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Privately practicing nurse practitioner services in Australia and patient access to care: Results from realist interviews.

BACKGROUND: To facilitate the expansion of nurse practitioners working in community and primary health settings, legislative changes were enacted in 2010. These led to privately practicing nurse practitioners (PPNPs) being enabled to provide care subsidized through the Australian Government Medicare Benefits Schedule and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme. Little is known about the impact of this legislation on patient access to care in Australia.

PURPOSE: To explore how, why and in which contexts PPNP services in Australia impact on patient access to care.

METHODS: Semistructured interviews using realist evaluation were undertaken with 20 participants, selected through stratified sampling using geographic criteria (State/territory in which practicing) and dividing the sample representatively between those who worked solely in private practice and those who worked in both private and public practice. Thematic analysis of qualitative data was undertaken.

CONCLUSION: Findings suggest that PPNPs have increased access to care for patients, predominantly in community and primary health settings.

IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: In increasing access to care, PPNPs have the potential to reduce hospital and general practitioner attendance, thereby potentially reducing the ever-increasing demand for health care.

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