I recently talked with a group of primary care nurse practitioners who expressed frustration about the amount of time they spend on work after the clinic doors close for the day. Working as a nurse practitioner means a lot more than interacting directly with patients. It means, well paperwork. From reviewing lab results to completing prior authorizations for medications, the behind the scenes activities of healthcare providers consume a lot of time. The NPs I talked with find themselves spending up to two hours every evening working on such tasks outside of normal hours.
The frustrations of these nurse practitioners are not uncommon. While there isn’t much data about the amount of time NPs spend on tasks outside of patient care, the issue has been looked at among physicians. Medscape’s 2016 Physician Compensation Report shows that over half of physicians spend at least 10 hours per week on paperwork. Given that nurse practitioners play a similar role to that of MDs, we can expect that the heavy paperwork load applies to advanced practice providers as well.
Clinics handle administrative responsibilities for providers in a few ways:
As a nurse practitioner, you must consider how administrative tasks are handled on the front-end of your employment. It’s always easier to negotiate for admin time in the beginning of the relationship rather than going back to ask for more admin time or higher compensation later.
How many admin hours do you have blocked in your schedule as a nurse practitioner? What does the arrangement look like?
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