Availability of Advanced Practice Providers in Adult Intensive Care Units in the United States: A Survey. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: How advanced practice providers (APPs) are deployed in adult US intensive care units (ICUs) is understudied. Further, whether state-level restrictions on practice affect the availability of these providers is unknown. OBJECTIVES: To describe staffing patterns of ICU APPs (nurse practitioners, physician assistants) in the context of physicians-in-training (interns, residents, fellows) and to explore the association between state-level APP practice restrictions and employment. METHODS: Data from a national survey of pre-COVID-19 (steady-state) ICU staffing linked to the 2020 American Hospital Association survey were used to examine staffing patterns (via descriptive statistics) and to explore the association of state-level practice restrictions with the presence of APPs in ICUs (via multivariable regression). RESULTS: The cohort included 588 adult ICUs, of which 336 (57.1%) reported both APPs and physicians-in-training, 124 (21.1%) APPs only, 73 (12.4%) physicians-in-training only, and 55 (9.4%) neither. Units with both provider types were more commonly surgical ICUs (17.6% vs ≤9.6%; P < .001), whereas those with neither were 98.2% mixed units. Those units with neither were smaller and more often in smaller, nonteaching, for-profit hospitals in nonmetropolitan areas. Two hundred twenty-five ICUs (38.3%) were in states allowing full APP practice scope. After adjustment, the odds of employing APPs were nonsignificantly higher in ICUs in full-practice states. CONCLUSIONS: Both APPs and physicians-in-training are commonly deployed in US adult ICUs, often together. Laws limiting practice scope may impede deployment of these providers in ICUs.

publication date

  • July 1, 2025

Research

keywords

  • Intensive Care Units
  • Nurse Practitioners
  • Personnel Staffing and Scheduling
  • Physician Assistants

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.4037/ajcc2025655

PubMed ID

  • 40583008

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 34

issue

  • 4