Physician Assistant Studies Program Goals

The MPAS program measures the success of meeting the program's goals through evaluations made by our graduates and their employers.

Maintain an accredited program that ensures graduates are practice-ready.

The St. 做厙輦⑹ Master of Physician Assistant Studies (MPAS) program assesses this goal through (1) its accreditation status with the Accreditation Review Commission on Education for the Physician Assistant (ARC-PA) and (2) a 2-year employer survey of recent graduates. Since the programs inception in 2012, the program has maintained its accreditation status. In 2015, it received the maximum accreditation available for an additional 10 years.

ARC-PA Accreditation

Y楚插賊 Y楚插賊S ACCREDITED
2012 3 (initial accreditation)
2015 10
2025 future accreditation visit

 

Employer Surveys Conducted at Two Years Post-graduation

A second way we assess graduates' readiness to practice is through an employer survey. Previously, this was conducted at 18 months post-graduation but in 2020 the timing was changed to two years to capture more time on the job. Employers are asked to compare the St. Kates graduates qualities and skills to that of their expectations for a new PA graduate. Specifically, employers reflect on the graduates medical knowledge, clinical proficiency, behavioral skills, and overall abilities. Below we report the Overall Rating for graduates within the past 5 years. Employers used a 5-point scale from 1=Unable to Assess to 5=Very Good.

COHORT YEAR 2014 2015 2016 2017
Response Rate* 33% (N=5) 85% (N=20) 89% (N=23) 82%(N=9)
Employer Overall Mean RatingSt. Kate's Grad 4.8 4.5 4.7 4.6
Employer Overall Mean RatingNew Grad 4.4 3.9 4.1 3.63

*Based on the number of graduates who provided an employer email contact.

Goal 2: Deliver an innovative integrated curriculum that emphasizes clinical reasoning, team-based care and scholarly practice.

The St. 做厙輦⑹ MPAS program delivers an integrated curriculum that intentionally combines foundational and clinical science components with skills training. The core curriculum is taught through body systems, populations, a social determinants of health perspective and practice settings. The components of the didactic foundation are classroom learning, evidence-based medicine, community engagement activities, and an integrated clinical experience. Classroom sessions combine lectures, problem-based learning, skills training, and group exercises. More than 50% of the curriculum is delivered in a non-lecture format. As part of their capstone activity, students participate in a 6-week community clinical quality improvement project after their clinical rotations are completed. Each year, at least one student team presents a research or quality improvement project at a national conference and/or publish their work in peer-reviewed journals.

Goal 3. Cultivate professional leadership with local, national, and global impact.

The St. 做厙輦⑹ Master of Physician Assistant Studies program fosters a culture of leadership within the program and through example. Each year, 100% of students participate in the Minnesota Academy of Physician Assistants (MAPA) conference as well as the MAPA sponsored Day on the Hill in which students practice advocacy skills and meet local state representatives. Twenty-five percent of each cohort is active in student leadership roles on campus and as representatives to external bodies such as the American Academy of Physician Assistants. Other ways we measure leadership impact is through the percent of each cohort who report serving as a preceptor currently or in the near term in their two-year alumni surveys.

COHORT 2014 % (N=18) 2015 % (N=24) 2016 % (N=24) 2017 % (N=24)
Currently serving as a preceptor or interested in starting 67% (12) 25% (6) 25% (6) 29% (7)
Indicated interest in serving as a preceptor in a year or two 33% (6) 46% (11) 58% (14) 50% (12)

Goal 4: Foster awareness of diversity, global responsibility, and community engagement.

Throughout the curriculum, we incorporate opportunities to build and strengthen students cultural competency and ability to deliver healthcare to each patient in a holistic manner. Cultural considerations are integrated throughout standard didactic class sessions including research, each body system, and a special populations course. For example, the students might be learning about diabetes and then work through a case of a homeless male whose diabetes is uncontrolled; or a patient who comes from a culture that equates physical illness with spiritual intervention. Community engagement activities during the didactic year provide dedicated time to develop cultural and self-awareness via field experience and reflection. With the help of over twenty community partners, each student logs over 60 hours of experiences in diverse settings.

In the Special Populations course, students explore root causes of healthcare disparity among different groups using a social determinants of health framework. Students have also chosen research or community clinical quality improvement projects to explore issues of diversity with topics such as Clinical management of diabetes in Muslim patients during Ramadan in Minnesota and working with a PA faculty member to develop, deliver and evaluate a breast and cervical cancer training for mid-level practitioners in Arusha, Tanzania.

We also provide the opportunity for interested students to participate in international clinical rotations or electives. To date, students have traveled to Haiti, Cuba, South Korea, Argentina, Tanzania, India, and Guatemala. In the fall of 2018, St. 做厙輦⑹s MPAS program initiated a Global Health and Underserved Populations Track. Here, students can choose to focus on underserved populations in their research, clinical quality improvement projects, and clinical rotations and would be prioritized for international options. A quarter to a third of students in each cohort have enrolled in this track since it began. Below is a summary of student participation in international rotations or electives over the past five years.

Percent Student Participation in International Rotations or Study by Cohort

COHORT 2015 % (N=32) 2016 % (N=30) 2017 % (N=31) 2018 % (N=30) 2019 % (N=34)
Participate in international rotation 18.8% (6) 30% (9) 9.6% (3)* 16.6% (5) 11.7% (4)

*Hurricane Matthew damaged the clinical site in Haiti and affected rotation plans for 4 students.