A nurse practitioner in general practice: working style and pattern of consultations.
- 1 April 1987
- journal article
- Vol. 37 (297) , 154-7
Abstract
The work of a specially trained nurse practitioner, to whom patients had open access, was studied in an inner city general practice over a period of six months in 1983. A total of 858 patients of all ages and ethnic origins sought consultations for 979 problems. Morbidity from every diagnostic group was presented but the majority of the problems (60.4%) fell into the 'Supplementary' group: preventive medicine; health instruction and education; social, marital and family problems; administrative procedures. The consultation room setting and the long appointment times available (20 minutes) may partly account for this. Additional problems, mostly concerning health education, were raised in 46.0% of consultations. Most patients chose a consultation with the nurse practitioner appropriately and in more than one-third of all consultations the nurse managed the presenting problem without further referral for investigation, prescription or other medical advice. It is concluded that nurses have a much larger and more autonomous part to play in the care of patients than hitherto.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- The "five minute" consultation: effect of time constraint on verbal communication.BMJ, 1986
- Nurse practitioner research: selected literature review and research agenda.1985
- Time and the general practitioner: the patient's view.1984
- Physicians and nurse practitioners: do they provide equivalent health care?American Journal of Public Health, 1982
- Nurse practitioner and physician adherence to standing orders criteria for consultation or referral.American Journal of Public Health, 1982
- The social and occupational characteristics of attached and employed nurses general practice.1980
- A four-year prospective study of the work of the practice nurse in the treatment room of a South Yorkshire practice.BMJ, 1980
- The Burlington Randomized Trial of the Nurse PractitionerNew England Journal of Medicine, 1974
- The Practice Nurse--A New LookBMJ, 1970