This was the year advanced practice nurses thought they’d get full practice authority in NC. They were wrong.

08/30/24 at 03:00 AM

This was the year advanced practice nurses thought they’d get full practice authority in NC. They were wrong.
NC Health News - NC Board of Nursing; by TwumasiD-Mensah; 8/29/24 
Every so often, Megan Conner, a nurse anesthetist in Greenville said she sees a patient who’s driven for hours to come for a screening colonoscopy but who instead has to be sent to the emergency department. ... It frustrates Conner that so many patients, who have to travel sometimes hours for care in eastern North Carolina, end up not getting it because of common ailments they can’t get treated closer to home.That’s why Conner is a big believer in the Safe, Accessible, Value-directed and Excellent Health Care Act (SAVE Act), which would give advanced practice registered nurses (APRNs) like her full practice authority. She argues the data show that more nurse practitioners would provide primary care in rural North Carolina if the state would give them autonomy to practice, bringing care to small burgs that often go without. And now, the demands for care are being driven by hundreds of thousands of patients newly eligible for care because of Medicaid expansion. Along with a growing number of lawmakers who believe the legislation is overdue, advanced practice nurses thought this would be the year that the SAVE Act finally passed. They were wrong. [Click on the title's link to continue reading.] 
Editor's Note: Pair this with today's post, Rounds with Leadership: Focusing on the outcomes of NP practice

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