| Literature DB >> 34294088 |
Carinne Magnago1, Celia Regina Pierantoni2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The shortage of doctors and their unequal distribution serve as challenges to advancing primary healthcare (PHC) and achieving effective universal healthcare coverage in Brazil. In an effort to use nurses' potential more efficiently, the country is investigating the introduction of the advanced practice nurse (APN) into PHC. This paper presents a situational analysis of the practices of Brazilian nurses based on the following components: regulation, practice, and education.Entities:
Keywords: Advanced practice nursing; Baccalaureate nursing education; Brazil; Nurse's role; Nursing legislation; Primary health care; Scope of practice
Year: 2021 PMID: 34294088 PMCID: PMC8296671 DOI: 10.1186/s12960-021-00632-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Resour Health ISSN: 1478-4491
Educational guidelines for the Bachelor’s in Nursing degree in Brazil
| Graduate profile | Professional with a generalist, humanistic, critical, and reflective training to work at all healthcare levels |
| Qualifications and emphases | Training must meet the healthcare system’s demands and social health needs and ensure comprehensive, humanized care and quality and emphasize the recognition of the right to health in technical and scientific performance and in health promotion, maintenance, prevention, protection, and recovery |
| General skills and abilities | Healthcare; decision-making; communication; leadership; administration and management; permanent education; and contextualized technical/scientific, ethical/political, and social/educational skills |
| Specific skills corresponding to primary care | - Acknowledge health as a right and act in a way to guarantee comprehensive care, understood as the coordinated, continuous set of preventive and curative individual and collective actions and services required for each case at all levels of the system’s complexity |
| - Be active in comprehensive healthcare programs for children, adolescents, women, adults, and the elderly | |
| - Be able to diagnose and resolve health problems, communicate, make decisions, intervene in the work process, work in a team, and face constantly changing situations | |
| - Respond to regional health specificities through strategically planned interventions in health promotion, prevention, and rehabilitation, paying full attention to the health of individuals, families, and communities | |
| - Assume an ethical, humanistic, and social commitment to multiprofessional healthcare work | |
| - Act in different scenarios of professional practice based on the premises of clinical and epidemiological models | |
| - Identify the population’s individual and collective health needs, their conditions, and determinants | |
| - Intervene in the health–disease process and take responsibility for the quality of nursing assistance/care in its different healthcare levels with health promotion, prevention, protection, and rehabilitation actions from the perspective of comprehensive care | |
| Curricular contents | Biological and Social Foundation of Nursing (Morphology, Physiology, Pharmacology, Pathology, Cellular and Molecular Biology, Nutrition, Public Health and Environmental Health/Ecology); Human Sciences (Anthropology, Philosophy, Sociology, Psychology, Communication, and Education); Fundamentals of Nursing; Nursing Assistance; Nursing Administration; Nursing Education |
| Internships | The minimum workload for the supervised curricular internship must total 20% of the total course load. In addition to the theoretical and practical content developed throughout the nurses’ training, nursing programs are required to include in their curriculum a supervised internship in general and specialized hospitals, outpatient clinics, primary care service network, and communities |
| Duration | Nursing programs must have a minimum course load of 4,000 h and a minimum limit of five years |
Synthesis of the set of permitted and prohibited practices for Brazilian nurses based on legal provisions
| Provision | Practices |
|---|---|
| Authorized practices | |
| Law No. 7.498/1986—Professional Practice Law | |
| a) Manage entities and head nursing services and units | |
| b) Plan, organize, coordinate, execute, and evaluate nursing assistance services | |
| c) Consult, audit, and issue opinions on nursing matters | |
| d) Nursing consultations | |
| e) Prescribe nursing assistance | |
| f) Direct nursing care for critically ill patients at risk of death | |
| g) More technically complex nursing care that requires scientific knowledge and the ability to make immediate decisions | |
| a) Participates in the planning, execution, and evaluation of healthcare programs and plans | |
| b) Prescribes drugs provided for in public healthcare programs and routinely approved by the healthcare institution | |
| c) Prevents and systematically controls nosocomial infection, communicable diseases in general, and harm that may be caused to patients | |
| d) Nursing care for pregnant women, prenatal and postnatal care | |
| e) Monitor progress and labor and delivery | |
| f) Delivery without dystocia | |
| g) Education that aims to improve the population’s health | |
| a) Provides assistance in prenatal care and in normal childbirth | |
| b) Identifies obstetric dystocia and takes measures until the physician’s arrival | |
| c) Performs episiotomy and episiorrhaphy and applies local anesthesia, when necessary | |
| Resolutions issued by the Federal Nursing Council | |
| a) The nurse can request routine and complementary exams | |
| b) Collect material for oncotic colpocytology by Pap smear | |
| c) Classify risk and prioritize assistance in urgent care services | |
| d) Insert urinary catheters | |
| Guidelines, manuals, and thematic journals orienting primary care, issued by the Ministry of Health | |
| a) Provide healthcare to individuals and families linked to teams in the unit, at home, and in other community spaces | |
| b) Perform nursing consultations and procedures, request complementary exams, prescribe medications according to protocols, clinical and therapeutic guidelines, or other technical norms established by the federal, state, or municipal administrator, observing the legal provisions for the profession | |
| c) Receive patients with qualified listening and risk classification | |
| d) Conduct group activities and refer patients to other services, when necessary | |
| e) Perform prenatal consultations for low-risk pregnant women, alternating with the presence of the physician | |
| f) Perform rapid tests | |
| g) Perform clinical breast examinations and collections for cervical cytopathological examinations | |
| h) Family planning and prescription of contraceptive methods (except definitive ones) | |
| i) Normal delivery without dystocia | |
| Prohibited practices | |
| Nursing Code of Ethics and resolutions issued by the Federal Nursing Council | a) Deny nursing care in urgent, emergency, epidemic, disaster, and catastrophic situations |
| b) Perform surgical acts, except in emergency situations or in those expressly authorized by law, provided that the nurse has the necessary technical/scientific skills | |
| c) Prescribe medications that are not established in public healthcare programs and/or in routines approved by a healthcare institution, except in emergency situations | |
| d) Provide services that are, by their nature, the responsibility of another professional, except in emergencies or those expressly authorized by current legislation | |
| e) Delegate exclusive activities to other members of the healthcare team | |
| f) Apply sutures, except in urgent cases where there is an imminent and serious risk of life | |
| g) Comply with a remote medical prescription or after the expiration date |
Fig. 1Dimensions of practices performed by Brazilian nurses in primary healthcare
Percentage of nursing programs according to the preparation of students for the development of actions (n = 110)
| Actions and procedures | Prepare | Partially prepare | Do not prepare |
|---|---|---|---|
| Insert nasogastric, nasoenteric, and urethral intubation | 99.1 | 1.0 | 0.0 |
| Apply dressings | 99.1 | 1.0 | 0.0 |
| Administer medications | 99.1 | 0.9 | 0.0 |
| Conduct health education groups | 98.2 | 0.9 | 0.9 |
| Execute health promotion actions | 97.2 | 2.8 | 0.0 |
| Administer vaccines | 96.7 | 2.1 | 1.1 |
| Plan and execute vaccination campaigns | 96.3 | 2.8 | 1.0 |
| Perform compulsory notifications | 95.7 | 4.3 | 0.0 |
| Execute family planning | 95.3 | 3.8 | 1.0 |
| Perform Pap smear | 94.5 | 3.7 | 1.9 |
| Perform pediatric consultation | 93.6 | 4.6 | 1.8 |
| Interpret Pap smear | 91.5 | 3.2 | 5.3 |
| Perform low-risk prenatal care | 90.9 | 9.1 | 0.0 |
| Receive patients with risk classification | 87.2 | 11.0 | 1.8 |
| Prescribe dressings | 83.9 | 10.7 | 5.4 |
| Perform electrocardiograms | 83.2 | 9.3 | 7.5 |
| Insert peripheral venous catheters | 81.3 | 10.2 | 8.4 |
| Perform artery punctures | 76.3 | 10.7 | 12.9 |
| Average | |||
| Interpret laboratory tests | 75.2 | 22.0 | 2.7 |
| Interpret imaging tests | 53.2 | 25.6 | 21.1 |
| Request laboratory tests | 47.7 | 29.4 | 22.9 |
| Prescribe medications provided for in institutional protocols | 46.7 | 46.7 | 6.7 |
| Perform normal deliveries | 42.1 | 18.7 | 39.2 |
| Request imaging tests | 23.1 | 24.1 | 52.7 |
| Prescribe anthelmintics | 19.6 | 15.9 | 64.5 |
| Prescribe antifungals | 13.1 | 9.8 | 77.1 |
| Prescribe anti-inflammatory drugs | 12.0 | 6.5 | 81.5 |
| Prescribe antibiotics | 9.3 | 15.9 | 74.7 |
| Average | |||
| Perform abscess drainage | 47.1 | 14.1 | 38.7 |
| Communicate nosological diagnoses to patientsb | 26.9 | 12.9 | 60.2 |
| Prescribe medications for people with chronic illness diagnosed by the physician | 17.6 | 18.5 | 63.9 |
| Renew medical prescriptions | 12.8 | 5.3 | 81.9 |
| Apply suturesc | 11.1 | 17.6 | 71.3 |
| Perform local anesthesiac | 9.7 | 7.5 | 82.8 |
| Confirm death | 8.7 | 7.6 | 83.7 |
| Prescribe psychoactive drugs | 5.4 | 3.3 | 91.3 |
| Make nosological diagnosesb | 4.3 | 2.1 | 93.6 |
| Average | |||
aLegally permitted by the Federal Nursing Council and the Ministry of Health but subject to the local administrator’s authorization through the creation of nursing protocols
bAccording to the Law on the Professional Practice of Medicine, these practices are not exclusive to the physician, but judicial decisions have ruled in favor of the understanding that the physician is the only professional legally authorized to perform diagnoses. Although it is not exclusive, it can only be shared with other professions by way of federal laws and never by council resolutions or municipal or state laws. Within PHC, these actions can be performed by nurses in services where clinical nursing protocols are in place, but they are limited to common diseases that are not serious (e.g., worm infestations, dermatitis, sexually transmitted infections)
cObstetric nurses can perform these actions within the scope of gynecological assistance (perform episiotomy and episiorrhaphy with the application of local anesthesia)
Convergent matrix of the research results
| Components | Results | Inferences | Recommendations |
|---|---|---|---|
Regulation | a) Curricular guidelines: comprehensive, indicate skills and abilities for primary care practices b) Normative documents of the Legislative and Executive branches and the professional council: regulate advanced practices in the context of primary healthcare (PHC) (nosological diagnoses of common and non-serious diseases, drug prescriptions, requests and interpretations for diagnostic tests, referrals) but are dependent on clinical protocols established by local administrators | a) The Professional Practice Law is outdated (it was created before the Brazilian Unified Health System (SUS)) and does not fully detail the activities that nurses can perform. The gaps in the legislation focus on the appropriation of tasks by other professions; excessive publications of regulations by professional councils that revoke, include, or ratify tasks; legal disputes with other categories, especially with physicians; insecurity in the professionals who provide care; limited social perception of the nurse’s scope of practice b) The practices performed by the nurse respond to the main healthcare demands of PHC c) The advanced practices prescribed in the legislation and performed by PHC nurses correspond to those defined by other countries d) The nurse’s autonomy is limited in places where there are no established clinical protocols, which points to nurses’ underutilization e) Exclusive medical acts are performed by nurses in places where there are no doctors f) Advanced practices have already been implemented in the context of Brazilian PHC, so it is not necessary to introduce the APN as a new professional category | a) Implement clinical protocols in all municipalities based on local needs b) In-service training for advanced practices c) Reforms in the training/education model that ensure the acquisition of skills for advanced practices d) Update the Professional Practice Law so that it considers incorporating the premises of the SUS, the content of the different normative acts issued by the professional council, and the details of the set of authorized activities for nurses |
Practices | a) Managerial, educational, clinical, and health surveillance practices b) Advanced practices based on clinical protocols: nosological diagnoses of common and non-serious diseases, drug prescriptions, requests and interpretations for diagnostic tests, referrals c) Exclusive medical practices: sutures, abscess drainage, application of local anesthesia | ||
Education | a) The program prepares students for practices legally and historically recognized as nurses’ activities b) Partly prepares for advanced practices c) Does not prepare for exclusive medical practices d) Education administrators do not recognize advanced practices as part of the nurse's scope of practice |
Fig. 2Steps and recommendations for operationalizing the Brazilian advanced practice nurse model