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Nurse Practitioners Want More Authority

February 12th, 2013 by flanews

Florida is one of only two states banning nurse practitioners from writing prescriptions for powerful drugs. As Whitney Ray tells us, the skilled nurses are also blocked from running emergency mental health checks on patients they think are homicidal.

Florida nurse practitioners are walking the state capitol warning lawmakers of an impending problem.

Tuesday, they visited Representative Daphne Campbell. The Miami Democrat sponsored a bill to allow them to perform emergency mental health checks on potentially dangerous patients.

“The patient says I want to commit suicide or homicide. You call the police. By the time police arrive that patient could kill themselves or kill the nurse,” said Campbell.

The nurses also want the authority to write prescriptions for controlled substances.

“The problem is we are not allowed to obtain a DEA license in Florida,” said Susan Lynch with the Florida Association of Nurse Practitioners.

“The vast majority of the meds that I’m restricted from prescribing, which by my training I am trained to prescribe, I can’t do,” said Patricia Wahrenberger a nurse practitioners from Orlando.

“The medications that are under the DEA controlled licensure would be things like testosterone for hormonal problems. Cough medicine like Codeine,” said Lynch.

Florida and Alabama are the only states in the union that don’t allow nurse practitioners to write prescriptions for controlled substances. Nurses rally here year after year to change the law. This year could be different.

The nurses say the aging baby boomer population and the insurance requirements under Obamacare will increase demand.

“We have a physician shortage,” Lynch said.

They say the best way to meet the demand is to give them more authority.

Florida TaxWatch and other fiscal groups support the changes. They say the state, hospitals and patients could save millions. Legislative leaders remain skeptical. Senate President Don Gaetz says the best way to fix the demand problem is to stop frivolous medical lawsuits so more doctors will want to work in Florida.

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