Curriculum

Semester 4 (summer) | 17 credits

The third in a series of three, this course provides Physician Assistant students with the knowledge of a variety of general medical problems encountered in clinical practice. Students learn to evaluate and manage common problems while utilizing and amplifying critical thinking skills and knowledge learned in basic science courses.

This course is designed to build on students’ knowledge of the general principles of clinical medicine and pharmacology. Lectures will teach how these principles are used to make rational clinical prescribing decisions. Small groups will be formed, and students will be asked to write and orally present assessments and plans over chief complaint topics. Topics covered will include pharmacology, routes of administration, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, pharmacogenomics, and toxicology, drug classes, disease management, and drug safety and regulation.

This course is part of a two-course series on health promotion and disease prevention. This course prepares the Physician Assistant student to apply the principles of health promotion and disease prevention across the lifecycle.

This course is a continuation of the prior clinical skills course. Skills learned are pertinent to physician assistant practice, including phlebotomy, intravenous lines, musculoskeletal special tests, central venous line placement, chest tube insertion and removal, sterile technique, and suturing review.

Educational experiences

  • Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) certification
  • Casting and splinting
  • Central line placement
  • Disaster training
  • Emergency medicine simulation cases
  • Incision and drainage
  • Injections
  • Interprofessional education
  • Intravenous access
  • Intubation
  • Lumbar puncture
  • Paracentesis, biopsies, and thoracentesis
  • Standardized patient encounters
  • Supervised clinical experiences
  • Suturing and wound closure
  • Ultrasound

Clinical rotation descriptions

This is the 4-week Family Medicine Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in Family Medicine under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to diverse preventive, emergent, acute, and chronic patient encounters, their complications, and impact on patients across the life span.

This is the 4-week Outpatient Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in a variety of outpatient medicine opportunities under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to diverse preventive, emergent, acute, and chronic patient encounters, their complications, multiple co-morbidities, and impact on patients across the life span.

This is the 4-week Women’s Health Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in Women’s Health under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to diverse preventive, emergent, acute, and chronic patient encounters, their complications, and impact on patients across the life span.

M684 is the 4-week Pediatric Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in Pediatric Medicine under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to diverse preventive, emergent, acute, and chronic patient encounters, their complications, and impact on patients in the pediatric population.

This is the 4-week Surgical Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in general surgery under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to diverse pre-operative, intra-operative and post-operative conditions, their complications, and impact on patients across the life span.

This is the 4-week Psychiatric Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in psychiatry under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to acute and chronic mental health conditions, their complications, and impact on patients across the life span.

This is the 4-week Community Medicine Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation provides students with a unique opportunity within a Community Medicine Health Center, to maximize the physician/physician assistant collaboration model, to further develop awareness of and coordination with all health team members, and to experience and participate the concept of a patient-centered medical home. This rotation introduces students to diverse preventive, emergent, acute, and chronic patient encounters, their complications, and impact on patients across the life span, within the underserved population.

This is the 4-week Internal Medicine Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in inpatient medicine, under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to diverse preventive, emergent, acute, and chronic patient encounters, their complications, and impact on primarily adult and geriatric patients.

This is the 4-week Emergency Medicine Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in Emergency Medicine under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to diverse preventive, emergent, acute, and chronic patient encounters, their complications, and impact on patients across the life span.

This is the 4-week Selective Clinical Rotation requirement of the experiential year. This clinical rotation is designed to provide students with a clinical opportunity in any area of specialty medicine or surgery of their choosing, under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. This rotation introduces students to diverse emergent, acute, and chronic patient encounters, their complications, and impact on primarily adult and geriatric patients.

This is a four-week elective course that allows the student to pursue an area of medicine beyond that of the core rotations. The rotation offers students an opportunity to create an elective unique to their interests. Students may self-select to participate in an international rotation overseas, as long as they practice under the direct supervision of a qualified preceptor. In addition to the four weeks of elective, there is one-week of required in-person immersive experience.