Abstract

BackgroundThis study aims to investigate the admission criteria used by physician assistant postgraduate education programs in selecting licensed PA applicants for postgraduate training in the United States. To our knowledge, there have been no previously published reports on selection criteria and/or other factors influencing postgraduate PA admission decisions.MethodA non-experimental, descriptive research study was designed to obtain information from members of the Association of Postgraduate Physician Assistant Programs (APPAP).ResultsTwenty-three out of 73 postgraduate programs (31.5%) responded to the survey. The study reported that applicant PAs and nurse practitioners (NPs) are largely selected on the basis of several factors. The most heavily weighted factor is the interview itself; other selection criteria perceived to be extremely/very important included board certification/eligibility, letters of recommendation, advanced degree, and personal essay. Survey data suggest that publications, undergraduate transcripts, and class rankings are not considered to be of high importance in applicant selection.The number of PA applicants applying to each postgraduate training program averages around 26 and total number of enrollees is about 3.6 per program. Additionally, some programs reported furloughing of trainees (temporary suspension of didactic and clinical training) during the pandemic, whereas the vast majority of postgraduate PA programs remained operational and some even experienced an increase in application volume. The total cost of training a PA resident or fellow in postgraduate programs is currently $93,000 whereas the average cost of training a categorical physician resident is estimated at $150,000 per year when considering both salary and benefits.ConclusionsThis novel study examined criteria and other factors used by postgraduate PA programs in selecting candidates for admission. Results can be used by postgraduate programs to improve or modify current selection criteria to enhance the quality of trainee selection. Further research is needed to examine correlations between applicant attributes, selection criteria, and trainee success in completing postgraduate training.

Highlights

  • This study aims to investigate the admission criteria used by physician assistant postgraduate education programs in selecting licensed physician assistants (PAs) applicants for postgraduate training in the United States

  • This novel study examined criteria and other factors used by postgraduate PA programs in selecting candidates for admission

  • Results can be used by postgraduate programs to improve or modify current selection criteria to enhance the quality of trainee selection

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Summary

Introduction

This study aims to investigate the admission criteria used by physician assistant postgraduate education programs in selecting licensed PA applicants for postgraduate training in the United States. All member programs of APPAP are formal postgraduate PA programs that offer structured curricula, including didactic and clinical components, to educate licensed and certified PAs for a defined period of time (usually 12 months) in a medical specialty (APPAP.org). Factors influencing specialty or subspecialty choice of postgraduate training among PAs is not well elucidated in the literature. There is no board certification available for PAs who complete a postgraduate training program. While formal accreditation by the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant (ARC-PA) is available as of 2020, it remains optional for postgraduate training programs

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