Aims
To understand patients’ and providers’ perceptions of primary care delivered by nurse practitioners (NPs) in the Veterans Affairs Healthcare System.
Design
Qualitative exploratory study (in convergent mixed‐methods design).
Methods
Semi‐structured interviews in 2016 with primary care providers and patients from facilities in states with full and restricted practice authority for NPs. Patient sample based on reassignment to: (a) a NP; or (b) a different physician following an established physician relationship. Data were analysed using content analysis.
Results
We interviewed 28 patients, 17 physicians and 14 NPs. We found: (a) NPs provided more holistic care than physicians; (b) patients were satisfied with NPs; and (c) providers’ professional experience outweighed provider type.
Conclusions
Patients’ preferences for NPs (compared with prior physicians) contributed to perceptions of patient centredness. Similarities in providers’ perceptions suggest NPs and physicians are both viable providers for primary care.
Impact
- Nurse Practitioners (NPs): practice authority
- Veterans Affairs Health care: nurse practitioners will continue to be a viable resource for primary care delivery
- United States Health care: challenges notions patients may not be satisfied with care provided by NPs and supports expanding their use to provide much‐needed access to primary care services; expanding Full Practice Authority would allow states to provide acceptable primary care without diminishing patient or provider experiences