Q. What is a Physician Assistant (PA)?
A. Physician assistants are health
care professionals licensed to practice medicine with physician
supervision. PAs employed by the federal government are credentialed
to practice. As part of their comprehensive responsibilities,
PAs conduct physical exams, diagnose and treat illnesses,
order and interpret tests, counsel on preventive health care,
assist in surgery, and in most states can write prescriptions.
PAs are trained in intensive
education programs accredited by the Accreditation
Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant
(ARC-PA). Because of the close working relationship the
PAs have with physicians, PAs are educated in the medical
model designed to complement physician training. Upon graduation,
physician assistants take a national certification examination
developed by the National Commission on Certification of PAs
in conjunction with the National Board of Medical Examiners.
To maintain their national certification, PAs must log 100
hours of continuing medical education every two years and
sit for a recertification every six years. Graduation from
an accredited physician assistant program and passage of the
national certifying exam are required for state licensure.
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