Nurse Practitioners, Physician Assistants May Not be Solution to Primary Care Shortage

As the nation faces a primary care physician shortage, many experts have suggested giving nurse practitioners and physician assistants more autonomy and responsiblity in order to bridge the primary care gap.

However, according to a Graham Center Policy One-Pager published in American Family Physician, a growing number of NPs and PAs choose to work outside of primary care. Therefore, there may not be enough midlevel providers to supplement the physician shortage.

According to the report, just 52.4 percent of the nation's NPs and 43.2 percent of PAs are in primary care.

"Relying on NPs and PAs to solve the problem of a growing shortage of primary care physicians may not be an option, and policymakers should not abandon policy solutions designed to increase the number of primary care physicians, NPs and PAs," the report concluded.

More Articles on Nurse Practitioners and Physicians Assistants:
Facing Physician Shortage, Autonomous Nurse Practitioners Still Stir Debate
Do PAs, NPs Impact Physician Satisfaction?
American Nurses Association: Include APRNs in Health Insurance Exchange Plan Networks

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