Northwest Communities Host OHSU Physician Assistant Students

Education

Oregon Health & Science University physician assistant students have begun their five-week rotations throughout Oregon and the Pacific Northwest. The OHSU Physician Assistant Program is a full-time, 26-month course of study culminating in a Master of Physician Assistant Studies degree. Physician assistants are licensed to practice medicine under physician supervision. They conduct physical exams, diagnose and treat illnesses, order and interpret tests, counsel on preventive health care, assist in surgery and write prescriptions. There are 72 students in the OHSU program. In addition to on-campus education, students spend 14 months completing five-week rotations in clinical sites around the Northwest.

The following rotations will begin Sept. 15:

 
Ada County, Idaho:

 
Benton County:

 

Clackamas/Washington County



Clark County, Wash.

 

 

 
Columbia County:

 
Crook County:

 
Deschutes County:






Douglas County:

 
Jackson County:

 

 

Lincoln County:

 
Malheur County:

 

Marion County:



 

Multnomah County:










 
Umatilla County:


 

Yamhill County:

 

About the OHSU School of Medicine Physician Assistant Program

The OHSU School of Medicine Physician Assistant Program was established in 1995 with the mission of preparing physician assistants to provide primary care services to rural and urban medically underserved communities. Students’ experiences include required rotations in primary care, women’s health, pediatrics, emergency medicine, general surgery, inpatient medicine and orthopaedics. The capstone clinical experience is a 10-week primary care preceptorship. During the clinical phase of their education, as part of the requirement for their degree, students complete a health promotion/disease prevention project designed to meet an identifiable health care need in the community.

 


OHSU Communications
503 494-8231