Orlando Physician Assistant Program

Program Curriculum

The South College Orlando Physician Assistant Program curriculum was designed by program faculty using national information sources to include the NCCPA PANCE Content Blueprint, the ARC-PA Accreditation Standards and data from the most current PAEA Annual Program and Curriculum Reports. Woven into the foundation of the curriculum design is a faculty passion for clinical relevance and application of the information presented. All of these measures are to create a strong curriculum that supports exceptional performance on the PANCE and develops quality graduates.

A smiling man with a beard and short hair sits at a wooden table in a library, wearing a gray long-sleeve shirt.

Some of the Special Areas of Curriculum Focus Include:

  • A strong emphasis of clinical application in our foundational courses of Clinical Anatomy, Clinical Physiology, and Clinical Pathophysiology.
  • Dedicated instruction on Medical Wellness.
  • Small group work that centers on clinical reasoning and problem-solving abilities in the laboratory component of our clinical medicine series, CAM I, II and III.
  • Instruction in our Public Health course specific to racism, health disparity and unequal access and outcomes.
  • Concentrated information on the care of the Native American and African American patient.
  • Management of mental health conditions across the lifespan
  • Prescribing across the lifespan.
  • Appropriate opioid prescribing and treatment of addiction.
  • Developing elective clinical rotation tracks in child maltreatment, care of the LGBTQI patient and care of other special patient populations.

Didactic Curriculum

Orlando Curriculum Organization

A3.12d, A3.12e

The didactic curriculum is 15 months in length (5 quarters), followed by a 12-month (4 quarter) clinical curriculum. Coursework is delineated as quarter credit hours.

Quarter I  (Fall)
CourseQuarter Credit Hours
SCI 5100 Gross Anatomy6 Credit Hours
SCI 5120 Human Physiology3 Credit Hours
PAS 5513 Professional Issues2 credit hours
PAS 5160 Health Assessment and Physical Examination6 Credit Hours
Quarter total17 Credit Hours

Quarter II (Winter)
Course Quarter Credit Hours
SCI 5201 Medical Pathology and Genetics4 Credit Hours
PAS 5262 Clinical Assessment and Management I6 Credit Hours
PAS 5271 Pharmacotherapeutics I3 Credit Hours
PAS 5430 Clinical Laboratory Medicine2 Credit Hours
PAS 5413 Essentials of Radiology and Electrocardiography3 Credit Hours
PAS 5314 Behavioral Science Concepts1 Credit Hour
Quarter total  19 Credit Hours

Quarter III (Spring)
CourseQuarter Credit Hours
PAS 5231 Medical Wellness2 Credit Hours
PAS 5340 Women’s Health3 Credit Hours
PAS 5242 Public Health2 Credit Hours
PAS 5362 Clinical Assessment and Management II6 Credit Hours
PAS 5371 Pharmacotherapeutics II3 Credit Hours
PAS 5382 Essentials of Cardiology3 Credit Hours
Quarter total19 Credit Hours

Quarter IV (Summer)
CourseQuarter Credit Hours
PAS 5420 Clinical Pediatrics3 Credit Hours
PAS 5351 Evidence Based Medicine2 Credit Hours
PAS 5440 Emergency Medicine4 Credit Hours
PAS 5462 Clinical Assessment and Management III5 Credit Hours
PAS 5471 Pharmacotherapeutics III2 Credit Hours
PAS 5485 Neuroanatomy and Diseases of the Neurological System3 Credit Hours
Quarter total19 Credit Hours

Quarter V (Fall II)
CourseQuarter Credit Hours
PAS 5521 Clinical Geriatrics3 Credit Hours
PAS 5531 Fundamentals of Surgery5 Credit Hours
HSC 5542 Health Care Ethics and Law1 Credit Hour
PAS 5551 Research Design and Methodology1 Credit Hour
PAS 5561 Didactic Summative Evaluation4 Credit Hours
Quarter total14 Credit Hours
 
Didactic total88 Credit Hours

Winter II, Spring II, Summer II, and Fall III Quarters (January December)
Clinical RotationQuarter Credit Hours
PAS 5610 Internal Medicine9 Credit Hours
PAS 5620 Surgery9 Credit Hours
PAS 5630 Family Medicine/Geriatrics9 Credit Hours
PAS 5640 Emergency Medicine9 Credit Hours
PAS 5650 Women’s Health9 Credit Hours
PAS 5660 Pediatrics9 Credit Hours
PAS 5671 Clinical Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine9 Credit Hours
PAS 5680 Elective-Clinical9 Credit Hours
PAS 5691 Clinical Summative Review3 Credit Hours
PAS 5701 Capstone Research Project3 Credit Hours
Clinical total78 Credit Hours
Program total166 Credit Hours

Didactic Curriculum Course Descriptions

HSC 5542 Health Care Ethics and Law

This course provides the future Physician Assistant a foundation to use as a reference to federal and state laws that impact PA practice. This course will review prescriptive authority, medical ethics, quality assurance and risk management in medical practice, as well as other legal issues of health care.  1 credit.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.17c, B2.18

PAS 5160 Health Assessment and Physical Examination

This course is designed to provide physician assistant students with the fundamental grounding and cognitive knowledge to prepare them for their professional clinical role. This course will provide students with skills for interviewing, patient communication skills, and general physical examination procedures necessary to conduct age-appropriate and thorough medical interviews and comprehensive physical examinations on culturally diverse populations.  6 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.04, B2.05, B2.06a, B2.06b, B2.06c, B2.06d, B2.06e, B2.06f, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2,07c, B2.08a, B2.08d, B2.09

PAS 5231 Medical Wellness

This course is designed to cover health maintenance, preventive medicine, and patient education. The focus is on maintenance of health rather than treatment of disease.  Topics will include nutrition, exercise and weight management, smoking cessation, appropriate screening and immunization schedules, injury prevention, behavior modification and treatment adherence.  2 credits.

ARC-PA Standards: B2.04, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.11d, B2.11e, B2.12a, B2.12b, B2.12c

PAS 5241 Public Health

This course provides students with an overview of the basic concepts of public health and preventative medicine. Public health concepts include distribution, prevalence, causation, mode of transmission, dissemination, control, and preventative countermeasures of infectious and non-communicable diseases, as well as environmental, occupational, behavioral, and chronic conditions. PA students will be introduced to research methodologies related to the study of disease and investigate epidemiological trends across a variety of cultures. Attention will be paid to professional responsibility, confidentiality, informed patient consent, and issues of patient welfare. 2 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.05, B2.06abdf, B2.07f, B2.08ab, B2.12bc, B2.13e, B2.14cd, B2.15a- d, B2.19ab, B2.20ab

PAS 5262 Clinical Assessment and Management I

This is the first course in a sequence of three courses designed to teach the essentials of medicine. PA students learn an organ-system and problem-oriented approach to understanding the etiology, epidemiology, pathophysiology, manifestations, laboratory and diagnostic studies, and diagnosis and treatment of specific diseases encountered in general practice. They will continue to develop and refine culturally appropriate patient communication, medical history taking, and physical exam skills. Health care providers will discuss specific focused physical examinations of each organ system. For each disease or problem, related health promotion, disease prevention, and patient education topics will be presented. Competency with various medical instruments and procedures will be taught. The specific specialty areas and organ system covered in the sequence include ophthalmology, otorhinolaryngology, dermatology, pulmonology, infectious disease, cardiology, gastroenterology, rheumatology, endocrinology, nephrology, hematology, oncology, orthopedics, psychiatry and urology. 6 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.10b, B2.14a, B2.14b

PAS 5271 Pharmacotherapeutics 1

This is the first course in a sequence of three courses designed to teach clinical pharmacology and pharmacotherapeutics for common medical problems seen in clinical practice. Instruction in counseling patients toward compliance, drug interactions, appropriate patient monitoring during therapy and prescription writing will also be covered. Pharmacologic management of dermatological, HEENT, musculoskeletal, pulmonary, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, psychiatric, endocrine, renal, genitourinary, male reproductive, female reproductive, infectious diseases, palliative care and opioid agents will be covered. 3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards: B2.02b, B2.02d, B2.03, B2.04, B2.05, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.12a, B2.16b

PAS 5314 Behavioral Science Concepts

This course is designed to provide instruction in the social and behavioral components of patient care. Topics will include development across the lifespan, sexuality, loss, dying and death, cultural diversity, response to illness, injury and stress and identification and prevention of violence. 1 credit

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.04, B2.06a, B2.06b, B2.06c, B2.06d, B2.06e, B2.06f, B2.11a, B2.11b. B2.11c, B2.11d, B2.11e, B2.11g, B2.12c

PAS 5340 Women’s Health

This course provides an introduction to women’s health issues, including the diagnosis, management, and treatment of common acute and chronic medical problems commonly encountered in reproductive health care and gynecology. 3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.06c, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.08d, B2.09

PAS 5351 Evidence Based Medicine

This course will prepare the students to search, interpret, and evaluate the medical literature in order to maintain a critical, current, and operational knowledge of new medical findings and provide a basis for future evidence-based clinical work. Topics will include research methodologies, inquiry, reliability, validity, and statistics. The PA students will study scientific writing, hypotheses, proposals, informed consent, and human volunteer and animal rights oversight committees.  2 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.04, B2.05 a-c, B2.07d, B2.10a-c, B2.13a-e, B2.18, B2.19

PAS 5362 Clinical Assessment and Management II

This is the second course in a sequence of three courses designed to teach the essentials of medicine. PA students learn an organ-system and problem-oriented approach to understanding the etiology, epidemiology, pathophysiology, manifestations, laboratory and diagnostic studies, and diagnosis and treatment of specific diseases encountered in general practice. They will continue to develop and refine culturally appropriate patient communication, medical history taking, and physical exam skills. Health care providers will discuss specific focused physical examinations of each organ system. For each disease or problem, related health promotion, disease prevention, and patient education topics will be presented. Competency with various medical instruments and procedures will be taught. The specific specialty areas and organ system covered in the sequence include ophthalmology, otorhinolaryngology, dermatology, pulmonology, infectious disease, cardiology, gastroenterology, rheumatology, endocrinology, nephrology, hematology, oncology, orthopedics, psychiatry and urology. 6 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.08d, B2.10b, B2.14a, B2.14b

PAS 5371 Pharmacotherapeutics II

This is the second course in a sequence of three courses designed to teach clinical pharmacology and pharmacotherapeutics for common medical problems seen in clinical practice. Instruction in counseling patients toward compliance, drug interactions, appropriate patient monitoring during therapy and prescription writing will also be covered. Pharmacologic management of dermatological, HEENT, musculoskeletal, pulmonary, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, psychiatric, endocrine, renal, genitourinary, male reproductive, female reproductive, infectious diseases, palliative care and opioid agents will be covered. 3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.02d, B2.03, B2.04, B2.05, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.08d, B2.12a, B2.16b

PAS 5382 Essentials of Cardiology

This course provides an organ-system and problem-oriented approach to understanding the etiology, epidemiology, pathophysiology, manifestations, laboratory and diagnostic studies, and diagnosis and treatment of specific cardiology diseases encountered in general practice. Students continue to develop and refine culturally appropriate patient communication, medical history taking, and physical exam skills in cardiology. For each cardiac-related problem, related health promotion, disease prevention, and patient education topics are presented. 3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b

PAS 5412 Essentials of Radiology and Electrocardiography

This course is designed to present instruction on the use and interpretation of basic radiologic studies and electrocardiograms in patient assessment. Indications, contraindications, patient preparation and interpretation of results will be included. Plain film studies of the musculoskeletal system, chest and abdomen will be presented.  Rhythm strips and 12 lead EKG’s will also be covered.  3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards: B2.05, B2.07d, B2.09

PAS 5420 Clinical Pediatrics

This course provides an introduction to the fundamentals of pediatric medicine, covering the age span from neonate through adolescence. Topics covered include normal growth and development, preventive care and anticipatory guidance, common pediatric illnesses and disorders and their diagnosis and management, and less common but important disorders that are peculiar to the pediatric population. 3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.08d, B2.09

PAS 5430 Clinical Laboratory Medicine

This course introduces the students to clinical laboratory diagnostic tests. The basic theory, selection, and interpretation of procedures most commonly used in a primary care setting are studied. Students study techniques used to obtain, preserve, and handle laboratory specimens as well as use clinical laboratory results to screen, diagnose, evaluate, and monitor patients. Students are familiarized with the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) and their implications for laboratory medicine.  2 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.05, B2.07

PAS 5440 Emergency Medicine

This course focuses on the specialty of emergency medicine including an understanding of pre- hospital care/emergency medicine system (EMS), and the interplay between 911 responders, the hospital emergency department, inpatient hospital services, and community medical providers in the primary care setting, as well as appropriate interaction with other medical providers in a variety of disciplines, including administrative. Emphasis is placed on the special skills and attitudes necessary and required to perform well in the emergency medical setting. Students take the Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) course as well as the Pediatric Life Support (PALS) course. 4 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.08d, B2.09

PAS 5462 Clinical Assessment and Management III

This is the third course in a sequence of three courses designed to teach the essentials of medicine. PA students learn an organ-system and problem-oriented approach to understanding the etiology, epidemiology, pathophysiology, manifestations, laboratory and diagnostic studies, and diagnosis and treatment of specific diseases encountered in general practice. They will continue to develop   and refine culturally appropriate patient communication, medical history taking, and physical exam skills. Health care providers will discuss specific focused physical examinations of each organ system. For each disease or problem, related health promotion, disease prevention, and patient education topics will be presented. Competency with various medical instruments and       procedures will be taught. The specific specialty areas and organ system covered in the sequence include ophthalmology, otorhinolaryngology, dermatology, pulmonology, infectious disease, cardiology, gastroenterology, rheumatology, endocrinology, nephrology, hematology, oncology, orthopedics, psychiatry and urology. 5 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.08d, B2.08e, B2.10b, B2.14a, B2.14b

PAS 5471 Pharmacotherapeutics III

This is the third course in a sequence of three courses designed to teach clinical pharmacology and pharmacotherapeutics for common medical problems seen in clinical practice. Instruction in counseling patients toward compliance, drug interactions, appropriate patient monitoring during therapy and prescription writing will also be covered. Pharmacologic management of dermatological, HEENT, musculoskeletal, pulmonary, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, psychiatric, endocrine, renal, genitourinary, male reproductive, female reproductive, infectious diseases, palliative care and opioid agents will be covered.  2 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.02d, B2.03, B2.04, B2.05, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.08e, B2.12a, B2.16b

PAS 5485 Neuroanatomy and Diseases of the Neurological System

This course consists of an in-depth study of neuroanatomy, neurophysiology and neurological development along with a review of the neurological examination.  In addition, a comprehensive study of diseases of the neurological system with emphasis on etiology, epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical presentation, laboratory and diagnostic studies, and diagnosis and treatment of common diseases is included.  Small-group patient cases in various formats will be woven into lecture to reinforce medical knowledge and patient assessment skills. Instruction in rehabilitative medicine will also be covered. 3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.02a, B2.02b, B2.02c, B2.03, B2.05, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b

PAS 5513 Professional Issues

This course is designed to introduce students to the professional issues of the physician assistant profession. Modules of content in this course include the historical development of the profession and its organizations, the PA role and scope of practice, the PA relationship with physicians and other health care providers, and the patient-centered care team approach will be covered.  A module on the business of healthcare to include documentation, coding, billing and patient safety, quality improvement and risk management is included.  Additionally, professionalism and integrity and provider well-being will be covered.  2 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.10a, B2.10b, B2.14a, B2.14b, B2.16a, B2.16b, B2.16c, B2.16d, B2.17b, B2.17e, B2.17g, B2.19a, B2.19b, B2.19c, B2.20a, B2.20b

PAS 5521 Clinical Geriatrics

This course is designed to provide physician assistant students with an understanding of the medical problems of the elderly including the biological and psychological changes commonly associated with aging. The overall goal of this geriatric course is to provide all students with a foundation for competent, compassionate care of the older adult. This foundation includes attitudes, knowledge, and skills needed by those giving care to older people. In addition, this course focuses on developing an understanding of age-related disease, an increased incidence of undesirable drug interactions, multi-system organ failure, and limitations in mobility, communication, and other impairments. End-of-life issues and palliative care will be addressed. 3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.07a, B2.07b, B2.07c, B2.07d, B2.07e, B2.07f, B2.08a, B2.08b, B2.08d, B2.08e, B2.09

PAS 5531 Fundamentals of Surgery

This course is designed to provide the students with an introduction and an overview to the discipline of surgery. The management of acute surgical problems, critical illness, solid organ malignancies, and elective surgical procedures will be discussed, as well as the pre- and post- operative care of surgical patients. Laboratory sessions will teach technical skills such as sterile technique, basic suturing, universal precautions, and minor surgical procedures. 5 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.03, B2.05, B2.08a, B2.08c, B2.09

PAS 5551 Research Design and Methodology

This course builds on the foundation of knowledge in medical research and design for health care providers. The students will review how to search, interpret, and evaluate the medical literature, then focus on a step-by-step approach to the development and implementation of medical research. Students will gain an understanding of the principles of research as they apply it to the practical, educational, and societal aspects of the Physician Assistant profession.  1 credit.

ARC-PA Standards:  B1.02, B2.04, B2.05, B2.13a-e, B2.19a-c

PAS 5561 Didactic Summative Evaluation

This course provides a summative evaluation of the didactic year. It will focus on evaluating history taking and physical examination performance skills, as well as communication and clinical reasoning ability, the ability to summarize and document clinical encounter findings, and demonstration of psychomotor clinical and cognitive critical thinking skills. The summative evaluation will include a variety of assessment tools including multiple choice question examinations, the PACKRAT examination, comprehensive oral case presentations, standardized patient encounters, Objective Structured Clinical Examinations (OSCEs), and clinical procedure performance skill laboratories. Students will be individually evaluated by core and adjunct faculty members. 4 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B1.01b, B4.01a, B4.01b

Clinical Curriculum Course Descriptions

A3.12d, A3.12e, A3.03

After successful completion of the 15-month didactic phase of the program, students will progress to the 12-month clinical learning phase. The clinical learning phase consists of at least 1,600 hours of patient care. Eight clinical learning rotations, each six weeks in length, are conducted at a variety of outpatient and/or inpatient clinical sites. Scheduling of rotations will be subject to change. Students will be expected to develop their core competencies in the following areas: medical knowledge, interpersonal and communication skills, patient care, and professionalism.

PAS 5610 Internal Medicine (9 quarter credit hours)

This rotation will allow the PA student to demonstrate knowledge and core competencies in the discipline of internal medicine. The student will demonstrate knowledge and core competencies related to internal medicine pertaining to the diagnoses, pathophysiology, risk factors, laboratory interpretation, procedures, and therapeutic strategies used in patient evaluation and treatment.

During this rotation the student is expected to recognize the signs and symptoms of a variety of medical illness and become familiar with treatment plans appropriate to internal medicine. This rotation will offer clinical experience in an inpatient and/or outpatient setting providing medical care for mainly the adult and geriatric population. Testing and evaluation for this rotation will be based on the knowledge, skills and abilities related to internal medicine.

PAS 5620 Surgery (9 quarter credit hours)

This rotation will provide the PA students with the opportunity to learn surgical principles, surgical pathology, and relevant laboratory studies as seen in surgical settings, as well as indications, limitations, and methodology of surgical procedures and therapeutic strategies used in surgery today. During this rotation the students will recognize the signs and symptoms of a variety of surgical conditions and become familiar with treatment plans appropriate to surgery.

This rotation will teach the students to respect and appreciate the contributions of other health care professionals in the overall delivery of health care and the importance of a team approach. This rotation will provide the students with access to patients in the inpatient setting and may also include evaluating patients in the outpatient setting. Testing and evaluation for this rotation will be based on the knowledge, skills, and abilities related to surgery.

PAS 5630 Family Medicine/Geriatrics (9 quarter credit hours)

This rotation provides students with the opportunity to learn the fundamental principles of family medicine.  Under the direction of a preceptor, students deliver preventative, acute, and chronic care for patients across the lifespan.  Emphasis is placed on the diagnosis and management of chronic diseases encountered in the family medicine setting.  Students develop additional skills in formulating plans for the primary and secondary prevention of disease including pharmacologic and non-pharmacologic interventions.

PAS 5640 Emergency Medicine (9 quarter credit hours)

This rotation provides students with the opportunity to learn principles of emergency medicine. Under the direction of a preceptor, students evaluate, stabilize, and treat acute and emergent conditions in patients of all ages across the lifespan.  Patients gain exposure to life-threatening and emergent conditions, interact with specialists and pre-hospital providers, and develop procedural skills commonly utilized in the acute care setting.  Additional focus is placed on developing skills in the recognition of emergent disease and collaborating as part of a multidisciplinary team to deliver patient care. 

PAS 5650 Women’s Health (9 quarter credit hours)

This rotation will provide the PA students with the opportunity to learn the basic and practical information in gynecology and women’s health. Students will make use of the evidence-based paradigm tailoring it to the indications, limitations, and methodology as related to gynecology, and procedures and therapeutic strategies utilized in women’s healthcare settings. During this rotation the students are expected to recognize the signs and symptoms of a variety of medical conditions and become familiar with treatment plans appropriate to women’s health, including gynecology and reproductive care. This rotation will offer clinical experience in inpatient and/or outpatient facilities providing medical care for female patients.

PAS 5660 Pediatrics (9 quarter credit hours)

This rotation provides the PA student with the opportunity to provide pediatric care. Students learn how to obtain a history from a pediatric patient, perform well-child and problem focused examinations, formulate differential diagnoses for common pediatric chief complaints (both medical and behavioral), and create accurate assessments and plans that are culturally sensitive and age appropriate. PA students learn preventive care for the pediatric population including the immunization schedule. PA students develop an understanding of pediatric developmental milestones and be able to provide anticipatory guidance to patients and caregivers alike. Students become familiar with pediatric growth charts and their relevance to the care of the pediatric patient. 

PAS 5671 Clinical Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine (9 quarter credit hours)

This rotation provides the PA student with the opportunity to learn the fundamental principles of behavioral health. Under the supervision of the clinical preceptor, students evaluate acute, chronic, and emergent behavioral health conditions and formulate the appropriate management plan and disposition. Students become familiar with common pharmacologic interventions utilized in behavioral health patients, including the medication benefits, risk, side effects, drug interactions, and need for monitoring. Students work collaboratively with the interdisciplinary team involved in the care of Behavioral Health patients.

PAS 5680 Elective-Clinical (9 quarter credit hours)

This rotation provides students with the opportunity to learn within an elective medical specialty. Under the direction of a preceptor, students evaluate, diagnose, and treat patients within the elective rotation setting.  The elective rotation setting may involve further exposure to practice within a core clinical rotation setting or a separate domain.  In addition to skills relevant to the elective setting, continued core competencies in patient evaluation, communication, professionalism, and interprofessional practice are developed.  

PAS 5691 Clinical Summative Review (3 quarter credit hours)

This course is intended to assure that students have met defined program objectives for the knowledge, skills, and attitudes suitable for clinical practice. It will include a multi-system approach to assess physical examination and history taking skills, communication skills and the ability to summarize and document findings, make a differential diagnosis and treatment plan. This course will include standardized patient encounters with problem based Objective Structured Clinical Examinations, comprehensive oral case presentations to a faculty member, completion of comprehensive multi-choice examinations, and completion of the PACKRAT examination.

Students will be individually evaluated and advised throughout this course by faculty members.

PAS 5701 Capstone Research Project (3 quarter credit hours)

The Capstone Research Project requires the PA students to apply knowledge and skills acquired in the structured competency-based PA curriculum, to a specific research or practical clinical experience-oriented project. The specific skills developed through this process include the ability to critically evaluation the relevant medical literature, comprehend the research process, and enhance the awareness of potential research questions related to general clinical practice. Each PA student is required to present his/her approved Capstone Research Project to a panel that includes at least two health science faculty members and an outside professional with expertise related to the project. PA students are expected to develop their Capstone Research Project in a format suitable for publication.

SCI 5100 Gross Anatomy    

This course provides a comprehensive study of human gross anatomy. A regional approach is used to study organ systems, extremities, and trunk. The clinical significance of topographical and radiological anatomical features is emphasized. Lectures are complemented by laboratory study of anatomic models, simulated and dissection, surface anatomy, and critical thinking issues. Laboratory sessions will utilize dissection software to reinforce topics presented in lecture, with limited gross dissection.  6 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.02a, B2.02b

SCI 5120 Human Physiology

This course will provide the students with a detailed overview of medical physiology and pathophysiology. Students will attain knowledge of the normal functions of the human body that is essential for clinical medicine. Emphasis is placed on homeostasis and the integration among organ systems. Pathophysiologic alterations in body function that occur with disease states are also discussed. Specific topics covered in the course include cellular structure, homeostasis, signal transduction mechanisms, neurophysiology and the nervous system, the cardiovascular system, and circulation and the respiratory systems.  3 credits.

ARC-PA Standards:  B2.02b, B2.02c

SCI 5201 Medical Pathology and Genetics

This course is designed to provide Physician Assistant students with fundamental principles and cognitive knowledge in Medical Pathology and Genetics in preparation for their professional careers as clinicians. The course provides an understanding of the essential nature of a broad representation of human diseases, with a focus on the structural and functional changes in cells, tissues, and organs caused by each disease, as well as the molecular and genetic mechanisms underlying these diseases.  4 credits.

ARC-PA Standards: B2.02c, B2.02e

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