A selected international appraisal of the role of the Non-Medical Surgical Assistant

Authors

  • Toni G Hains University of Queensland
  • Dr Haakan Strand University of Queensland
  • Dr Catherine Turner University of Queensland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26550/2209-1092.1015

Abstract

The term Non-Medical Surgical Assistant (NMSA) is not widely acknowledged in Australia but is used to describe the role of clinicians without a medical degree or qualification who provide clinical services during the perioperative phase of a patient’s journey. The role of NMSA has many configurations internationally and not all NMSA roles arise from a nursing platform. To date, the implementation of many Advanced Practice Nurse (APN) roles have lacked educational support or professional direction. The literature supports the
standardisation of APN roles where they are regulated by the profession and attained through an appropriate tertiary level qualification. In this paper, we review characteristics of the roles of the NMSAs in the United States of America, Canada, the United Kingdom and New Zealand, countries that have similar standards for practice to Australia and provide a similar standard of health care. We will discuss implications for perioperative nurses and make recommendations for a future approach which formalises the role of the NMSA for the Australian context.

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Published

01-06-2017

How to Cite

Hains, T., Strand, H., & Turner, C. (2017). A selected international appraisal of the role of the Non-Medical Surgical Assistant. Journal of Perioperative Nursing, 30(2), 37–42. https://doi.org/10.26550/2209-1092.1015

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Articles