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My contact with pain patients was extensive during my
residency in Aurora, North Carolina, a coastal town of about 400, with a
patient population compromising of retirees, commercial fisherman and
above-ground miners from a phosphate mine. I knew from that experience that
even if I never found a job as an NP, I would not choose to do pain ...
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Last week, New
Grad NP blogger Samantha Damren posted the struggle she encounters working
with multiple physicians: memorizing the preferences and practices of each. On Facebook,
reader Amber said, ''20 in my emergency physician
group ... can get frustrating!'' On our blog, more readers weighed in. Here
are some of their ...
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This week, readers of ADVANCE
for NPs & PAs let us know their opinions on many posts, comments and
articles.
On Facebook,
our readers liked career development tips, the newest practices in skincare, NP
certification information and the latest posts from our various bloggers. We also
posted an
article discussing the growing ...
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I received some disappointing news last week. My collaborating physician is moving on. She was offered a great opportunity and she decided to take it. I was very upset by her news. I had blogged about her early on in my employment and I described her as the opposite of warm and fuzzy -- if she would have accepted an opportunity sooner I would not ...
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If you're not chatting with us on Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn, ''like'', ''follow'' and ''connect'' with us and start sharing in the conversations! If you are, keep following and spread the word!
This week, our social media sites exploded with great comments from our readers. Here are some of the highlights, copied verbatim and without ...
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If you're
not following us on Facebook,
''like'' us and start sharing in the conversations! If you are, keep following
and spread the word!
This week,
we posted the article ''Organizing and Investing to Expand Primary Care
Availability with Nurse Practitioners'' by Peter J. Levin and Rick Bateman from Journal of Community Health to our ...
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On my first day working the clinic alone, I saw 19 patients, half of
whom were primary care patients and the others a combination of family
planning, child health, and STDs. The nurses were amazed and very pleasantly
surprised. Given that the PA who was fired saw seven to eight patients a day,
and often left the clinic without notice, anyone ...
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