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California Weighs Expanded Role For Nurse Practitioners

Nurse Practioner Tina Clark examines Anastacia Casperson at the Glide Health Clinic in San Francisco.
Andrew Nixon / Capital Public Radio
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Flickr
Nurse Practioner Tina Clark examines Anastacia Casperson at the Glide Health Clinic in San Francisco.

As states gear up for the Affordable Care Act, they're trying to figure out if there will be enough providers of health care to meet demand from the newly insured.

California is one of 15 states expected to consider legislation this year that would give advanced practice nurses more authority to care for patients without a doctor's supervision.

Tina Clark is a nurse practitioner at Glide Health Services, a clinic in San Francisco's Tenderloin district, a low-income section of the city.

Anastacia Casperson, who has struggled with homelessness and drug addiction, came to the clinic because she was alarmed about swelling in her legs. Clark spends a half-hour with Casperson, gives her a prescription for a diuretic and talks to her about quitting smoking. Casperson says she's been coming to this clinic for a few years.

"They have compassion for a client. They have understanding for a client," Casperson says. "I like the nurses here because they're like one big family, and they all work together."

Glide is run by nurses with advanced training. Even under current law, nurse Clark can see patients without a doctor in the room. But a physician visits the clinic 12 hours a week to sign forms and consult on difficult cases.

Right now, California law says nurses must follow procedures set after consulting a doctor. But lawmakers are considering eliminating that requirement. That idea doesn't sit well with some doctors.

"Nurses and nurse practitioners are a very, very important part of the health care team, but they are part of a team," says Dr. Paul Phinney, president of the California Medical Association.

Phinney's group is opposed to allowing more independence for nurses. He says they are an important part of the health care team, but they don't have as much training, and may not know as much about testing and technology.

Plus, he says, there's nothing in the bill that would require the empowered nurses to go where they are needed most.

"I would be very surprised if should this bill pass that all of a sudden you'll see a massive egress of nurse practitioners out into medically underserved areas. I just don't see that happening," he says.

But University of California, San Francisco, health care economist Joanne Spetz says research shows otherwise.

"Nurse practitioners are more likely to practice in settings that serve large shares of Medicaid patients, and they're somewhat more likely to practice in rural communities," Spetz says.

Nurse practitioners can be trained much more quickly than a physician, and their compensation is lower, Spetz points out.

"So when a legislature is looking at the insurance of hundreds of thousands of people and the demand for care that those people are going to have, getting health professionals to meet their needs as quickly as possible and as cost-effectively as possible is a real need," she says.

The next step for the California bill on nurses is a hearing Monday in the state Senate Appropriations committee.

This piece is part of a partnership between NPR, Capital Public Radio and Kaiser Health News.

Copyright 2013 CapRadio