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Research ArticleSpecial Articles

Creating a Vision for Respiratory Care in 2015 and Beyond

Robert M Kacmarek, Charles G Durbin, Thomas A Barnes, Woody V Kageler, John R Walton and Edward H O'Neil
Respiratory Care March 2009, 54 (3) 375-389;
Robert M Kacmarek
Department of Anesthesiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, and with Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
PhD RRT FAARC
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  • For correspondence: [email protected]
Charles G Durbin
Departments of Anesthesiology and Surgery, University of Virginia Medical Center, University of Virginia School of Medicine, Charlottesville, Virginia
MD FAARC
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Thomas A Barnes
Professor Emeritus of Cardiopulmonary Sciences, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts
EdD RRT FAARC
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Woody V Kageler
Health Sciences Department, Tarrant County College, Hurst, Texas
MD MBA
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John R Walton
Resurrection Health Care, Chicago, Illinois
MBA RRT FAARC
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Edward H O'Neil
Department of Family and Community Medicine and Social and Behavioral Sciences, and with the Center for the Health Professions, University of California, San Francisco, California
PhD
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Abstract

The respiratory care profession is over 60 years old. Throughout its short history, change and innovation have been the terms that best describe the development of the profession. The respiratory therapist (RT) of today barely resembles the clinicians of 60 years ago, and the future role of the RT is clearly open to debate. Medicine is continually changing, with new approaches to disease management emerging almost daily. Third-party payers are challenging payment for iatrogenic injury, manpower issues are affecting all disciplines in medicine, and the nonphysician and physician work force is aging. These factors make us question what the respiratory care profession will look like in the year 2015. To address this issue the American Association for Respiratory Care established a task force to envision the RT of the future. The goal is to identify potential new roles and responsibilities of RTs in 2015 and beyond, and to suggest the elements of education, training, and competency-documentation needed to assure safe and effective execution of those roles and responsibilities. We present the initial findings of that task force.

  • respiratory care
  • respiratory therapist
  • iatrogenic injury
  • manpower
  • education
  • training
  • competency

Footnotes

  • Correspondence: Robert M Kacmarek PhD RRT FAARC, Respiratory Care Services, Massachusetts General Hospital, 55 Fruit Street, Boston MA 02114. E-mail: rkacmarek{at}partners.org.
  • Copyright © 2009 by Daedalus Enterprises Inc.
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In this issue

Respiratory Care: 54 (3)
Respiratory Care
Vol. 54, Issue 3
1 Mar 2009
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Creating a Vision for Respiratory Care in 2015 and Beyond
Robert M Kacmarek, Charles G Durbin, Thomas A Barnes, Woody V Kageler, John R Walton, Edward H O'Neil
Respiratory Care Mar 2009, 54 (3) 375-389;

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Creating a Vision for Respiratory Care in 2015 and Beyond
Robert M Kacmarek, Charles G Durbin, Thomas A Barnes, Woody V Kageler, John R Walton, Edward H O'Neil
Respiratory Care Mar 2009, 54 (3) 375-389;
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Keywords

  • respiratory care
  • respiratory therapist
  • iatrogenic injury
  • manpower
  • education
  • training
  • competency

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