American Association of Nurse Practitioners Responds to American Osteopathic Association’s Call for Strengthening Barriers to Patient Primary Care Access

The following statement is attributable to Joyce Knestrick, Ph.D., APRN, C-FNP, FAANP, concerning the American Osteopathic Association’s (AOA) recent statements recklessly opposing independent practice for non-physician health care providers to the benefit of its own membership.

AUSTIN, Texas, Oct. 31, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- The following statement is attributable to Joyce Knestrick, Ph.D., APRN, C-FNP, FAANP, concerning the American Osteopathic Association’s (AOA) recent statements recklessly opposing independent practice for non-physician health care providers to the benefit of its own membership.

American Association of Nurse Practitioners (PRNewsfoto/American Association of Nurse P)

“We’re disappointed, but frankly not surprised, that the AOA has chosen to expend its organizational resources to undermine patient choice and put the profits of its members ahead of the 84 million people who are living today in primary care shortage areas. It is disingenuous to suggest that the primary care access crisis will be solved only by physicians, many of whom are actively fleeing primary care in favor of high-income specialties. In contrast, the nurse practitioner (NP) workforce is experiencing double-digit growth, with three-quarters of the 248,000-member NP workforce choosing primary care. More than 50 years of research overwhelmingly demonstrates that NPs, in more than 1 billion patient visits annually, provide safe, high-quality care, equal to or better than physicians. States where NPs are prevented from independent licensure consistently rank among the poorest on health outcomes, access to primary care and geographic disparities in care.

“Twenty-two states and the District of Columbia, the US Federal Trade Commission, the US Department of Veterans Affairs, and most recently, Congress through passage of the opioid law -- along with highly regarded think tanks, from the American Enterprise Institute to Brookings -- have spoken. Patients and our country deserve direct access to high-quality, NP-delivered health care, a choice of health care providers and a health care system free of artificial barriers designed to protect physicians from free-market competition. AANP will continue to advocate for patients and policies that support their health, including Full Practice Authority, retiring barriers to care, and the adoption of the Consensus Model for APRN licensure. We invite AOA to do the same.”

The American Association of Nurse Practitioners (AANP) is the largest professional membership organization for nurse practitioners (NPs) of all specialties. It represents the interests of the more than 248,000 licensed NPs in the U.S. AANP provides legislative leadership at the local, state and national levels, advancing health policy; promoting excellence in practice, education and research; and establishing standards that best serve NP patients and other health care consumers. As The Voice of the Nurse Practitioner®, AANP represents the interests of NPs as providers of high-quality, cost-effective, comprehensive, patient-centered health care. To locate a nurse practitioner in your community, go to npfinder.com. For more information about NPs, visit aanp.org.

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SOURCE American Association of Nurse Practitioners

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