Master of Physician Assistant Study Graduates Have a Bright Future
Recent graduates of the Ķų±¬³Ō¹Ļ Physician Assistant Studies masterās program accepted jobs in primary care at almost twice the national rate of their peers.
Data from the National Commission on Certification of Physician Assistants reveal that 46.4 percent of the programās graduates from 2013-2015 accepted jobs in family medicine/general practice and internal medicine/general practice upon certification, compared to 25.6 percent of certified graduates from other programs nationwide during the same time period.
Program Director and Chair Paul Allen said the program has made a sustained and concerted effort to meet the need for primary care healthcare providers.
āThe largest need healthcare wise is primary care,ā Allen said. āItās a huge gap.ā
The data also show that more than 42 percent of Ķų±¬³Ō¹Ļ PA graduates accepted their first job at one of their clinical rotation sites, compared to 34.7 percent of all recently certified PAs.
āThe data would suggest that the clinical experiences have an impact on where they choose to practice,ā said Brent Shriver, associate professor and academic coordinator for the Department of Physician Assistant Studies.
The Departmentās mission to graduate primary practice health providers has been made possible in part by a $980,000 federal grant awarded in 2011 by the Health Resources and Services Administration. As part of that effort, the Department has worked to increase the number of primary care clinical rotation sites āthat are not within the easy confines of the city,ā Shriver said, adding that students are eligible for a $1,000 stipend if they complete an extra primary care rotation in a medically underserved area or health professional shortage area.
This year marked the third consecutive year that 100 percent of the programās PA graduates passed the Physician Assistant National Certifying Exam on the first try, Allen noted.