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1 ce providers (APPs) (nurse practitioners and physician assistants).
2 ors for burnout among critical care medicine physician assistants.
3  typically staffed by nurse practitioners or physician assistants.
4  burnout is common in critical care medicine physician assistants.
5 prenatal visits with nurse practitioners and physician assistants.
6 ients were called 2 weeks after surgery by a physician assistant and assessed using a scripted templa
7  intervention of high-risk individuals using physician assistants and community health coaches.
8 g the number of fellows each year, utilizing physician assistants and nurse practitioners in greater
9                      Nonphysician providers (physician assistants and nurse practitioners) are being
10 sts, an ERAS coordinator (often a nurse or a physician assistant), and staff from units that care for
11 aim to help 100 000 primary care physicians, physician assistants, and nurse practitioners to effecti
12 ctitioners including nurse practitioners and physician assistants are contributing to care for critic
13             In 2012, nurse practitioners and physician assistants billed independently for more than
14 ian assistant care, and five were focused on physician assistant care in acute and critical care sett
15 , six focused on both nurse practitioner and physician assistant care, and five were focused on physi
16 ng certified registered nurse practitioners, physician assistants, clinical nurse specialists, certif
17 tered to physicians, nurse practitioners and physician assistants from June-September 2009.
18  providers (physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants) from across the United States.
19 al (Heart360), community health coaches, and physician assistant guidance could improve hypertension
20 ed on the role of the nurse practitioner and physician assistant in acute and critical care settings.
21 omote optimal use of nurse practitioners and physician assistants in acute and critical care settings
22  supports the use of nurse practitioners and physician assistants in acute and critical care settings
23 plores the impact of nurse practitioners and physician assistants in the intensive care unit setting
24 wever, the impact of nurse practitioners and physician assistants in the intensive care unit setting
25              From 431 critical care medicine physician assistants invited, 135 (31.3%) responded to t
26                       Critical care medicine physician assistant members of the Society of Critical C
27  fellows (n = 4), and nurse practitioners or physician assistants (n = 2).
28 ese disciplines include nurse practitioners, physician assistants, nurse-midwives, chiropractors, acu
29 ance practice providers (nurse practitioner, physician assistant, nurses, pharmacists, and student me
30                                  Physicians, physician assistants, nurses, nurse practitioners, pharm
31 esidents, and lacked a nurse practitioner or physician assistant on staff.
32 SurveyMonkey to query critical care medicine physician assistants on demographics and the full 22-que
33 ed primarily of a rapid response team led by physician assistants on the rates of in-hospital cardiac
34        Clinicians included 56 physicians, 28 physician assistants or nurse practitioners, and 9 regis
35                Nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) are primary care providers fo
36 Ps), including nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs), in the current referral-to-e
37 such disciplines: nurse practitioners (NPs), physician assistants (PAs), nurse-midwives, chiropractor
38 Nongastroenterologist physicians, nurses, or physician assistants performed 72% of FS.
39  were: Registered Nurses, nurse prescribers, Physician Assistants, pharmacists, dieticians, and physi
40 se practitioners, optometrists, podiatrists, physician assistants, physical or occupational therapist
41 applied to all health professions, including physician assistants, physical therapists, speech and la
42 ology (2), family practice (1), nursing (1), physician assistant practices (1), and health services r
43 ce clinicians (APCs [nurse practitioners and physician assistants]) provide care of relatively lower
44     Higher patient-to-critical care medicine physician assistant ratios and provision of futile care
45 d sixty-one physicians, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, respiratory therapists, and regist
46  and staffing structure (resident staffed vs physician assistant staffed), results changed minimally.
47                                              Physician assistants successfully managed emergency airw
48 anded utilization of nurse practitioners and physician assistants, telemedicine, offering critical ca
49  physicians, 21 states also permit nurses or physician assistants to administer examinations, and 11
50 e of publications on nurse practitioners and physician assistants utilizing Ovid MEDLINE, PubMed, and
51 Mid-level providers (nurse practitioners and physician assistants) were originally envisioned to prov
52 hysicians, fellows, nurse practitioners, and physician assistants--were interviewed about whether the
53  included a rapid response team (RRT) led by physician assistants with specialized critical care trai
54              The deployment of an RRT led by physician assistants with specialized skills was associa

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