Transcript IOM Report: Future of Nursing Massachusetts Action Coalition
Massachusetts Action Coalition
IOM Report: Future of Nursing Massachusetts Action Coalition
Overview, January 2013
IOM Report: The Future of Nursing
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IOM Report Summary: Key Messages & Recommendations
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Future of Nursing: Campaign for Action MA Action Coalition (MAAC) Academic Progression in Nursing (APIN) Grant Role of Deans and Directors
IOM Report: The Future of Nursing
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Report released in October of 2010 by the IOM in collaboration with RWJF “Blueprint” for transforming the American health system:
– Timely due to recent Affordable Care Act legislation – Developed Vision for
Transformed Health Care System
– Goal to improve access, quality of care and cost control – Nursing profession must transform to achieve Vision •
Two-year study resulted in 4 key themes and 8 recommendations
IOM Report: The Future of Nursing
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The RWJF/IOM Vision: Transformed Health Care System
– Quality care is accessible to the diverse US populations – Promotes wellness and disease prevention – Reliably improves health outcomes – Provides compassionate care across the lifespan – Primary care and prevention are central drivers of the health care system – Inter-professional collaboration and coordination are the norm – Payment for health care services rewards value, not volume
Nursing’s Potential Wide-Reaching Impact
Largest component of health care workforce Spend most time with patients Understand care process across continuum of care Evidence links them to high-quality patient care
IOM Report’s 4 Key Messages
1. Nurses should practice to the full extent of their education and training 2. Nurses should achieve higher levels of education and training through an improved education system that promotes seamless academic progression 3. Nurses should be full partners, with physicians and other health care professionals, in redesigning health care in the United States 4. Effective workforce planning and policy making require better data collection and an improved information infrastructure
IOM Report’s Recommendations
1. Remove scope-of-practice barriers 2. Expand opportunities for nurses to lead and diffuse collaborative improvement efforts 3. Implement nurse residency programs 4. Increase the proportion of nurses with baccalaureate degree to 80 percent by 2020
IOM Report’s Recommendations
5. Double the number of nurses with a doctorate by 2020 6. Ensure that nurses engage in lifelong learning 7. Prepare and enable nurses to lead change to advance health 8. Build and infrastructure for the collection and analysis of inter-professional health care workforce data
Current Minimum Entry-Level Education Requirements Select Licensed Health Professions in Massachusetts OCABR and EOHHS Nurse
Diploma/ Associate
Dietician Athletic Trainer
Bachelor’ s
Advance Practice Nurse Occupational Therapy Speech Language Pathology Audiology Clinical Social Worker Mental Health Counselor Physician Assistant
Master’s
Medicine Dentistry Podiatry Psychology Pharmacy Physical Therapy
Doctorate
IOM Future of Nursing: Campaign for
Action
IOM Report Future of Nursing
Leading Change, Advancing Health
RWJF Susan Hassmiller, RN Senior Nursing Advisor Susan Reinhard, RN SVP, Public Policy State Action Coalitions
State Action Coalitions
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Massachusetts Action Coalition (MAAC)
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Applied to RWJF/AARP’s “Center to Champion Nursing in America” (CCNA) to become an AC
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MA designated as an AC - September 2011
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Nurse Lead: MA Organization of Nurse Leaders
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Non-Nurse Lead: MA Department of Higher Education (DHE)
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Established Short-term and Long-term Goals
MA Action Coalition: Short Term Goals
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Disseminate IOM Report Findings Engage/educate stakeholders statewide Build statewide consensus for academic progression with plan to increase diversity
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Use developed models as framework Survey nursing program requirements
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Develop plan for statewide adoption of NOFNCC© Expand use in academic/practice settings
MA Action Coalition: Long Term Goals
Implement statewide plan for academic progression for all nurses
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Create models for all levels of practice Remove scope of practice barriers for APRNs
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Strengthen interdisciplinary collaboration within medical community
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Strategies to influence policy changes Utilize data to understand workforce needs, demographics
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Analyze data and develop action plans to address workforce needs/diversity gaps
MAAC Progress to date
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Created teams and action plans to address goals Began fundraising efforts Held a 2 day “State Site Visit” featuring Sue Hassmiller during 7 events in March 2012
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Developed and submitted proposal for RWJF Academic Progression in Nursing (APIN) Grant in May 2012
Academic Progression in Nursing Grant Announcement – August 2012
MAAC Highlights (con’t)
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MA was awarded the APIN Grant as one of nine states selected nationwide !
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Grant timeline: Sept 2012 – Aug 2014
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Funding $150,000 per year for 2 years
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Developed 12 Project Teams – Sept 2012
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Team membership recruitment – ongoing
Campaign for Action - RWJF
CCNA (The Center to Champion Nursing in America at AARP) 49 Action Coalitions 9 Action Coalitions with APIN Funding APIN Tri-Council
* AONE - National Program
AACN ANA NLN
MA Action Coalition (MAAC) Leadership Structure
MAAC
Executive Committee MA Action Coalition (
MAAC
)
MAAC Stakeholder Advisory Council
MAAC Teams
APIN
Grant Teams PIN Grants Other Initiatives Scope of Practice Data Use Communications Philanthropy Academic Progression NOFNCC © Integration Increase Faculty Care Transitions IP Education 18
APIN Goal # 1
CREATE ACCELERATED PATHWAYS FOR NURSES TO ACHIEVE BACCALAUREATE OR HIGHER DEGREE Strategy 1: Disseminate existing and new seamless academic progression models throughout the higher education system.
Strategy 2: Develop and implement Nursing Education Transfer Compact.
Strategy 3: Work with nursing programs and employers to increase options for flexible student-centered learning environments that will increase diversity and promote access for educational advancement.
APIN Goal # 2
PROMOTE THE INTEGRATION OF NURSE OF THE FUTURE NURSING CORE COMPETENCIES (NOFNCC © ) Strategy 1: Work with academic institutions to integrate NOFNCC © into curriculum at all levels of education throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Strategy 2: Work with practice settings to integrate NOFNCC © into practice programs throughout the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
APIN Goal # 3
INCREASE FACULTY POOL AVAILABLE TO EDUCATE NURSES FROM BSN THROUGH DOCTORAL DEGREES Strategy 1: Increase opportunities for retired faculty to return to teaching positions.
Strategy 2: Maximize opportunities for the practicing nursing workforce to obtain faculty positions.
MAAC Project Teams (12)
Academic Progression
- Progression Model Team - Transfer Compact Team - Flexible Options Team
NOFNCC Integration
- Academic Institutions Team - Practice Settings Team
Faculty
- Faculty Opportunities Team - Faculty Development Team
Scope of Practice
- APRN Team - RN Team
Data Use
- Data Team
Communications
- Plan Team
Philanthropy
- Fundraising Team
MAAC Project Team Co-Leads
Progression Models Janet Lusk, Donna Kelly Williams Education Transfer Compact Susie Conrad, Eileen Costello Flexible Options Kathleen Scoble, Earlene Avalon NONCC© Academic Settings Judy Beal, Cecilia McVey NOFNCC© Practice Settings Gayle Gravlin, Lorraine Schoen Faculty Opportunities Cynthia Bechtel, Nancy Bittner Faculty Recruitment/Retention Karen Manning, Paulette Seymour Route Scope of Practice APRN Pat Noga, Stephanie Ahmed Scope of Practice RN Elaine Bridge, Paul McKinnon Data Collection and Use Judie Pelletier, Stephen Cavanagh Communications Plan Pat Crombie, Ashley Waddell Philanthropy Sharon Gale, Kevin Whitney
Nursing Workforce Development
Precepting Education ----------------- Transition ------ Practice Education/Academic Residency
Competent
Patient Outcomes
Nursing Practice
Quality DEU’s
Inter-
Lifelong Learning
Education/ Clinical
Professional
Orientation
Care Environments
Safety Cost Nurse of Future Nursing Core Competencies
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Nursing by the Numbers
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MA BORN License Data, February 2012 Total Nurses - 141,773 Registered Nurses – 111,388 Advanced Practice RN – 9,598
Nurse Midwives – 480 Nurse Practitioners – 6,962 Nurse Specialists – 946 Nurse Anesthetists – 1,210
Licensed Practical Nurses – 20,787
MA BORN Approved Nursing Programs
Total of MA Programs – 74 • RN Entry Level Graduate Degree (MSN) – 7 • RN Baccalaureate (BSN) – 20 • RN Associate Degree (ADN) – 20 • RN Diploma – 1 • Practical Nursing - 26
Rebalancing the Nursing Workforce
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The Plan: Key Assumptions 55% - Nurses with a BSN or Higher Degrees in 2012 66% - Target for increase by 2020 Projections based on: LPN/Diploma/AD numbers are level or declining New BSNs include direct entry plus LPN/Diploma/AD graduates progressing to BSN degree Currently working LPN/Diploma/AD nurses also return to school to obtain a BSN Higher degrees include new MSNs and AD/BSN/MSN nurses progressing
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IOM Report – Role of Community Colleges
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Key role in attracting nurses into pipeline Provide access where other access points are limited by capacity, distance or cost Provide high quality and affordable pathway for nurses to move to higher education levels Predominant education institutions in rural and medically underserved areas Greatest opportunities to develop innovations linking to BSN programs and to foster a culture that values academic progression
Role of Deans and Directors
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Promote life long learning and academic progression Partner with other Deans and join education collaboratives Partner with CNOs to develop strategies for flexible student-centered learning environments Promote NOFNCC © integration into curriculum at all levels of education!
Support the work of the MAAC by participating in requested surveys!!
Next Steps: Visit our new state page, MAAC website:
http://championnursing.org/state/massachusetts also: www.mass.edu/nursing