Article

Dancing to our own tune: understandings of advanced nursing practice in British Columbia

Details

Citation

Pauly B, Schreiber R, MacDonald M, Davidson H, Crickmore J, Moss L, Pinelli J, Regan S & Hammond C (2004) Dancing to our own tune: understandings of advanced nursing practice in British Columbia. Nursing Leadership, 17 (2), pp. 47-57. https://doi.org/10.12927/cjnl.2004.16346

Abstract
There has been ongoing confusion about the meaning of advanced nursing practice (ANP) and the nature of ANP roles in Canada and elsewhere. A broad range of roles and titles have been adopted throughout Canada in an attempt to delineate specialized and/or advanced roles within nursing. One key objective in a recent three-phase study of ANP in British Columbia was to clarify the role and understanding of advanced nursing practice and related roles within the larger healthcare system. Our intent in this paper is to describe the understandings of ANP that emerged in Phase I of this recent study and to compare registered nurses' understandings of ANP to the characteristics and competencies identified by the Canadian Nurses Association (2002) framework. (Note: The term "nurse," as used in this paper, refers to "registered nurse.") We conclude by identifying future directions for development of advanced practice roles. 

Journal
Nursing Leadership: Volume 17, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/05/2004
PublisherLongwoods Publishing in cooperation with the Canadian Academy of Executive Nurses
ISSN1910-622X

People (1)

Professor Bernadette Pauly

Professor Bernadette Pauly

Honorary Professor, Faculty of Social Sciences