Author:
Halcomb Elizabeth J,Davidson Patricia M,Griffiths Rhonda,Daly John
Abstract
Objective: More than two-thirds of health
expenditure is attributable to chronic conditions, of
which a significant proportion are related to cardiovascular
disease. This paper identifies and
explores the factors cited by practice nurses as
impacting on the development of their role in
cardiovascular disease management.
Methods: Sequential mixed methods design
combining postal survey (n = 284) and telephone
interviews (n = 10) with general practice nurses.
Results: The most commonly cited barriers to
role extension were legal implications (51.6%),
lack of space (30.8%), a belief that the current role
is appropriate (29.7%), and general practitioner
attitudes (28.7%). The most commonly cited facilitators
of role extension were collaboration with the
general practitioner (87.6%), access to education
and training (65.6%), the opportunity to deliver
primary health care (61.0%), a high level of job
satisfaction (56.0%) and positive consumer feedback
(54.6%).
Conclusions: Australian government policy
demonstrates a growing commitment to an
extended role for general practice in primary
health care and cardiovascular disease management.
In spite of these promising initiatives, practice
nurses face a range of professional and
system barriers to extending their role. By
addressing the barriers and enabling features
identified in this investigation, there is potential to
further develop the Australian practice nurse role
in cardiovascular disease management.
Cited by
76 articles.
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