Assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in South Africa

Background: The shortage of nurses in public healthcare facilities in South Africa is well documented; finding creative solutions to this problem remains a priority. Objective: This study sought to establish the amount of time that clinical nurse practitioners (CNPs) in one district of the Western...

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Main Authors: Jude Igumbor, Alta Davids, Catharina Nieuwoudt, Jessica Lee, Rifqah Roomaney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2016-03-01
Series:Curationis
Online Access:https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1479
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spelling doaj-0e75aa3c74d84ab88732c423e984a6052020-11-24T20:46:02ZengAOSISCurationis0379-85772223-62792016-03-01391e1e810.4102/curationis.v39i1.14791297Assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in South AfricaJude Igumbor0Alta Davids1Catharina Nieuwoudt2Jessica Lee3Rifqah Roomaney4School of Public Health, University of the Witwatersrand and BroadReach HealthcareDepartment of Health, Western Cape Provincial GovernmentDepartment of Health, Western Cape Provincial GovernmentJohns Hopkins University, BaltimoreBroadReach HealthcareBackground: The shortage of nurses in public healthcare facilities in South Africa is well documented; finding creative solutions to this problem remains a priority. Objective: This study sought to establish the amount of time that clinical nurse practitioners (CNPs) in one district of the Western Cape spend on clinical services and the implications for staffing and skills mix in order to deliver quality patient care. Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted across 15 purposively selected clinics providing primary health services in 5 sub-districts. The frequency of activities and time CNPs spent on each activity in fixed and mobile clinics were recorded. Time spent on activities and health facility staff profiles were correlated and predictors of the total time spent by CNPs with patients were identified. Results: The time spent on clinical activities was associated with the number of CNPs in the facilities. CNPs in fixed clinics spent a median time of about 13 minutes with each patient whereas CNPs in mobile clinics spent 3 minutes. Fixed-clinic CNPs also spent more time on their non-core functions than their core functions, more time with patients, and saw fewer patients compared to mobile-clinic CNPs. Conclusions: The findings give insight into the time CNPs in rural fixed and mobile clinics spend with their patients, and how patient caseload may affect consultation times. Two promising strategies were identified – task shifting and adjustments in health workerd eployment – as ways to address staffing and skills mix, which skills mix creates the potential for using healthcare workers fully whilst enhancing the long-term health of these rural communities.https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1479
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jude Igumbor
Alta Davids
Catharina Nieuwoudt
Jessica Lee
Rifqah Roomaney
spellingShingle Jude Igumbor
Alta Davids
Catharina Nieuwoudt
Jessica Lee
Rifqah Roomaney
Assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in South Africa
Curationis
author_facet Jude Igumbor
Alta Davids
Catharina Nieuwoudt
Jessica Lee
Rifqah Roomaney
author_sort Jude Igumbor
title Assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in South Africa
title_short Assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in South Africa
title_full Assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in South Africa
title_fullStr Assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in South Africa
title_sort assessment of activities performed by clinical nurse practitioners and implications for staffing and patient care at primary health care level in south africa
publisher AOSIS
series Curationis
issn 0379-8577
2223-6279
publishDate 2016-03-01
description Background: The shortage of nurses in public healthcare facilities in South Africa is well documented; finding creative solutions to this problem remains a priority. Objective: This study sought to establish the amount of time that clinical nurse practitioners (CNPs) in one district of the Western Cape spend on clinical services and the implications for staffing and skills mix in order to deliver quality patient care. Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted across 15 purposively selected clinics providing primary health services in 5 sub-districts. The frequency of activities and time CNPs spent on each activity in fixed and mobile clinics were recorded. Time spent on activities and health facility staff profiles were correlated and predictors of the total time spent by CNPs with patients were identified. Results: The time spent on clinical activities was associated with the number of CNPs in the facilities. CNPs in fixed clinics spent a median time of about 13 minutes with each patient whereas CNPs in mobile clinics spent 3 minutes. Fixed-clinic CNPs also spent more time on their non-core functions than their core functions, more time with patients, and saw fewer patients compared to mobile-clinic CNPs. Conclusions: The findings give insight into the time CNPs in rural fixed and mobile clinics spend with their patients, and how patient caseload may affect consultation times. Two promising strategies were identified – task shifting and adjustments in health workerd eployment – as ways to address staffing and skills mix, which skills mix creates the potential for using healthcare workers fully whilst enhancing the long-term health of these rural communities.
url https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1479
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