Abstract

Rationale and AimAdvanced Practice Nurse (APN) is a specialist who has acquired clinical skills to make complex decisions for a better professional practice. In the United States, this figure has been developed in different ways, but in some European countries, it is not yet fully developed, although it may imply a significant advance in terms of continuity and quality of care in patients with chronic or multiple pathologies, including cardiac ones and, more specifically, heart failure (HF). The follow‐up of HF patients in many countries has focused on the medical management of the process, neglecting all the other comprehensive health aspects that contribute to decompensation of HF, worsening quality indicators or patient satisfaction, and there are not updated reviews to clarify the relevance of APN in HF, comparing the results of APN interventions with doctors clinical practice, since the complexity of care that HF patients need makes it difficult to control the disease through regular treatment. For this reason, this systematic review was proposed in order to update the available knowledge on the effectiveness of APN interventions in HF patients, analysing four PICO questions (Patients, Interventions, Comparison and Outcomes): whether APN implies a reduction in the number of hospital readmissions, if it reduces mortality, if it has a positive cost‐benefit relationship and if it implies any improvement in the quality of life of HF patients.Design and MethodsA systematic review was performed based on the PRISMA statement, searching at four databases: PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus and Cuiden. Articles were selected based on the following criteria: English/Spanish language, up to 6 years since publication, and original quantitative studies of experimental, quasi‐experimental or observational character. Papers were excluded if they do not comply with CONSORT or STROBE checklists, and if they had not been published in journals indexed in JCR and/or SJR. For the analysis, two separate researchers used the Cochrane Handbook form for systematic reviews of intervention, collecting authorship variables, study methods, risks of bias, intervention and comparison groups, results obtained, PICO question or questions answered, and the main conclusions.ResultsA total of 43,754 patients participated in the 11 included studies for the development of this review, mostly from United States and non‐European countries, with a clearly visible lack of European publications. Regarding the results related to first PICO question, researches reviewed proved that APN implied a reduction in the number of hospital readmissions in patients with heart failure (up to 33%). Regarding the second question, mortality was always lower in groups assisted by APN versus in control groups (up to 7.8% vs. 17.7%). Regarding the third question, APN was cost‐effective in this type of patient as the cost reduction was eventually calculated in 1.9 million euros. Regarding the last question, quality of life of patients who have been cared for by an APN had notoriously improved, although one of the papers concluded that no significant differences were found. All the questions addressed obtained a positive answer; therefore, APN is a practice that reduced hospital readmissions and mortality in HF patients. The cost‐effectiveness is much better with APN than with usual care, and although the quality of life of HF patients seems to improve with APN, more studies are needed to support this focused on this.

Highlights

  • Advanced Practice Nursing was defined in 2002 by the International Council of Nurses as “a specialist nurse who has acquired the expert knowledge base, the abilities to adopt complex decisions and the clinical competences needed for an enhanced professional practice, whose characteristics are given by the context or country in which the nurse is accredited to work in” (International Council of Nurses, 2008).This same concept having been generally described, it is necessary to clarify that the concept of Advanced Practice Nursing (APN) includes different specific and well-differentiated Nursing roles such as: Nurse Practitioners (NPs), Certified Nurse-Midwives (CNMs), Certified Registered Nurse Anaesthetists (CRNAs) and | 3Clinical Nurse Specialists (CNSs), always in the scope of the United States (Jansen & Zwygart-Stauffacher, 2010)

  • Regarding the results related to first PICO question, researches reviewed proved that APN implied a reduction in the number of hospital readmissions in patients with heart failure

  • The cost-effectiveness is much better with APN than with usual care, and the quality of life of Heart Failure (HF) patients seems to improve with APN, more studies are needed to support this focused on this

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Summary

Introduction

Advanced Practice Nursing was defined in 2002 by the International Council of Nurses as “a specialist nurse who has acquired the expert knowledge base, the abilities to adopt complex decisions and the clinical competences needed for an enhanced professional practice, whose characteristics are given by the context or country in which the nurse is accredited to work in” (International Council of Nurses, 2008).This same concept having been generally described, it is necessary to clarify that the concept of Advanced Practice Nursing (APN) includes different specific and well-differentiated Nursing roles such as: Nurse Practitioners (NPs), Certified Nurse-Midwives (CNMs), Certified Registered Nurse Anaesthetists (CRNAs) and | 3Clinical Nurse Specialists (CNSs), always in the scope of the United States (Jansen & Zwygart-Stauffacher, 2010). Advanced Practice Nursing was defined in 2002 by the International Council of Nurses as “a specialist nurse who has acquired the expert knowledge base, the abilities to adopt complex decisions and the clinical competences needed for an enhanced professional practice, whose characteristics are given by the context or country in which the nurse is accredited to work in” (International Council of Nurses, 2008) This same concept having been generally described, it is necessary to clarify that the concept of Advanced Practice Nursing (APN) includes different specific and well-differentiated Nursing roles such as: Nurse Practitioners (NPs), Certified Nurse-Midwives (CNMs), Certified Registered Nurse Anaesthetists (CRNAs) and | 3. In order to do so, health managers, politicians and the collective of the different professions together with their leaderships should know that, to provide an adequate health care to the population as a whole, it is necessary to adopt the idea that that is precisely what matters, independently of who provides these services (Galao-Malo, 2009)

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