Monday, November 26, 2007

Club Health Program To Help Fill In Care Gaps

The physician assistant program at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center in Oklahoma City has 50 students Club Health.

OU-Tulsa President Dr. Gerard Clancy says the campus serves a number of nontraditional Club Health, motivated students, including aspiring physician assistants. Applicants typically are several years older than medical school applicants, often have families and are changing careers Club Health.

At 4:30 in the evening Club Health, you see people leaving but you see just as many people coming on campus, he said of the Schusterman Center. PAs are a very cost-efficient Club Health, high-quality health provider, said Associate Director Meredith Davison.

Ijams was able to remove a suture and prescribe blood pressure medicine without having to have a doctor on site. Instead of seeing physician assistants as lesser health care providers or as competition Club Health, she said most doctors see them as knowledgeable professionals.

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