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Health workforce planning: which countries include nursepractitioners and physician assistants and to what effect?

Maier, C.B., Batenburg, R., Birch, S., Zander, B., Elliott, R., Busse, R. Health workforce planning: which countries include nursepractitioners and physician assistants and to what effect? Health Policy: 2018, 122(10), p. 1085-1092.
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Background
An increasing number of countries are introducing new health professions, such as NursePractitioners (NPs) and Physician Assistants (PAs). There is however limited evidence, on whether thesenew professions are included in countries’ workforce planning.

Methods
A cross-country comparison of workforce planning methods. Countries with NPs and/or PAswere identified, workforce planning projections reviewed and differences in outcomes were analysed,based on a review of workforce planning models and a scoping review. Data on multi-professional (physi-cians/NPs/PAs) vs. physician-only models were extracted and compared descriptively. Analysis of policyimplications was based on policy documents and grey literature.

Results
Of eight countries with NPs/PAs, three (Canada, the Netherlands, United States) included theseprofessions in their workforce planning. In Canada, NPs were partially included in Ontario’s needs-basedprojection, yet only as one parameter to enhance efficiency. In the United States and the Netherlands,NPs/PAs were covered as one of several scenarios. Compared with physician-only models, multi-professional models resulted in lower physician manpower projections, primarily in primary care. Aweakness of the multi-professional models was the accuracy of data on substitution. Impacts on policywere limited, except for the Netherlands.

Conclusions
Few countries have integrated NPs/PAs into workforce planning. Yet, those with multi-professional models reveal considerable differences in projected workforce outcomes. Countries shoulddevelop several scenarios with and without NPs/PAs to inform policy. (aut. ref.)