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Implementing two nurse practitioner models of service at an Australian male prison: A quality assurance study
Author(s) -
Wong Ides,
Wright Eryn,
Santomauro Damian,
How Raquel,
Leary Christopher,
Harris Meredith
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of clinical nursing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.94
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1365-2702
pISSN - 0962-1067
DOI - 10.1111/jocn.13935
Subject(s) - nursing , medicine , prison , mental health , multidisciplinary approach , context (archaeology) , district nurse , health care , nurse practitioners , quality assurance , quality management , family medicine , service (business) , psychology , psychiatry , paleontology , social science , external quality assessment , economy , criminology , pathology , sociology , economics , biology , economic growth
Aims and objectives To examine the quality and safety of nurse practitioner services of two newly implemented nurse practitioner models of care at a correctional facility. Background Nurse practitioners could help to meet the physical and mental health needs of Australia's growing prison population; however, the nurse practitioner role has not previously been evaluated in this context. Design A quality assurance study conducted in an Australian prison where a primary health nurse practitioner and a mental health nurse practitioner were incorporated into an existing primary healthcare service. The study was guided by Donabedian's structure, processes and outcomes framework. Methods Routinely collected information included surveys of staff attitudes to the implementation of the nurse practitioner models ( n  = 21 staff), consultation records describing clinical processes and time use ( n  = 289 consultations), and a patient satisfaction survey ( n  = 29 patients). Data were analysed descriptively and compared to external benchmarks where available. Results Over the two‐month period, the nurse practitioners provided 289 consultations to 208 prisoners. The presenting problems treated indicated that most referrals were appropriate. A significant proportion of consultations involved medication review and management. Both nurse practitioners spent more than half of their time on individual patient‐related care. Overall, multidisciplinary team staff agreed that the nurse practitioner services were necessary, safe, met patient need and reduced treatment delays. Conclusions Findings suggest that the implementation of nurse practitioners into Australian correctional facilities is acceptable and feasible and has the potential to improve prisoners' access to health services. Structural factors (e.g., room availability and limited access to prisoners) may have reduced the efficiency of the nurse practitioners' clinical processes and service implementation. Relevance to clinical practice Results suggest that nurse practitioner models can be successfully integrated into a prison setting and could provide a nursing career pathway.

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