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Scope of Practice and Telehealth Nursing: 2005/2006 Update

Scope of Practice and Telehealth Nursing: 2005/2006 Update. Carol Rutenberg, RNC, MNSc AAACN 31 st Annual Conference. Outcome Objectives. At the completion of this presentation, the participant will be able to: recognize regulatory telehealth nursing practice issues

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Scope of Practice and Telehealth Nursing: 2005/2006 Update

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  1. Scope of Practice and Telehealth Nursing: 2005/2006 Update Carol Rutenberg, RNC, MNSc AAACN 31st Annual Conference

  2. Outcome Objectives At the completion of this presentation, the participant will be able to: • recognize regulatory telehealth nursing practice issues • articulate issues related to state’s scope of practice • identify problems relative to scope of practice in your state • develop strategies to address areas of deviation from scope of practice in your clinical setting

  3. Practice Standards

  4. Standards • Regulatory • Organizational Policy • Professional • Accreditation

  5. Standards • REGULATORY • Organizational Policy • Professional • Accreditation

  6. Telenursing:A Challenge to Regulation Telenursing is defined as the practice of nursing over distance using telecommunications technology. National Council of State Boards of Nursing recognizes nursing practice provided by electronic means as the practice of nursing and, thus, asserts that it is regulated by the boards of nursing. National Council of State Boards of Nursing (1997)

  7. Nurse Practice Act • State LAW, so it can’t be “ignored” • There are 50 of them (and they’re all different) • Federal laws supersede state laws • Department of Defense (Military) • Veteran’s Administration • Indian Health Services

  8. Legal Authority Board of nursing exists to protect the public • Nurse Practice Act • Rules and Regulations • Position Papers / Declaratory Rulings • FAQs • Correspondence / Minutes

  9. Nurse Practice Issues • Interstate Practice / Licensure • Scope of Practice • (Recommendation of medications) • Role of LPNs and UAPs

  10. Interstate Compact for Mutual Recognition of Nurse Licensure www.ncsbn.org February, 2006

  11. Interstate Practice Issues • Permanent residents • 88% (43/49) require licensure in their state • Excluding • HI • KY • NH • Silent • IN • PA • WI

  12. Interstate Practice Issues • Permanent residents • 88% (43/49) require licensure in their state • “Snow birds” • 80% (39/49*) require licensure in their state • Vacationers / Business travelers • 59% (29/49*) require licensure in their state • Established relationship (eg Drs. Office) • 31% (15/49**) make an exception in this case * 3 silent ** 4 silent

  13. 20 States + NJ (pending)

  14. “Soon” Colorado Florida Illinois Kentucky Massachusetts Minnesota Montana Unknown Michigan? No Plans (21) Considering Interstate Compact: 7 (+ 21 = 58%)

  15. State Attorney General Opinions/Interpretive Documents • State Attorney General Opinions • Kansas • Maryland • Nebraska • Wisconsin • Interpretive Documents • California http://nursingworld.org/gova/state/attgen99/index.htm retrieved 4-2-05

  16. Canada:Locus of Accountability “Nurses engaged in telepractice are considered to be practising in the province/territory where they are located and currently registered, regardless of where the client is located.” CNA Position Statement, The role of the nurse in telepractice 2000

  17. Recommendation of Meds

  18. Recommendation of Meds

  19. Arkansas California Iowa Kentucky Massachusetts Minnesota Mississippi North Dakota New Hampshire Nevada Oklahoma South Carolina South Dakota Texas Wisconsin Wyoming Policy on Telehealth Nursing: 16/49 (33%)

  20. RNs, LPN/LVNs, and UAPs RN • Independent scope of practice • Nursing process • Not licensed to assess independently • (so can they do telephone triage?) • Works under supervision of RN or MD • 47% (23/49) yes • 1 independently (Massachusetts) • 22 under supervision • 47% (23/49) no • 6% ( 3/49) silent LPN

  21. Arkansas Massachusetts Minnesota Mississippi New Hampshire Nevada New York Texas Vermont Wisconsin Wyoming Policy on LPNs and Telenursing: 11/49 (22%)

  22. RNs, LPN/LVNs, and UAPs RN • RN • Independent scope of practice • Nursing process • LPN / LVN • Not licensed to assess independently • (so can they do telephone triage?) • Works under supervision of RN or MD ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ • uap Widely variable education/training Does triage under license of MD LPN UAP

  23. Captain of the Ship Doctrine “Legal doctrine that, when applied to medical malpractice, holds doctor liable for the actions of others, such as nurses, attendants, and other staff.” (Bogart, p. 640) “Borrowed Servant” may apply in cases in which the UAP is an employee of the organization but under the control of the physician. Bogart, J. B. (ed.), (1998). Legal Nurse Consulting Principles & Practice.American Association of Legal Nurse Consultants.

  24. Alaska Arkansas California Connecticut Idaho Kansas Kentucky Massachusetts Maine Minnesota Mississippi Montana North Carolina North Dakota New Jersey Nevada Rhode Island South Carolina West Virginia Wyoming Policy on UAPs and Telenursing: 20/49 (41%)

  25. So Where Do I Go Now?

  26. “…has legal action been taken against nurses re telephone nursing practice in your state?” • Related to Interstate Practice • Kansas • Nevada • Not related to Interstate Practice • Minnesota • Wisconsin

  27. Act in the Patient’s Best Interest!

  28. Assess Plan Implement Evaluate Nursing Process

  29. USE THE NURSING PROCESS! • Do a thorough assessment • Diagnose urgency (clinical judgment) • Develop the right plan (based on protocol, context, patient preference/critical thinking) • Facilitate implementation of the plan • Evaluate to be sure you know if the patient doesn’t get better

  30. Nursing Process Assess Evaluate Plan Implement

  31. So What Can You Do? • Interact with your Board of Nursing about issues related to telephone triage. • Join a professional organization & get involved. • Stay informed of new developments (read, network, assume responsibility).

  32. So What Can WE Do? • Be certain our standards address these issues clearly • Are there policy statements that we need to construct? • Re interstate practice and the Compact? • Re UAPs (specifically medical assistants) and their role in telephone triage?

  33. carol@telephone-triage.com 501-767-4564 www.telephone-triage.com

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