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#1
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Hello everyone,
I posted the same question from last night, but it seems like the thread was deleted (i donno why, if anyone knows, kindly let me know), so I am reposting this question. I have just recently accquired a profession called nurse practitioner. They are Registered Nurses with an extra a year to two of training. With the additional training, they are allowed to perform similar duties as doctors: consulting patients, diagnosing, prescribing medication etc w/o the supervision of a physician. From what I gather from the Ontario website, nurse practitioners are basically family doctors. And from what I heard from a friend, nurse practitioners can earn more than doctors. However, I do not know anyone who is a nurse practioner or has been dealing with them. Hence, I am asking people who know more about NP to explain the cons n pros of the profession a little more. What exactly is the difference between nurse practitioners and doctors? How is the job prospect of nurse practitioner? Is it difficult to be one? http://www.healthforceontario.ca/Wha...titioners.aspx Thanks a lot in advance Last edited by Gloria741 : 06-30-2012 at 09:29 AM. |
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#2
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Lets clarify a a few things, in a major city or urban center you will not find a nurse practitioner working at a capacity of a family physician, you will only find them in northern towns where no FP wants to go. In cities nurse practitioner usually works as specialists in wound care or respiratory care, they very rarely will prescribe any medications or come up with a diagnosis without consulting a physician. Its a pretty decent job though you are making 100K and have more autonomy then a RN. To become one you need to finish a 4 year nursing degree, then work for 2 years in a ICU/Emerg setting. Then you apply to a masters Nurse practitioner program which takes an additional 2 years. Make sure your charge nurse actually likes you or she won't write you a reference letter to apply to the program.
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There is a time to take counsel of your fears, and there is a time to never listen to any fear. George S. Patton |
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#3
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Actually, this is not true. I volunteer at Toronto Western Hospital in the Family Medicine clinic, and there is an NP who is essentially a family doctor.
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#4
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many people are unware of the current roles NPs play in Ontario.
NPs function as a primary health care provider. You can now choose to see either an MD or NP in most cases, they essentially have the same authority and ability in terms of diagnosis and prescribing in their specialized areas. There are many NP lead family clinics and they also work in hospitals...they do not work under the supervision of a physician (this is the case for a physician-assistant). There are four NP specialty certificates....NP-Primary Health Care, NP-Pediatrics, NP-Adult and NP-Anesthesia. after 4 years you receive you BscN, you work for 2 years and apply to your Masters of Nursing (2 years), then take a 1 year program for your NP certificate. |
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#5
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An NP or family physician might be in a better position to comment on this topic. I don't fully understand this because there are many regulations involved. For example, in Ontario most medical procedures fall under 14 categories of "controlled acts":
1) physicians are authorized to perform 13 of these 2) NPs are authorized to perform 7 of these (For comparison: RNs can perform 3 of these, and only with permission from a supervisor higher up) But it's more complicated because these controlled acts don't include everything. In terms of freedom, NPs (in Ontario) are not legally required to consult with physicians, but some employers still require this. In terms of NP pay though, I'm pretty sure it's less than a family physician's on average (~100k vs 200k). Certainly, an NP's scope of practice is less than a family physician's, but how much less? I'm not sure. You really have to ask an NP + MD who has worked with each other. And remember, this is just in Ontario. Every place has a different regulation. Last edited by Msclphrnc : 09-25-2012 at 10:00 PM. |
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#6
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edit: never mind I looked it up, dental-stuff. Why isn't dentistry just a medical specialty? ![]() Last edited by jerkstore : 10-04-2012 at 06:07 PM. |
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#7
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A family physician is allowed to perform those 13 acts, and the same applies for every other physician, regardless of specialty. |
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#8
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In reference to prior posts about wages, I know a couple NPs who work in community and what they tell me is you can make similar money to a family doc, because NPs usually work in a clinic or health centre where they don't have the overhead of the lease, secretary, hydro, etc that a family physician would have. But I have also heard newly graduated NPs say that being an NP your workload is similar to a physician but with less pay. An NP quoted to me that the difference between RN and NP pay is $4 per hour. She said not to do it for the money. These NPs told me to go to med school if I can get in lol. They work in a hospital though, so maybe NPs in community make more? in general I don't think you're gonna hit 6 digits. But wage-happiness are only positively correlated up to 60K a year, then flat-lines so as RN or NP we're good ![]() Last edited by leijona88 : 10-24-2012 at 01:51 PM. |
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#9
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but it is true that NPs are limited in what they can do from either education or legislature. It is a form of nursing where you're given a great deal of autonomy, but that said if you really want a full-out autonomy with no one telling you what to do and having all the abilities to do what you want (or the potential) in terms of procedures, diagnosis, treatment -- just go to med school and don't deal with the part turf-war, politics, and patient perspectives that go along with being an NP. |
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#10
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