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Trauma
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Doctors and nurses in emergency care: where are the boundaries now?

Simon Brook

University of Southampton and Southampton Walk In Centres, Southampton, UK, psb{at}soton.ac.uk

Robert Crouch

Emergency Department, Southampton University NHS Trust, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

The current political healthcare economy is blurring traditional professional bound aries, and national agendas are requiring nurses to take on more roles and tasks previously undertaken by doctors. The emergency nurse practitioner’s expanding scope of practice has moved beyond managing the care of patients with minor injuries, to include those with ‘minor’ illnesses and indeed beyond that to the management and care of those with increasingly complex, acute and chronic conditions. The process of conjugation between the two disciplines has been driven by the demands and pressures on the health economy. Given the unprecedented and increasing overlap in practice between the domains of medicine and nursing, it is time to re-examine differences between them and clarify the issues which divide them. There is a need to benchmark infrastructure and standardize the education and development of nurses undertaking advanced practice roles. There is also a need for continued debate on the future of the health care workforce, informed by research, to facilitate correct and cost effective decision making.

Key Words: autonomous practice • emergency medicine • emergency nursing • interprofessional roles • nurse practitioner

Trauma, Vol. 6, No. 3, 211-216 (2004)
DOI: 10.1191/1460408604ta316oa


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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]



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