MS Entry Program
PHYSICIAN ASSISTANT
Master of Science
A graduate Physician Assistant (PA) provides a broad
spectrum of health care services to patients under the
supervision of a doctor of medicine or osteopathy. Among
these services are the performance of history and
physical assessments, the development and implementation
of appropriate therapeutic interventions, patient
education and counseling, and establishing appropriate
referrals. These highly skilled practitioners also
provide numerous preventative and health maintenance
functions that are characteristic of the practice of
medicine. Physician Assistants are educated in basic
science, patient assessment and clinical medicine in
programs that are nationally accredited by the
Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the
Physician Assistant (ARC-PA).
What are the Job opportunities?
Physician Assistants are employed by hospitals,
physician groups or solo practices, outpatient clinics,
health maintenance organizations, teaching hospitals,
the armed services, and federal, state, and local
governments. Salaries vary, depending on an individual's
experience, the region of the country, the nature of the
practice and the level of job responsibilities.
Entry-level salaries for new Physician Assistant
graduates average $65,000. The demand for Physician
Assistants is strong, and is expected to increase in the
coming decade.
What is the Physician Assistant Program?
The PA Program is an intense, full-time, 27-month
curriculum with a total of 98 credit hours. A Master of
Science degree in Physician Assistant Studies is awarded
upon completion of the curriculum and fulfillment of
University of Saint Francis Graduate School
requirements. Students will spend the first 15 months
primarily in the classroom obtaining a foundation of
medical knowledge, in the areas of basic biomedical
science and clinical skills. Problem-based learning
techniques are used extensively throughout the program
and exclusively in medical diagnosis and therapeutics
courses. During the last 12 months of the program,
students will be assigned to clinical rotations spending
a minimum of 40 hours per week typically working with a physician
or PA preceptor on a 1 to 1 basis in settings such as
physician offices, clinics, extended care facilities and
hospitals. All students will complete a core of
rotations in areas of family medicine, internal
medicine, emergency medicine, general surgery,
pediatrics, obstetrics & gynecology, psychiatry, and an
elective. Then, students may choose from a series of
rotations in the areas of trauma / surgical
subspecialties, hospital-inpatient care, family practice or
internal medicine, geriatrics and long term care
experiences and experience with underserved patient
populations may be assigned separately or incorporated
with one the above specialties.
What kind of classes will I take?
May - August
Biomedical Sciences - Credits 6
Gross Anatomy Topics
Medical Microbiology /Genetics
Physiologic Control Systems
Foundations of PA Studies - Credits 4
Essentials of Patient
Assessment
Introduction to Medical Research
Introduction to Medical Procedures
Pharmacology for PAs - Credits 2
Fall
Pharmacology II - Credits 2
Clinical Medicine for PAs - Credits 2
Pathophysiology - Credits 2
Clinical Problem Solving - Credits 6
Spring
Medical Diagnostics I - Credits 6
Medical Therapeutics I - Credits 6
Research Methods for PAs - Credits 1
Summer
Medical Diagnostics II - Credits 5
Medical Therapeutics II - Credits 5
Medical Ethics - Credits 1
Master's Project I - Credits 1
Fall
Clinical Experience I, II, III, - Credits 15
Clinical Year Seminar - Credits 2
Master's Project II - Credits 1
Spring
Clinical Experience IV, V, VI, - Credits 15
Summer
Clinical Experience VII, VIII, IX - Credits 15
Master's Project III - Credits 1
What kind of clinical experiences will I have?
The core rotations for all students are:
- Family Medicine (5 weeks)
- Internal Medicine (5 weeks)
- General Surgery (5 weeks)
- Emergency Medicine (5 weeks)
- Elective (5 weeks)
- Pediatrics (2.5 weeks)
- Obstetrics & Gynecology (2.5 weeks)
- Psychiatry (2.5 weeks)
- Geriatrics / Long Term Care (2.5 weeks OR incorporated
with another experience)
After the Core Rotations, students will choose two
additional experiences in one of
the following tracts: Trauma / Surgery Subspecialty,
Family Practice, Hospital-Inpatient Care, or Internal Medicine.
Choice of Trauma / Surgery Subspecialty Tract Rotations
(5 weeks each) may include:
- Outpatient Clinic / Occupational Medicine
- Surgery Subspecialties
- Trauma Emergency Medicine
- Medical Office Orthopedics
- Radiology
Choice of Family Practice Tract Rotations (5 weeks each)
may include:
- Pediatrics (additional 2.5 weeks)
- Geriatrics
- Obstetrics and Gynecology (additional 2.5 weeks)
- Psychiatry (additional 2.5 weeks)
- Urgent Care
Choice of Hospital-Inpatient Care Tract Rotations (5
weeks each) may include:
- Cardiology
- Pulmonology
- Oncology
- Intensive Critical Care Unit
- Neurology
- Gastroenterology
Choice of Internal Medicine Tract Rotations (5 weeks
each) may include:
- Cardiology
- Pulmonology
- Neurology
- Nephrology
- Gastroenterology
- Endocrinology
- Rheumatology
When are applications accepted?
Applications are accepted from June 1 through December 1
for classes beginning the following May. Acceptance
decisions are made as early as mid-September and continue
until the class is filled. All applicants are encouraged
to apply as early as possible before the class fills.
Who should apply?
Admission to the Physician Assistant Program is granted
through a competitive selection process. Classes begin
each May. Anyone who is interested in admission to the
next class and who anticipates fulfilling all of the
entrance requirements by that time may apply. Applicants
will file using the Centralized Application Service for
the PA (CASPA). Visit
http://www.caspaonline.org
Will there be interviews?
The most qualified applicants are offered interviews on
the University of Saint Francis campus. Each applicant
will be given a brief orientation to the USF campus and
PA program and will have interviews with admission
committee members. At the interview, applicants will be
expected to provide a written plan to fulfill all
entrance requirements that have not been completed to
that point.
How is the acceptance decision made?
After the interview, the admissions committee will
review all of the application data and materials
including evaluations from the interview. If the
applicant is accepted into the PA program, it may be
without reservation, or it may be contingent upon
completion of all entrance requirements. It will be the
responsibility of the applicant to fulfill the
requirements according to the agreed plan.
How will the class be filled?
We typically accept about 25 students into a class.
Up to 5 seats can be filled via the
BS/MS Entry
Program. Interviewed
CASPA applicants will be notified within two weeks of the
interview about the admission committee's decision. If
accepted, that seat is reserved for two weeks allowing
the accepted applicant to respond indicating willingness
to attend and submitting a $400 nonrefundable deposit
(applied to tuition). This process will continue on a
rolling basis until 25 seats are filled. The admission's
committee will then build a "wait list". Individuals
offered a wait list position will be offered a seat in
the class if seats become available. An additional $400
nonrefundable deposit, also applied to tuition, will be
due two months after acceptance.
What are the Program objectives or outcomes?
The program is committed to preparing Physician
Assistants capable of:
- Successfully pass the National Certifying
Examination for Physician Assistants.
- Provide primary health care services with an
emphasis on human caring and the underserved
- Perform diagnostic and therapeutic health
services appropriate for a wide range of
pathophysiologic processes.
- Develop and implement effective treatment plans
for care of common conditions.
- Perform technical and surgical procedures within
the scope of practice.
- Monitor and manage patients in acute, long term
and ambulatory settings.
- Facilitate patient referral to appropriate
specialty practices and community agencies.
- Use clinical problem solving to integrate
knowledge from the biological and behavioral
sciences with medical knowledge and current
standards of clinical practice.
- Demonstrate a commitment to professional growth
and life-long learning.
- Enlarge the knowledge of the discipline by
participating in research projects and publishing
findings.
- Demonstrating professional behavior.
What are the Technical Standards required of students?
Please see our
Health Profession Program Technical
Standards
What are the academic standards and progression
standards required of students?
Each of the following criteria must be met in order for
a Physician Assistant student to advance in the program
and/or graduate.
· Completion of all required courses with a grade of “C”
or equivalent.
· Compliance with the PA Program Attendance Policy.
· Maintenance of a minimum 3.0 GPA.
· Completion of all didactic courses before entry into
the clinical year curriculum.
· Completion of all incomplete grades prior to the
conclusion of the next grading period.
· Satisfactory completion of all clinical rotation
objectives.
· Successful completion of didactic and clinical
comprehensive exams.
· Successful completion of Didactic Year
Summative Evaluation prior to entering the clinical
phase of the program.
· Successful completion Clinical
Year Summative Evaluation prior to graduation.
Transfer credit / advanced standing
All courses contained within the PA curriculum must be
completed prior to graduation without exception or
exemption. No transfer credit or credit by portfolio
will be accepted (No students are exempted from classes
because of prior courses, training, or experience. i.e.
there is no advanced standing.
Academic Review Committee
The Academic Review Committee comprised of the
Department Chair, Medical Director and faculty will meet at the
conclusion of each semester and summer session and as
needed to review student achievement of progression
standards. If a student fails to meet the progression
standards, the Academic Review Committee will consider
actions including remediation, repetition of course,
retesting or dismissal from the program.
Dismissal from program
Dismissal of students from the PA Program is under the
jurisdiction of the Program’s Academic Review
Committee. Causes of dismissal include but are not
limited to: unprofessional behavior, breech of the
Academic Honesty policy, unsuccessful remediation,
unsafe patient practices, patterns of deficiencies, or
failure of course, clinical rotation or progression
standards. Failure to meet University rules and
expectations is also cause for dismissal. Dismissal
from the program does not necessarily equate to
dismissal from the University.
What are the graduation requirements?
A physician assistant student must meet the following
requirements to graduate with a Master of Science
Degree:
1. Complete all 98 credit hours in the physician
assistant curriculum with a minimum of “C” or its
equivalent in every course.
2. Maintain a minimum cumulative GPA of at least 3.0.
3. Fulfill all financial obligations to the University
of Saint Francis.
4. Fulfill all of the progression standards.
What about certification?
Graduates of an accredited program are eligible to take
the certification examination offered by the National
Commission on Certification for Physician Assistants.
Successful completion of the examination allows the
individual to use the title "Physician
Assistant-Certified" or PA-C.
How do I find out more?
Call the Office of Admissions at 260-399-8000 or
800-729-4732, or visit our website at
http://www.sf.edu.
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