Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Nurse practition­ers hold key to access to quality care

- By Sen. Camera Bartolotta Times Guest Columnist

Pennsylvan­ia is in the midst of a health-care crisis, and nowhere is the problem more obvious than in rural communitie­s. Insurance and service costs have gone through the roof. Many doctors are refusing to accept new patients, and some are even turning away existing patients who rely on government-sponsored health care coverage.

The troubling financial trends in the industry are not the only cause for concern; availabili­ty of health care is becoming an even more serious challenge. As older doctors in rural areas retire, fewer new physicians are opening up shop to replace them.

Without action by lawmakers to ease this crisis, patients may reach a point in the near future when they are forced to travel an hour or more just to see a doctor – if they can find proper care at all.

As the number of primary care doctors in rural areas continues to decline, nurse practition­ers are uniquely positioned to fill the need for quality health-care services. Unfortunat­ely, state law prevents nurse practition­ers from providing services to the full extent of their knowledge, training and education.

Even the most experience­d and capable nurse practition­ers can only serve patients under business contracts with physicians. This severely limits their ability to expand care options to a broader number of people.

The only thing stopping them from playing a larger role in meeting the growing demand for services

is our antiquated state law.

The Senate passed a bill I introduced last year that would address this problem by providing full practice authority to advanced practice registered nurses. Rep. Jesse Topper introduced a companion bill in the House. These qualified providers would still be required to complete a period of collaborat­ion with a doctor for a number of years, but they would be allowed to serve patients to the full extent of their knowledge and training without a contract with a physician thereafter.

It does not solve all of the issues plaguing the health care community, but it is a necessary tourniquet as new ideas are debated at

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