Complete List Of Physician Assistant Programs

  • Mar 07, 2009
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Complete List of Physician Assistant Programs

Physician Assistant Education Resource Guide

List of CASPA & Non-CASPA Physician Assistant Schools

During my reseach as a prospective PA student, I stumbled through various information resources attempting to find a concise list of programs and the respective deadlines for application submission. This site is a collection of ALL Accredited Physician Assistant programs, CASPA and Non-CASPA programs throughout the United States.

The field is expanding due to an increase in applicants to accredited PA programs, while Nurse Practitioners (NPs) are seeing a decline in enrollement into their respective programs. NPs and PAs have very similar functions and often serve as the gateway to health care, primary care physicians. Its likely that prospective students are moving toward PA because of the additional responsibilities they are eligible carry, for example: surgery and anesthesiology. The outlook for both professions is very good as there continues to be a shortage of graduating primary care physicians from MD and DO programs.

In 2001 approximately 104,000 nurse practitioners (NPs) and physician assistants (PAs) were in clinical employment throughout the United States. The roles of PAs and NPs in providing comparable physician services are similar; they differ in that NPs are predominantly in primary care, while PAs are divided between primary and specialty care. PA and NP education processes also differ in the student pool and trends in the output. The combined number of graduates totaled 11,585 in 2001. However, the annual number of NP graduates is declining, while the number of PA graduates is increasing. These observations have implications for the future in the types of patients they see and the degree of health care services they provide.

Visit http://physicianassistantprograms.synthasite.com for a Complete List of Physician Assistant Programs which includes Caspa and Non-Caspa programs. Financing options, health of profession and much more!

Quick Facts about PAs from BLS

  • Physician assistant programs usually last at least 2 years; admission requirements vary by program, but many require at least 2 years of college and some health care experience.
  • All States require physician assistants to complete an accredited education program and to pass a national exam in order to obtain a license.
  • Employment is projected to grow much faster than average as health care establishments increasingly use physician assistants to contain costs.
  • Job opportunities should be good, particularly in rural and inner-city clinics.
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