Nurse anesthetists have been
providing anesthesia care to patients in the United States
for nearly 150 years.
The credential CRNA (Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist)
came into existence in 1956. CRNAs are anesthesia
professionals who safely administer approximately 32 million
anesthetics to patients each year in the United States,
according to the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists
(AANA) 2009 Practice Profile Survey.
CRNAs are the primary providers of anesthesia care in rural
America, enabling healthcare facilities in these medically
underserved areas to offer obstetrical, surgical, and trauma
stabilization services. In some states, CRNAs are the sole
providers in nearly 100% of the rural hospitals.
According to a 1999 report from the Institute of Medicine,
anesthesia care is nearly 50 times safer than it was in the
early 1980s. Numerous outcomes studies have demonstrated
that there is no difference in the quality of care provided
by CRNAs and their physician counterparts.*
CRNAs provide anesthesia in collaboration with surgeons,
anesthesiologists, dentists, podiatrists, and other
qualified healthcare professionals. When anesthesia is
administered by a nurse anesthetist, it is recognized as the
practice of nursing; when administered by an
anesthesiologist, it is recognized as the practice of
medicine. Regardless of whether their educational background
is in nursing or medicine, all anesthesia professionals give
anesthesia the same way.
As advanced practice registered nurses, CRNAs practice with
a high degree of autonomy and professional respect. They
carry a heavy load of responsibility and are compensated
accordingly.
CRNAs practice in every setting in which anesthesia is
delivered: traditional hospital surgical suites and
obstetrical delivery rooms; critical access hospitals;
ambulatory surgical centers; the offices of dentists,
podiatrists, ophthalmologists, plastic surgeons, and pain
management specialists; and U.S. military, Public Health
Services, and Department of Veterans Affairs healthcare
facilities.
Nurse anesthetists have been the main providers of
anesthesia care to U.S. military personnel on the front
lines since WWI, including current conflicts in the Middle
East. Nurses first provided anesthesia to wounded soldiers
during the Civil War.
Managed care plans recognize CRNAs for providing
high-quality anesthesia care with reduced expense to
patients and insurance companies. The cost-efficiency of
CRNAs helps control escalating healthcare costs.
In 2001, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS)
changed the federal physician supervision rule for nurse
anesthetists to allow state governors to opt out of this
facility reimbursement requirement (which applies to
hospitals and ambulatory surgical centers) by meeting three
criteria: 1) consult the state boards of medicine and
nursing about issues related to access to and the quality of
anesthesia services in the state, 2) determine that opting
out is consistent with state law, and 3) determine that
opting out is in the best interests of the state’s citizens.
To date, 15 states have opted out of the federal supervision
requirement, most recently California (July 2009).
Additional states do not have supervision requirements in
state law and are eligible to opt out should the governors
elect to do so.
Nationally, the average 2009 malpractice premium for
self-employed CRNAs was 33% lower than in 1988 (62% lower
when adjusted for inflation).
Legislation passed by Congress in 1986 made nurse
anesthetists the first nursing specialty to be accorded
direct reimbursement rights under the Medicare program.
More than 40,000 of the nation’s 44,000 nurse anesthetists
(including CRNAs and student nurse anesthetists) are members
of the AANA (or, greater than 90%). Approximately 41% of
nurse anesthetists are men, compared with less than 10% of
nursing as a whole.
Education and experience required to become a CRNA include:
In order to be recertified, CRNAs must obtain a minimum of
40 hours of approved continuing education every two years,
document substantial anesthesia practice, maintain current
state licensure, and certify that they have not developed
any conditions that could adversely affect their ability to
practice anesthesia.
*To receive a copy of Quality of Care in Anesthesia, please
call (847) 692-7050, or go to www.aana.com - Resources -
Practice Documents.
For More
Information
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF NURSE ANESTHETISTS
PR Dept., 222 South Prospect Avenue, Park Ridge, IL
60068-4001
Tel: 847.692.7050 ▪
pr@aana.com ▪
www.aana.com