Nurse Practitioners Urge Legislators to Follow FTC Lead Against Practice Restrictions
AANP supports Federal Trade Commission efforts to protect patient choice and health care competition
AUSTIN, Texas, March 11, 2014 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP), the largest national professional membership organization for nurse practitioners of all specialties, is calling on state lawmakers to consider the consequences of undue restrictions on APRNs or nurse practitioners, as recommended by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).
On Friday, March 7th, the FTC released a policy paper that states, "limiting the range of services APRNs may provide and the extent to which they can practice independently… may reduce competition that benefits consumers." The Commission goes on to recommend that state legislators exercise caution when evaluating proposals that would limit nurse practitioner practice and direct patient access to nurse practitioner services.
The paper, Policy Perspectives: Competition and the Regulation of Advanced Practice Nurses, is part of the FTC's ongoing work to protect consumer choice and competition in the health care marketplace.
AANP points to the paper as a valuable new resource for legislators weighing the impact of state licensure laws on patient populations.
"Like the FTC, we believe that competition among health care providers results in greater access, lower costs and quality improvement," said Kenneth Miller, PhD, RN, CFNP, FAAN, Co-President of AANP. "Full patient access to high-quality nurse practitioner services is essential for making such competition a reality."
"State legislation that prevents full and direct access for patients has the potential to further hamper our health care delivery system," said Angela K. Golden, DNP, FNP-C, FAANP, Co-President of AANP. "It is our hope that legislators pay close attention to the analysis of the FTC and honor the health care needs of their constituents."
The FTC paper included additional statements in support of nurse practitioners, such as:
- research demonstrates that nurse practitioners provide safe and effective care;
- nurse practitioners might help alleviate health care access problems across the U.S. if undue regulatory burdens on their practice are reduced;
- effective collaboration among health care providers, including team-based care, does not always require physician supervision of nurse practitioners; and
- fewer restrictions on nurse practitioners would be good for competition and America's health care consumers.
The full paper is available at http://www.ftc.gov/system/files/documents/reports/policy-perspectives-competition-regulation-advanced-practice-nurses/140307aprnpolicypaper.pdf.
The American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) is the largest national professional membership organization for nurse practitioners (NPs) of all specialties. It represents the interests of over 189,000 NPs, including nearly 50,000 individual members and 203 organizations, providing a unified networking platform and advocating for their role as providers of high-quality, cost-effective, comprehensive, patient-centered and personalized health care. The organization provides legislative leadership at the local, state and national levels, advancing health policy; promoting excellence in practice, education and research; and establishing standards that best serve NP patients and other health care consumers.
For more information visit aanp.org. To locate an NP in your community, go to npfinder.com.
SOURCE American Association of Nurse Practitioners
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