kaiser, IPC, or another of the large healthcare systems, you may wonder what the Veterans Health Administration Healthcare System (VA) could possibly have to do with your practice. In many ways, the VA is the prototype, risk-adjusted, capitated accountable care organization (ACO) focused on expanding access to affordable healthcare, lowering costs, and improving quality. We care for complex, diverse, often vulnerable patient populations. We are incented to keep them healthy and out of the hospital. As a highly integrated healthcare system with 152 medical centers and more than 400 hospitalists, the VA has been able to coordinate hospital care, primary care, and post-acute care in a way that many health systems hope to achieve.

VA hospitalists care for veterans with multiple issues, including acute MI, heart failure, pneumonia, and COPD. In short, we care for the same types of patients as hospitalists across the country, with measured outcomes of similar or better quality as non-VA patients.

The VA has utilized an advanced electronic health record (CPRS) since 1997. It allows for effective patient care and is successfully leveraged for large-scale health services research.

VA hospitalists educate the next generation of physicians through robust academic affiliations with most of our nation’s most-renowned medical schools and have administered residency training programs for almost 60 years.

The VA has been the site of groundbreaking, Nobel Prize-winning research that has shaped the care of hospitalized patients worldwide: beta blockers for heart failure, steroids for COPD exacerbations, and the invention of implantable cardiac pacemakers and computerized axial tomography (CAT) scans all have as their foundation research performed at VAs.

VA hospitalists educate the next generation of physicians through robust academic affiliations with most of our nation’s most-renowned medical schools and have administered residency training programs for almost 60 years. More than half of all medical students and residents complete part of their training at VAs.

VA hospitalists are also leaders in quality and patient safety.

Over the next year, SHM’s VA Task Force will be sharing 10 of the innovative approaches VA hospitalists are taking to provide care for our nation’s heroes. We will dispel a few myths about the “VA Spa” along the way and, hopefully, share some ideas you can use to better care for your patients.

Many of The Hospitalist’s readers have family members who have served in the military. For all of you, this IS your granddad’s VA—and it’s pretty darn good.


Dr. Odden is a hospitalist at the VA in Ann Arbor, Mich. Dr. Kartha is a hospitalist at the VA in Boston. Both are members of SHM’s VA Task Force.

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If you are a hospitalist working for Kaiser, IPC, or another of the large healthcare systems, you may wonder what the Veterans Health Administration Healthcare System (VA) could possibly have to do with your practice. In many ways, the VA is the prototype, risk-adjusted, capitated accountable care organization (ACO) focused on expanding access to affordable healthcare, lowering costs, and improving quality. We care for complex, diverse, often vulnerable patient populations. We are incented to keep them healthy and out of the hospital. As a highly integrated healthcare system with 152 medical centers and more than 400 hospitalists, the VA has been able to coordinate hospital care, primary care, and post-acute care in a way that many health systems hope to achieve.

VA hospitalists care for veterans with multiple issues, including acute MI, heart failure, pneumonia, and COPD. In short, we care for the same types of patients as hospitalists across the country, with measured outcomes of similar or better quality as non-VA patients.

The VA has utilized an advanced electronic health record (CPRS) since 1997. It allows for effective patient care and is successfully leveraged for large-scale health services research.

VA hospitalists educate the next generation of physicians through robust academic affiliations with most of our nation’s most-renowned medical schools and have administered residency training programs for almost 60 years.

The VA has been the site of groundbreaking, Nobel Prize-winning research that has shaped the care of hospitalized patients worldwide: beta blockers for heart failure, steroids for COPD exacerbations, and the invention of implantable cardiac pacemakers and computerized axial tomography (CAT) scans all have as their foundation research performed at VAs.

VA hospitalists educate the next generation of physicians through robust academic affiliations with most of our nation’s most-renowned medical schools and have administered residency training programs for almost 60 years. More than half of all medical students and residents complete part of their training at VAs.

VA hospitalists are also leaders in quality and patient safety.

Over the next year, SHM’s VA Task Force will be sharing 10 of the innovative approaches VA hospitalists are taking to provide care for our nation’s heroes. We will dispel a few myths about the “VA Spa” along the way and, hopefully, share some ideas you can use to better care for your patients.

Many of The Hospitalist’s readers have family members who have served in the military. For all of you, this IS your granddad’s VA—and it’s pretty darn good.


Dr. Odden is a hospitalist at the VA in Ann Arbor, Mich. Dr. Kartha is a hospitalist at the VA in Boston. Both are members of SHM’s VA Task Force.

If you are a hospitalist working for Kaiser, IPC, or another of the large healthcare systems, you may wonder what the Veterans Health Administration Healthcare System (VA) could possibly have to do with your practice. In many ways, the VA is the prototype, risk-adjusted, capitated accountable care organization (ACO) focused on expanding access to affordable healthcare, lowering costs, and improving quality. We care for complex, diverse, often vulnerable patient populations. We are incented to keep them healthy and out of the hospital. As a highly integrated healthcare system with 152 medical centers and more than 400 hospitalists, the VA has been able to coordinate hospital care, primary care, and post-acute care in a way that many health systems hope to achieve.

VA hospitalists care for veterans with multiple issues, including acute MI, heart failure, pneumonia, and COPD. In short, we care for the same types of patients as hospitalists across the country, with measured outcomes of similar or better quality as non-VA patients.

The VA has utilized an advanced electronic health record (CPRS) since 1997. It allows for effective patient care and is successfully leveraged for large-scale health services research.

VA hospitalists educate the next generation of physicians through robust academic affiliations with most of our nation’s most-renowned medical schools and have administered residency training programs for almost 60 years.

The VA has been the site of groundbreaking, Nobel Prize-winning research that has shaped the care of hospitalized patients worldwide: beta blockers for heart failure, steroids for COPD exacerbations, and the invention of implantable cardiac pacemakers and computerized axial tomography (CAT) scans all have as their foundation research performed at VAs.

VA hospitalists educate the next generation of physicians through robust academic affiliations with most of our nation’s most-renowned medical schools and have administered residency training programs for almost 60 years. More than half of all medical students and residents complete part of their training at VAs.

VA hospitalists are also leaders in quality and patient safety.

Over the next year, SHM’s VA Task Force will be sharing 10 of the innovative approaches VA hospitalists are taking to provide care for our nation’s heroes. We will dispel a few myths about the “VA Spa” along the way and, hopefully, share some ideas you can use to better care for your patients.

Many of The Hospitalist’s readers have family members who have served in the military. For all of you, this IS your granddad’s VA—and it’s pretty darn good.


Dr. Odden is a hospitalist at the VA in Ann Arbor, Mich. Dr. Kartha is a hospitalist at the VA in Boston. Both are members of SHM’s VA Task Force.

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