Primary Care Physician Assistant Program
Keith Administration Building B29
1975 Zonal Avenue
Los Angeles 90033
(323) 442-1328
FAX: (323) 442-1260Program Director: Rochelle Kern
Medical Director: Allan Abbott
Faculty
Ricardo Hahn, Chair and Professor
Professor of Family Medicine: A. Abbott
Assistant Professors of Clinical Family Medicine:M. Blesofsky; R. Kern; L. Landry-Taylor; J. Liskin; D. Middleton; B. Sonnier
Instructor of Clinical Family Medicine:C. Towery
Clinical Instructors: L. Howard; N. Nielsen-Brown; J. Tramel
The faculty listed above are core faculty with the Primary Care Physician Assistant Program. A complete list of faculty in the Department of Family Medicine is found in the Bulletin of the USC School of Medicine, 1993-1996.
The Primary Care Physician Assistant Program, established in 1971, prepares men and women to practice medicine under the supervision of a physician. Graduates of the program receive a bachelor of science degree in physician assistant practice from the USC School of Medicine which prepares them to work in the physician assistant profession.
Based in the Department of Family Medicine located on the USC Health Sciences Campus, the classroom curriculum is provided by physician assistant program faculty and faculty from other departments within the School of Medicine, as well as clinicians from the surrounding communities. Emphasis is placed on primary care. Clinical training occurs at the LAC + USC Medical Center and other sites throughout the Southern California area, including Kern, Fresno, Riverside, San Bernardino, San Diego, and Ventura counties. Opportunities to train in selected off-site settings, e.g., sites serving Native American populations in the Southwest, are available to some students.
Students complete clerkships in emergency medicine or urgent care, family medicine, internal medicine/geriatrics, ob/gyn, orthopaedics/occupational medicine, pediatrics, and general surgery. Throughout these clerkships emphasis is placed on obtaining necessary clinical skills as well as learning to provide primary care services as part of a health care team. The physician assistant program is committed to recruiting disadvantaged applicants and to preparing graduates to practice in medically underserved areas.
The USC primary care physician assistant program is accredited by the Accreditation Review Committee on Education for the Physician Assistant which is sponsored by seven medical national associations including the American Medical Association. The program is approved by the Physician Assistant Examining Committee of the Medical Board of California. Graduates must pass a National Certifying Examination to qualify for licensure in California.
Bachelor of Science in Physician Assistant Practice
Admission Requirements
Once prerequisites have been met, currently enrolled USC students may apply directly to the physician assistant program in their sophomore year for acceptance into the program.
Prospective transfer students at other colleges or universities must submit a USC undergraduate application available from the USC Office of Undergraduate Admission. Transfer students should contact the PA Program Office to obtain supplementary application materials. The supplemental application deadline is November 1
Admission to the program is for the fall semester only. Admission to the physician assistant program is granted by the physician assistant faculty after careful review of all applications. Selections are made on the basis of a formal interview and consideration of a variety of factors which include academic record, type and amount of clinical experience, multicultural sensitivity, community service experience, and personal and professional experience.
Health Careers Opportunity Program
The Health Careers Opportunity Program (HCOP) is a federally funded program at USC designed to help individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds enter and graduate from physician assistant programs.
For further information contact the HCOP coordinator at the PA Program Office, (323) 442-3665.
Advisement
Physician assistant program admissions staff are available to prospective students regarding preparation for the program. Interested high school, undergraduate and post-baccalaureate students are encouraged to contact the physician assistant program for guidance in applying to the program. Admissions staff can be reached directly at (323) 442-
General Education Requirements
The university's general education program provides a coherent, integrated introduction to the breadth of knowledge you will need to consider yourself (and to be considered by other people) a generally well-educated person. This new program requires six courses in different categories, plus writing and diversity requirements, which are described in detail here.
All students who (1) entered the School of Medicine as freshmen in the summer of 1997 or later; or (2) began college elsewhere in the summer of 1997 or later; or (3) began college earlier but transfer to USC in the summer of 2000 or later, must satisfy the requirements of the new general education program. Other students whose schedules permit are encouraged to follow the new program as well. However, continuing and transfer students who began college full-time before summer 1997 and enter USC before summer 2000 may elect to satisfy a "transitional" plan instead.
Major Prerequisites
BISC 101x Human Biology (with a discussion section) or a USC transferable college-level chemistry course.
BISC 306Lx Introductory Physiology (with a lab section)
BISC 310Lx Principles of Human Microbiology (with a lab section)
BISC 312Lx Human Anatomy (with a lab section)
SPAN 120 Spanish I or waiver by faculty
Students intending to apply to the Physician Assistant Program should contact the admissions director of the PA Program for evaluation of transfer course work.
Upper Division Requirements
All physician assistant students enroll in the same course work during their two years in the program. The following courses must be successfully completed in order to earn the bachelor of science degree in physician assistant practice. Only physician assistant program students may enroll in these courses. Departmental clearance is required to enroll.
Fall Semester, Junior Year Units PCPA 301 Cross-Cultural Competency 3 PCPA 302 Health Behavior 1 PCPA 311 Physical Assessment 3 PCPA 312 Specialties in Medicine I 3 PCPA 313 Specialties in Medicine II 3 PCPA 314 Specialties in Medicine III 3 PCPA 321a Clinical Skills Practica I 1 ____ 17 Spring Semester, Junior Year Units PCPA 303 Medical Spanish 2 PCPA 315 Specialties in Medicine IV 3 PCPA 316 Specialties in Medicine V 3 PCPA 321b Clinical Skills Practica II 1 PCPA 421ab Clinical Placement I 9-0* ____ 18 Fall Semester, Senior Year Units PCPA 401 Health Promotion and Disease Prevention 3 PCPA 402 Primary Care Medicine 2 PCPA 422 Clinical Placement II 9 ____ 14 Spring Semester, Senior Year Units PCPA 403 Physician Assistant Profession 1 PCPA 423 Clinical Placement III 6 PCPA 424ab Preceptorship 8-0* ____ 15 Total units: 64 *Grades for these courses are awarded in the following summer session. Students register for the "b" section in that summer session.
Requests for further information may be addressed to: Physician Assistant Program, USC School of Medicine, 1975 Zonal Avenue, KAM B-29, Los Angeles, CA 90033, (323) 442-1879.
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