Quality Assurance Plan for Prescriptive Authority Example 2 - arsbn arkansas 2025

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Act 412 of 2021 allows a pathway for certified nurse practitioners (CNPs) or clinical nurse specialists (CNSs) to apply for full independent practice after having practiced 6,240 hours under a collaborative practice agreement. Applications shall be submitted through the Arkansas Nurse Portal.
The American Medical Association (AMA) acknowledges that non-physician practitioners, including NPs, can provide essential patient care, but that such care is most appropriately provided as part of a physician-led team. In addition, the AMA states that, nurses are critical to the health care team, but there is no
Advanced Practice Registered Nurses Transition to independent practice and prescribing period required. Physician relationship required for practice and prescriptive authority. Arkansas opted out of the CRNA federal supervision requirement in 2022.
Full Practice Authority (NPs can perform the full scope of practice without a supervising or collaborating physician. NPs can evaluate patients; diagnose, order, and interpret diagnostic tests; initiate and manage treatments, including prescribing medications; and operate their own independent practices.)
Prescriptive authority is not automatically issued with an APRN license in Arkansas. You may apply online for Prescriptive Authority which includes a separate fee. You cannot submit the application prior to the issuance of an Arkansas APRN license.
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Nurse Practitioners can practice independently in the 27 states with full practice authority: Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Hawaii, Idaho, Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Oregon, Rhode Island,

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