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Magaly
Olivero wrote about the reorganization of the Undergraduate Career
Services Office in the October
issue of
the
Yale Alumni Magazine.
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No
Doctor? No Problem!
Managed
care may have made it harder than ever to get time with an M.D.,
but personal medical attention hasn't disappeared. Two new groups
of providers are helping to fill the gap.
November
1999
by Magaly Olivero
For generations,
the image of American medical care was molded by Norman Rockwell's
paintings
of kindly physicians making house calls on old folks, and television
scenes of Marcus Welby ministering to croupy kids. Such rosy scenes
have long since been obscured by the impersonality of managed care.
But in the process, many Americans may not have noticed that one-on-one
medical attention is making a comeback. It's just that some of the
people most involved in providing it don't put M.D. after their
names on the prescription forms.
As the
health-care environment in America has evolved over the past 30-odd
years, two groups of providers have been quietly transforming the
way patients are treated. They are nurse practitioners and physician
assistants (sometimes known as physician associates), and their
numbers and impact are growing dramatically. Trained in the skills
of diagnosis and treatment, NPs and PAs can handle much of the load
that general practitioners used to account for and today's medical
specialists are often too busy to deal with. They are also trained
to recognize problems that exceed their expertise and refer them
to the appropriate physician. But perhaps most important, they can
help bring a personal touch back to a profession that many feel
has become too bureaucratic and mechanical. These professionals
are transforming urgent-care centers, emergency rooms, community
health centers, school-based clinics, and health maintenance organizations
across the land. "Ten years ago, there were about 50
institutions that trained PAs," says Elaine E. Grant, assistant
dean for Yale's Physician Associate Program. "Now, there are 116
nationwide."
Nowhere
is the evolution more apparent than at Yale, where the School of
Nursing and the School of Medicine have pioneered the training of
NPs and PAs, and the Yale Health Plan, which was the first health
maintenance organization in Connecticut, has made extensive use
of them in looking after Yale students and employees. And the phenomenon
is growing. The PA program last spring graduated its first class
with a master of medical science degree. And in response to growing
demand, Yale this fall created an oncology nurse practitioner master's
specialty.
The
origins of these increasingly influential professions go back to
the mid-1960s, when physicians and educators alike recognized
that there was a growing shortage and uneven distribution of primary-care
physicians, especially in rural and inner-city areas. Eugene Stead,
a doctor at the Duke University Medical Center in North Carolina,
is often credited with developing the physician assistant concept.
Stead realized that a large percentage of his own cases did not
require the care of a fully trained physician like himself, at least
in the early stages, and that with a group of people looking after
minor ailments, he could concentrate on the acute cases. In search
of a solution, Stead approached Duke's School of Nursing about offering
advanced training to nurses. But Stead's medical model did not appeal
to the nursing administrators. So Stead turned his attention to
the substantial numbers of men and women who had served as medical
aides with the military during the Vietnam War. They had received
intensive training during their service, but with few exceptions
had no chance to use their skills in civilian life.
Largely
as a result of the efforts of Stead and his like-minded colleagues,
thousands of physician assistants are today licensed to practice
the sort of medicine Stead originally envisioned. They are trained
to diagnose and treat ailments, but they also can prescribe medication
and order and interpret diagnostic tests. Graduation from an accredited
program such as Yale's, and passage of a national certifying exam,
are required for state licensure. About 52 percent of the country's
physician assistants are involved in primary care, with the remaining
involved in internal medicine, emergency care, and other specialties.
Nurse
practitioners operate on a somewhat different model. They are registered
nurses with advanced educational preparation who provide nursing
and medical services, emphasizing health education and disease prevention,
as well as diagnosis and management of acute and chronic diseases.
According to Nanette Alexander, the president of the Connecticut
Nurse Practitioner Group Inc., the history of the NP specialty is
similar to that of PAs, but different in significant ways. Many
of the first nurse practitioners in the country were midwives and
registered nurses with advanced training in pediatrics who were
assigned to care for underserved populations.
Today,
pediatrics still accounts for a major portion of nurse practitioner
work. A teddy bear mobile hangs in the office of Jane Milberg, a
nurse practitioner in pediatrics at the Yale Health Plan, as she
goes about her work. "I knew from the start that I wanted to be
in pediatrics," says Milberg, who has cared for children for two
decades. "I see pediatrics as the launching pad for your whole lifetime,"
she says. "You can lay the foundation for good habits and well-being -- traits children can carry with them for the rest of their lives."
Milberg,
a biology and chemistry major with a doctorate in pharmacology,
was conducting animal research for several years when she decided
she would rather work with people. As a nurse practitioner, Milberg
could combine her interest in science with her desire to "help people
stay healthy and well." She enrolled in Yale's nurse practitioner
program and began working at the Yale Health Plan right after graduation.
While
she specializes in pediatrics, Milberg believes strongly in taking
care of the medical, social and psychological needs of the entire
family, not just the child coming in for an office visit. "No one
grows in isolation," she says, "that's why you treat the child and
the family." That means helping children and parents get through
"major family stages," whether it's the birth of a sibling, divorce,
or the cry of independence from a teenager. Helping each family
member cope with the stresses and changes taking place affects the
overall health of the entire family. That's also why patient education
plays such a key role. "Our goal is to empower children and parents
with enough information so they can make informed decisions and
take charge of their bodies," says Milberg.
But
nurse practitioners increasingly work in a variety of other settings
with people of all ages, and, like physician assistants,
they too can prescribe medication and order and interpret diagnostic
tests. Patient education and counseling are a major part of their
activities. Yale's program offers master's degrees in many specialties
including acute care, gerontology, adult care, oncology, and psychiatric
mental health.
Reasons
for the growth of each profession reflect the changes taking place
in health care. Economic pressures exerted by managed care are forcing
providers to look for ways to provide cost-effective, high-quality
treatment to more patients. The use of physician assistants and
nurse practitioners, who earn considerably less than physicians,
provides a way for health-care organizations and private practices
to continue providing care while keeping costs downs. According
to Moreson Kaplan, medical director of the Yale Health Plan, relying
on nurse practitioners and physician assistants represents a "more
efficient use of people and resources," because, as Stead recognized
at Duke, many cases do not require the expertise and extensive training
of a physician.
The emphasis
on preventive care and patient education also helps to keep medical
costs down, while assisting patients to more effectively manage
their own health-care needs. Studies show that nurse practitioners
are more likely to suggest lower-cost approaches -- such as lifestyle
changes -- to deal with a particular health problem, rather than
automatically prescribing medication. "It's the difference between
prescribing a pill for heartburn and talking to the patient about
cutting back on the many Big Macs he eats," says Nanette Alexander.
The holistic,
family-centered approach to medicine embraced by nurse practitioners
also streamlines the health-care delivery system and increases continuity
of care by reducing the number of providers a patient requires.
Says Paula Milone-Nuzzo, associate dean for Academic Affairs at
the School of Nursing, "We look at the entire needs of the person -- physical, mental, social, and spiritual. We don't just treat
the medical problem."
The complexity
of today's health-care environment, as well as the acceleration
in medical research and technology, has forced this more team-oriented
approach to health care. Says John Dailinger, a physician assistant
in orthopedics with the Yale Health Plan: "It's nice to look with
nostalgia to the days of the local general practitioner who took
care of all your needs. But that's not true nowadays, and anyway,
it's not really the best way to provide care in today's environment.
Medicine has grown so that nobody can do it all or do it better
than a group of people with special and general skills who work
together."
There
is another practical side to the growth in the population of NPs
and PAs. As the number of applicants entering medical school
decreases, many hospitals face the challenge of providing adequate
numbers of residents and interns. Physician assistants and nurse
practitioners provide a powerful alternative to fill these critical
roles. Many physician assistants work in urgent care and surgery,
while many nurse practitioners are concentrating on acute care.
"There is a great need to have caregivers around the clock in hospital
settings," says Alexander.
Patients
who may feel alienated by today's complex medical system often appreciate
the extra attention they receive from nurse practitioners and physician
assistants. In general, these professionals are more apt to spend
time with patients, helping them to understand their medical condition,
make lifestyle changes, and navigate the health-care delivery system.
Some patients inevitably feel short-changed when they are seen by
someone who does not have an M.D., degree. But Dailinger thinks
the positive aspects of the NP and PA alternatives outweigh the
negatives. "Good medicine should leave people feeling that they
have been taken care of, not processed," he says.
For all
the emphasis on team play, philosophical differences sometimes put
physician assistants and nurse practitioners at odds. And despite
their prevalence in numerous health-care settings, some physicians
remain skeptical or even suspicious of practicing medicine with
people who do not share their own training. But few would deny the
benefits offered by the expansion of the care-giving cadre. Physician
assistants, trained according to a medical model, actually work
"under the supervision" of physicians, and tend to be more oriented
toward curing a problem once it has emerged. Nurse practitioners,
on the other hand, are educated using a nursing model and, according
to the Connecticut Nurse Practice Act, practice in a "collaboration"
with physicians that emphasizes avoiding or minimizing the problem
before it becomes serious.
Needless
to say, competition for jobs, as the health-care market becomes
tighter, is another potential point of friction. And some physicians
chafe at having their earning potential reduced by lower-paid professionals
who may intercept cases that might otherwise have been billed at
an M.D.'s higher rates.
All parties,
however, are quick to note that physician assistants and nurse practitioners
are trained to seek advice from colleagues or physicians when faced
with a case beyond their reach. And in most settings, they say,
nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and physicians work together
in harmony, keeping the needs of the patient as their top priority.
"One of our strengths lies in our ability to recognize when we need
assistance," says Molly Meyer, a nurse practitioner in undergraduate
medicine and oncology at the Yale Health Plan.
Dailinger
downplays the issue of "turf wars" between physician assistants
and nurse practitioners who may be vying for the same openings
because, as he points out, there are "plenty of jobs to go around.
There's a great need for people to do general medicine." He cites
the Yale Health Plan as an example of an organization where members
of all health-care fields work as colleagues to deliver high-quality
health care to patients. "Some of my closest colleagues are nurse
practitioners," says Dailinger, who lectures on orthopedic medicine
and other health-related issues at Yale. He often brings students
in Yale's physician associate and nurse practitioner programs together
to "discuss their goals, training, and the roles they envision for
themselves. Once they start talking, they discover they share many
common bonds."
Dailinger
speaks with considerable authority, having come to his present position
through a route that Duke's Eugene Stead might have prescribed himself.
Dailinger says he spent his undergraduate years "making fun of the
pre-med majors," and decided to become a high school teacher. But
in 1970 he was drafted. "I had no problem with serving my country,"
he says, "but I refused to bear arms. That's why they began training
me as a battlefield medic." A nationwide shortage of operating room
technicians led to Dailinger's assignment -- not to combat, but
to the Presidio military complex in San Francisco caring for the
wounded returning home.
Once
his military term ended, Dailinger decided he wanted to remain in
medicine, but the prospect of juggling medical school with a home
life that by then included two children wasn't appealing. Instead,
he took a job as an operating room technician at Greenwich Hospital
and soon learned about the physician assistant profession from a
colleague. Dailinger graduated from Yale's program in 1976 and joined
the Yale Health Plan, specializing in orthopedics.
A close
colleague of Dailinger's at the YHP, Molly Meyer illustrates the
subtle differences between the PA and nurse practitioner roles.
Meyer has worked as a nurse practitioner with hundreds of Yale students
and employees, including many of the University's athletes and coaches,
in addition to the oncology patients served by the YHP. It's hard
to keep up with Meyer, who juggles a multitude of duties, ranging
from physical exams and treating medical ailments to helping patients
manage their oncology treatment and comforting concerned parents.
"I view myself as a primary caregiver and a traffic cop who helps
connect people with the resources they need," she says.
Meyer
was one of four registered nurses selected by the Yale Health Plan
when it began to provide on-the-job training for nurse practitioners.
The program was the vision of then medical director Daniel "Pete"
Rowe, who believed strongly in the nurse practitioner concept. Rowe
turned to Kaplan, who was then a staff doctor in internal medicine,
for assistance in developing the in-house program in conjunction
with the Yale School of Nursing. The Yale Health Plan originally
opened with two nurse practitioners, one a midwife and one in pediatrics,
but couldn't find any NPs in the field of adult medicine. "Rowe
recognized the value of the expanded role of the nurse in treating
clinical problems where the training of physicians was superfluous,"
Kaplan says.
That
recognition changed everything for Meyer, who had been working as
a registered nurse for six months when she was tapped to receive
the intensive training. "I was in the right place at the right time,"
she says. "I consider myself to be incredibly lucky." Like Dailinger,
Meyer says she enjoys the collegial atmosphere at the Health Plan,
and doesn't hesitate to seek guidance from physicians and others
if a case poses a challenge. Many colleagues turn to her as well.
"Nurse practitioners have a tremendous amount of expertise to contribute
for the betterment of the patient, whether as a member of a team
or as an individual practitioner," says Meyer.
The nursing
field was also familiar territory for Thomas Brady, whose mother
and sister are nurses, and whose father became a licensed practical
nurse after working for 30 years as a butcher. Brady, too, was interested
in health care, but he lacked what he calls the "inner flame" to
become a doctor and wanted a career with "more of a medical model"
than nursing. So after working for two years in research, he enrolled
in Yale's PA program and then joined the urgent-care team at the
Health Plan. "I can honestly say that after eight years I thoroughly
enjoy my work," says Brady. "I don't dread Monday mornings."
Brady
says he enjoys the interaction with patients, and the variety of
cases that appear each day. But most of all, he says, he values
the collegial relationship he shares with physicians and other health-care
providers: "We all work together to figure out the puzzle that the
patient presents."
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