Dear Editor:
I am writing in response to the Ethics Column discussing whether the Doctor
of Nursing Practice (DNP) is ethical.
To compete with physicians in today’s health care culture and develop the
social authority needed to implement ethical changes, advanced preparation
beyond the master’s level in the form of the DNP is essential.
Having just completed a Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner Program, my colleagues
and I feel that additional professional training is imperative. Although my
program was rigorous and presented by competent and experienced nursing
professionals, I have, in some circles, avoided discussions regarding this
preparation, feeling that in many ways it only minimally prepared us for
practice. As I compare my program with the medical psychiatric specialty I see
that future nurse practitioners would benefit from additional in-depth training
in psychopathophysiology, psychopharmacology, and the potential crown jewel - a
residency program - to develop further our practice competencies. To this end
the DNP would not only benefit by providing consumers with better clinicians and
cost-effective treatment options, but also enhance legitimacy of the nursing
profession in public and professional venues.
As APRN’s continue to "push the envelope" toward more autonomous practice,
nursing needs to continue developing timely and comprehensive educational
programs. The DNP has the potential to do this and in so doing to move nursing
as a profession forward.
Rob Detlefsen,RN, MS
rodet2@mchsi.com