| Literature DB >> 32143696 |
Kristen R Choi1,2, Sae Takada3,4, Altaf Saadi3,5, Molly C Easterlin3,5,6, Liza S Buchbinder3,4, Shaw Natsui3, Frederick J Zimmerman5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nursing resources can have a protective effect on patient outcomes, but nurses and nursing scope of practice have not been studied in relation to injury outcomes. The purpose of this study was to examine whether scope of practice and ease of practice laws for nurse practitioners and registered nurses are associated with suicide and homicide rates in the United States.Entities:
Keywords: Injury; Nurse practitioner; Policy; Registered nurse; Scope of practice; Suicide
Year: 2020 PMID: 32143696 PMCID: PMC7059356 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-020-5025-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Nursing Practice Laws in US States, 2014. Footnote: Authors’ own work; analysis of data from the Cato Institute Freedom in the 50 States Project, 2012–2016. Exhibit 1a shows differences in nurse practitioner scope of practice laws across the US states in 2014, the median study year (range 1–3). Exhibit 1b shows differences Nurse Licensure Compact membership across the US states in 2014 (Member, Non-member
Analytic Variables
| Variable | 2012 (Baseline) | 2016 (End) |
|---|---|---|
| M (SD) | M (SD) | |
| Poverty rate (%) | 18.75(4.82) | 16.44(4.31) |
| Medicaid generosity (% of FPL) | 86.68(62.95) | 102.50(49.59) |
| Hunting license rate (licenses per 1000 population) | 203(213.2) | 191.3(194.6) |
| Density (per 1000 county population) | 1094(1376) | 1135(1422) |
| Primary care physician rate (per1000 population) | 0.41(0.19) | 0.42(0.21) |
| Psychiatrist rate (per 1000 population) | 0.08(0.03) | 0.08(0.06) |
| NP rate (per 1000 population) | 0.38(0.16) | 0.51(0.18) |
| RN rate (per 1000 population) | 8.81(1.79) | 9.31(1.85) |
| Worker protections index (0–4) | 1.68(1.36) | 1.82(1.50) |
| Firearm policy count: Mental illness/substance abuse | 1.30(1.41) | 1.44(1.45) |
| Firearm policy count: Violent offenders | 1.20(0.99) | 1.26(1.09) |
Authors’ analysis of data from the US Census Bureau, Kaiser Family Foundation, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Cato Institute Freedom in the 50 States Project, and State Firearm Laws Database, 2012–2016. FPL federal poverty line, M mean, SD standard deviation, RN registered nurse, NP nurse practitioner
Nurse Practitioner Scope of Practice and Suicide/Homicide
| Suicide (R2 = 0.84) | Homicide (R2 = 0.60) | |
|---|---|---|
| β (SE) | β (SE) | |
| Urbanity/Rurality (reference: rural) | ||
| Suburban | − 0.70(0.57) | −1.16(0.53)a |
| Urban | −2.48(0.81)b | −1.61(0.76)a |
| Poverty rate | −0.02(0.04) | 0.16(0.04)b |
| Hunting license rate | < 0.01(< 0.01)b | - < 0.01(< 0.01)b |
| Density | - < 0.01(<.01)b | - < 0.01(<.01) |
| Worker index | −0.37(0.18) | 0.30(0.15)b |
| Primary care physician rate | 2.84(0.68)b | 1.12(0.65) |
| Psychiatrist rate | −1.84(3.61) | −4.02(3.61) |
| NP rate | −2.11(1.20) | −2.28(1.08)a |
| Medicaid generosity | −0.18(0.32) | −0.04(0.29) |
| Distance to trauma center | 0.21(0.18) | −0.09(0.17) |
| NP scope of practice (reference: limited) | ||
| Partial scope of practice | 1.18(0.54)a | −1.51(0.43)b |
| Full scope of practice | −2.32(0.46)b | −1.31(0.39)b |
| Firearm prohibition laws | 0.25(0.13) | −0.21(0.14) |
Authors’ analysis of data from the US Census Bureau, Kaiser Family Foundation, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Cato Institute Freedom in the 50 States Project, and State Firearm Laws Database. SE standard error, NP nurse practitioner; aValue is significant at the 0.05 level; bValue is significant at the 0.01 level. This table displays state-level fixed effects linear regression models of nurse practitioner scope of practice laws, sociodemographic and healthcare system factors, firearm policy, and their relationship to suicide and homicide rates for all 50 states, excluding the District of Columbia and US territories. Estimates are adjusted for year and census division. The firearm prohibition laws differ by outcome; for the suicide model, the firearm prohibition laws variable is a count of laws prohibiting firearm possession for those with certain types of mental illness. For the homicide model, the variable is a count of laws prohibiting firearm possession for those with a history of certain types of violent crime
Registered Nurse Ease of Practice and Suicide/Homicide
| Suicide (R2 = 0.81) | Homicide (R2 = 0.58) | |
|---|---|---|
| β (SE) | β (SE) | |
| Urbanity/Rurality (reference: rural) | ||
| Suburban | −0.21(0.59) | −1.16(0.53)a |
| Urban | −1.60(0.77)a | −1.05(0.67) |
| Poverty rate | 0.05(0.04) | 0.20(0.03)b |
| Hunting license rate | < 0.01(< 0.01)b | - < 0.01(<.01)a |
| Density | - < 0.01(<.01)b | - < 0.01(<.01) |
| Worker index | −0.24(0.22) | 0.40(0.18)a |
| Primary care physician rate | 3.60(0.78)b | 1.58(0.67)a |
| Psychiatrist rate | −5.55(3.82) | −7.25(3.48)a |
| RN rate | 0.06(0.15) | −0.19(0.13) |
| Medicaid generosity | 0.08(0.35) | −0.16(0.30) |
| Distance to trauma center | 0.04(0.18) | < 0.01(0.16) |
| RN ease of practice | −0.60(0.30)a | −0.67(0.27)a |
| Firearm prohibition laws | −0.15(0.13) | −0.27(0.14) |
Authors’ analysis of data from the US Census Bureau, Kaiser Family Foundation, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Cato Institute Freedom in the 50 States Project, and State Firearm Laws Database. SE standard error, RN registered nurse; aValue is significant at the 0.05 level; bValue is significant at the 0.01 level. This table displays state-level fixed effects linear regression models of RN ease of practice laws, sociodemographic and healthcare system factors, firearm policy, and their relationship to suicide and homicide rates for all 50 states, excluding the District of Columbia and US territories. Estimates are adjusted for year and census division. The firearm prohibition laws differ by outcome; for the suicide model, the firearm prohibition laws variable is a count of laws prohibiting firearm possession for those with certain types of mental illness. For the homicide model, the variable is a count of laws prohibiting firearm possession for those with a history of certain types of violent crime