Home-based primary care visits by nurse practitioners.

Chun-An Sun, Chad Parslow, Ja'Lynn Gray, Irina Koyfman, Melissa deCardi Hladek, Hae-Ra Han
Author Information
  1. Chun-An Sun: The Johns Hopkins University, School of Nursing, Baltimore, Maryland.
  2. Chad Parslow: The Johns Hopkins University, School of Nursing, Baltimore, Maryland.
  3. Ja'Lynn Gray: The Johns Hopkins University, School of Nursing, Baltimore, Maryland.
  4. Irina Koyfman: Affinity Expert, Baltimore, Maryland.
  5. Melissa deCardi Hladek: The Johns Hopkins University, School of Nursing, Baltimore, Maryland.
  6. Hae-Ra Han: The Johns Hopkins University, School of Nursing, Baltimore, Maryland.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: With rapidly growing numbers of homebound older adults, the need for effective home-based health interventions is increasingly recognized. Advanced practice registered nurses (NPs) are one of the most common providers of home-based primary care. Limited information is available to address the scope and nature of NP-led home-based primary care and associated outcomes.
OBJECTIVE: To synthesize research evidence of NP visits in home-based primary care.
DATA SOURCES: Six electronic databases-PubMed, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Embase, Cochrane, Web of Science, and Scopus-were searched to identify peer-reviewed research articles addressing home-based primary care interventions led by NPs. Independent screening resulted in 17 relevant articles from 14 unique studies to include in the review.
CONCLUSIONS: Nurse practitioners provided health assessments, education, care planning and coordination primarily by face-to-face home visits. Despite a variability in terms of study design, setting, and sample, NP-led home-based primary care was in general associated with less hospitalization and fewer emergency department visits. Evidence was mixed in relation to patient-reported outcomes such as subjective health, functional status, and symptoms. Costs and patient or caregiver satisfaction were additional outcomes addressed, but the findings were inconsistent.
IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Recent policy changes to authorize NPs to independently assess, diagnose, and order home care services directly affect how NPs approach home-based primary care programs. Our findings support NP-led home-based primary care to decrease consequential health utilization and suggest the need for further evaluating the care models in diverse populations with more patient-reported and caregiver outcomes.

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Grants

  1. P30 NR018093/NINR NIH HHS
  2. R01 AG062649/NIA NIH HHS
  3. UL1 TR003098/NCATS NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Aged
Emergency Service, Hospital
Home Care Services
Humans
Nurse Practitioners
Primary Health Care

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0carehome-basedprimaryhealthNPsoutcomesvisitsNP-ledneedinterventionsassociatedresearcharticlespractitionershomepatient-reportedcaregiverfindingsBACKGROUND:rapidlygrowingnumbershomeboundolderadultseffectiveincreasinglyrecognizedAdvancedpracticeregisterednursesonecommonprovidersLimitedinformationavailableaddressscopenatureOBJECTIVE:synthesizeevidenceNPDATASOURCES:Sixelectronicdatabases-PubMedCumulativeIndexNursingAlliedHealthLiteratureEmbaseCochraneWebScienceScopus-weresearchedidentifypeer-reviewedaddressingledIndependentscreeningresulted17relevant14uniquestudiesincludereviewCONCLUSIONS:Nurseprovidedassessmentseducationplanningcoordinationprimarilyface-to-faceDespitevariabilitytermsstudydesignsettingsamplegenerallesshospitalizationfeweremergencydepartmentEvidencemixedrelationsubjectivefunctionalstatussymptomsCostspatientsatisfactionadditionaladdressedinconsistentIMPLICATIONSFORPRACTICE:RecentpolicychangesauthorizeindependentlyassessdiagnoseorderservicesdirectlyaffectapproachprogramssupportdecreaseconsequentialutilizationsuggestevaluatingmodelsdiversepopulationsHome-basednurse

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