Sly Saint
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Abstract
available inRationale
The demand for health services to deliver hospital‐based care has increased due to an ageing population, more complex healthcare needs, comorbidities, and increasing healthcare costs. Nurse‐physician substitution can improve access to care for patients who may otherwise have a significant wait for review by a physician.Objectives
The main objective of this review was to examine the impact of substituting nurses for physicians in the hospital setting (hospital inpatient units and outpatient clinics) on patient outcomes, process of care outcomes, and economic outcomes.The secondary objectives of this review were to assess whether the effects of nurse‐physician substitution differ according to healthcare setting (low‐ and middle‐income countries (which included low‐income, lower middle‐income, and upper middle‐income countries) versus high‐income countries), patient type, patient disease, intervention type (inpatient care, nurse‐led clinics, role substitution, and task substitution), nurse grade, additional training, level of responsibility, and mode of substitution for nurse‐led clinics (telephone/telehealth, partial substitution, enhanced substitution, and full substitution).