In 2004, the National Council of State Boards of Nursing
(NCSBN) and accrediting agencies sought to develop uniform
standardization of education, accreditation, licensure, and
certification across the advanced practice arena. The Consensus Model
for APRN Regulation, Licensure, Accreditation, Certification and
Education separated the APRNs into four distinct roles: certified nurse
practitioners (CNPs), clinical nurse specialists (CNSs), certified
registered nurse anesthetists (CRNAs), and certified nurse midwives
(CNMs), and in at least one of six population foci: family/individual
across the lifespan, adult-gerontology, neonatal, pediatrics, women’s
health/gender-related, or psychiatric/mental health (Consensus Model).
However, the nurse leader and the nurse educator are missing from the
four identified roles. Some experts believe that the nurse leader and
the nurse educator roles are advanced practice nurse role while others
do not.
- Explore the pros and cons for identifying the nurse leader and nurse educator roles as advanced practice nurses.
- Based on the evidence from your research and resources,
state if you agree or disagree on these roles meeting advanced practice
nurse statue. - Discuss the rationale for your decision and support with evidence.
Resources
Educator
Booth, T.L., Emerson, C.J., Christi, J., Hackney, M.G.,
& Souter, S. (2016). Preparation of academic nurse educators. Nurse
Education in Practice, 19, 54-57. Retrieved from Proquest – USU Library
O’Lynn, C. (2015). Endorsing the Doctor of Nursing practice pathway for nurse educators. Journal of Nursing Education, 54(9), 475-477. Retrieved from Proquest – USU Library
National League for Nursing – http://www.nln.org/
American Association Colleges of Nursing – http://www.aacnnursing.org/
Leader
AONE Nurse Executive Competencies
Expectations
Initial Post:
- Due: Saturday, 11:59 pm PT
- Length: A minimum of 250 words, not including references
- Citations: At least one high-level scholarly reference in APA from within the last 5 years