Elsevier

Health Policy

Volume 117, Issue 2, August 2014, Pages 151-169
Health Policy

Review
Reframing professional boundaries in healthcare: A systematic review of facilitators and barriers to task reallocation from the domain of medicine to the nursing domain

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.healthpol.2014.04.016Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Highlights

  • We systematically review task reallocation from cure (physicians) to care (NPs).

  • Thematic analysis identified four categories of facilitators and barriers.

  • Addressing facilitators and barriers to task reallocation is a dynamic process.

  • Task reallocation to NPs requires reframing of professional boundaries.

  • Professionalism should be reframed at the multiple layers of the healthcare system.

Abstract

Aim

To explore the main facilitators and barriers to task reallocation.

Background

One of the innovative approaches to dealing with the anticipated shortage of physicians is to reallocate tasks from the professional domain of medicine to the nursing domain. Various (cost-)effectiveness studies demonstrate that nurse practitioners can deliver as high quality care as physicians and can achieve as good outcomes. However, these studies do not examine what factors may facilitate or hinder such task reallocation.

Method

A systematic literature review of PubMed and Web of Knowledge supplemented with a snowball research method. The principles of thematic analysis were followed.

Results

The 13 identified relevant papers address a broad spectrum of task reallocation (delegation, substitution and complementary care). Thematic analysis revealed four categories of facilitators and barriers: (1) knowledge and capabilities, (2) professional boundaries, (3) organisational environment, and (4) institutional environment.

Conclusion

Introducing nurse practitioners in healthcare requires organisational redesign and the reframing of professional boundaries. Especially the facilitators and barriers in the analytical themes of ‘professional boundaries’ and ‘organisational environment’ should be considered when reallocating tasks. If not, these factors might hamper the cost-effectiveness of task reallocation in practice.

Keywords

Professional delegation
Advanced Practice Nursing
Nurse practitioners
Organisational innovation
Physician–nurse relations
Systematic review

Cited by (0)