Publication | Closed Access
Primary Care Outcomes in Patients treated by Nurse Practitioners or Physicians: Two-Year Follow-Up
281
Citations
25
References
2004
Year
NursingFamily MedicineAdvanced Practice ProviderPrimary CareAdvanced Practice NursePatient SatisfactionPrimary Care OutcomesPatient SafetyNurse PractitionersTwo-year Follow-upOutcomes ResearchGeneral PracticePatient-centered OutcomePrimary Health CarePrimary Care VisitsMedicinePatient ExperienceHealth Services Research
This study reports results of the 2-year follow-up phase of a randomized study comparing outcomes of patients assigned to a nurse practitioner or a physician primary care practice. In the sample of 406 adults, no differences were found between the groups in health status, disease-specific physiologic measures, satisfaction or use of specialist, emergency room or inpatient services. Physician patients averaged more primary care visits than nurse practitioner patients. The results are consistent with the 6-month findings and with a growing body of evidence that the quality of primary care delivered by nurse practitioners is equivalent to that by physicians.
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