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State Scope of Practice Laws: An Analysis of Physician Assistant Programs and Graduates. J Physician Assist Educ 2020 Dec;31(4):179-184

Date

11/03/2020

Pubmed ID

33136717

DOI

10.1097/JPA.0000000000000331

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85096815770 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   4 Citations

Abstract

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to understand the association between physician assistant (PA) state scope of practice (SOP) laws and (1) PA program growth and (2) PA graduate demographics.

METHODS: Scope of practice laws were categorized as ideal, average, and restrictive. Descriptive statistics by year and SOP categories were determined for the number of states, population density, PA programs, and PA graduate number, gender, race, and mean age. The Mann-Whitney U test was used to analyze demographic data by SOP categories. Adjusted risk ratios were generated for the number of PA programs and SOP categories.

RESULTS: The number of PA programs is not associated with ideal SOP states. As of 2017, only 10 states have restrictive SOP laws. A minority of PA students now graduate from states with restrictive SOP laws.

CONCLUSION: There is heterogeneity in PA SOP laws throughout the United States but only a minority of PA graduates now come from restrictive SOP states. This study provides foundational information prior to the implementation of optimal team practice.

Author List

Valentin VL, Najmabadi S, Jones J, Everett CM

Author

Christine M. Everett PhD, PAC Chief, Director, Professor in the Health Sciences Education department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Adult
Databases, Factual
Demography
Female
Humans
Male
Physician Assistants
United States