New healthcare profession to help shortage
Staff Development Weekly: Insight on Evidence-Based Practice in Education, January 12, 2006
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To help alleviate the shortage of doctors and nurses in hospital emergency rooms, British healthcare planners have developed a new profession: medical care practitioners (MCPs).
Following the American model of physicians' assistants, the new staff would work independently, although a doctor would still retain responsibility for a patient, the UK paper The Daily Telegraph reported.
The MCPs would require two years training at the post-graduate level and have the equivalent a master's degree. They would take medical histories, perform examinations, order diagnostic tests, manage the care of patients with chronic illnesses-such as diabetes or depression-and provide patient education.
Source: United Press International
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