Description
PA Residencies are out there—but what’s it like to attend one?
Today’s guest is Theresa Brodeur, PA-C who is from Syracuse, NY. She attended PA school and knew she wanted to pursue Emergency Medicine, so she attended a Residency in California to further her skills. Her experience was excellent, even though she was working long hours and completing coursework the whole time.
Some of the highlights:
Set out to apply to Physical Therapy, but found PA profession Interested in ER—pursued EMT and worked as EMT and got shadowing hours Attended school in NY First rotation was ED—had a great preceptor, worked at a smaller upstate ED and had a great experience Goals at Graduation: Emergency Medicine, wanted to practice full scope as ED provider SEMPA website—lead her to research fellowships/resumes ED Residency/Fellowship 14 months in length—fellows finishing program act as mentors to new arrivals Classroom didactic, projects, presentations Tuesday/Thursday classes for 4 hours—reading assignments, presentations 4-5 12-hour shifts through the week, rotating days/nights Rotations: OBGYN, surgical, ortho Several ERs and Corrections facility for experience Call for other services Stipend—$11.25/hr while working Suturing, central lines, intubations, other procedures Job prospects at graduation Company sponsoring residency (Vituity) was well-established in California for ED coverage Having residency—the name of the sponsoring program led to programs asking “how can we convince you to work here” If going away from where name is recognized, will it help get a job? For more info on PA Residencies/Fellowships:
The Association of Postgraduate PA Programs
http://appap.org/
American Association of Surgical Physician Assistants-PA Residency Programs
https://www.aaspa.com/resources/pa-residency-programs
PA School Finder—Residency Programs:
https://www.paschoolfinder.com/cat/postgraduate-pa-residency-program/
Quick Reference Guide from APPAP site:
http://appap.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Program_Matrix-as-of-March-2019.pdf