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What You Need to Know About Specializing as a PA

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How do PAs specialize? While the physician assistant profession was designed to fill a need for primary care, there are many PAs who work in various specialties. A question that comes up a lot is how education works for PAs who choose to go into a specific area of medicine. Here's your answer:

Do PAs specialize during school?

Nope! PA school has specific subjects that are covered by all programs to provide a generalized education for a career in primary care. Even a program that is "surgery" focused will still cover those main areas that are required by the ARC-PA. There isn't required additional training to enter a speciality, although there post-graduate training programs for PAs available for extra education in certain specialties. The most common are ER, ICU, surgery, and psych.

What can I do during school if I want to work in a certain specialty?

Use your electives to get some experience and make connections. Networking is such an important part of finding a job. During rotations, I started off thinking I needed to tell all of my preceptors I wanted to do their specialty (even if I knew I didn't) to try to get job offers. It didn't work. Once I started sharing my interest for surgery and dermatology, I actually got calls about job openings in the area and my preceptors were essential in landing my first job.

Can PAs change specialties?

Yes! That's one of the benefits of the career. While PAs don't switch around as much as one might expect after they find their niche, it's reassuring to know it's an option. Before we get into that, here are some of my favorite specialty PA accounts:

@busybeingbridget - Plastic Surgery

@sammiesupageek - Surgery

@rectalrockstar - Anorectal Health

@itsgabythepa - Family Medicine

@strivewithkristin - Critical Care

@jamienicole_pa - ER

@thewholepa_ckage - Pain Management

Now let’s talk about changing specialties and working in multiple specialties — PAs can do it all!

One of the benefits of the PA profession is being trained as a generalist with the option of working in more specialized areas. A very non-exhaustive list includes dermatology (me), surgical positions (orthopedics, trauma, plastics, bariatric), endocrinology (my back up), OB/GYN, pediatric specialties, and even opthalmology. There are SO many options, and I think one of the coolest things about our profession is that even though we are all "PAs" the actual job description can look so different even if in the same specialty.

If a PA in one area, say dermatology, were to decide to change specialties or need to based on life circumstances, there isn't anything "official" that has to happen. It's as simple as getting a job in the new area, completing the necessary training, and likely brushing up on that section of PA school and learning more in-depth information. That's why having a supportive collaborating physician is so important! It took a good 6 months for me to feel somewhat comfortable in dermatology, and being 7 years out, there are still conditions I've never actually seen in practice or cases that surprise me. To make the switch to a new specialty at this point would take a lot of work, but I appreciate that the option is there.

As far as working in multiple specialties at the same time, it is possible, but probably not as common as you'd think. As you may already know, working in medicine can be exhausting, so trying to juggle multiple jobs and areas could be tough, but I know some PAs who do it well. One thing to remember about going into a specialty area is that the PANRE (recertification test PAs take every 10 years) is general and you'll be tested on all of the information from PA school again in the future, so that's a good reason to try to stay up to date with everything at least a little bit. I would love to hear more about the specialty you hope to work in or any experience you've had as a PA in different specialties! Let me know in the comments who your favorite PA is and what area they are in so others can find more PAs to follow along with.


How to Survive the Night Shift - Guest post by Jamie

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So you’re looking to survive night shift, huh? Maybe you’re a pre-PA student whose CNA position is overnight. Maybe you’re a PA student on a rotation that has stretches of night shifts. Maybe you’re a practicing PA in the ER, like me! Or maybe you stumbled upon this because you Googled, “I think I’m going to die working night shift, help!” Regardless of which category you fall in, this blog is for you.

Here’s a few general tips 

While at work:

  • No caffeine past the first 2-3 hours of the shift (I know, you’re thinking, what? Are you crazy? But hear me out – if you crutch yourself with caffeine you’ll either have trouble sleeping later or crash around 4-5am).

  • No liquids at all within 4 hours before you want to go to sleep for the day when you get home. (It’s important so you don’t have to wake up every hour to pee during the day).

  • LOTS of water leading up to that 4 hours (I’m talking at least 60 oz). I use a large tumbler like this. 

  • Snacks – healthy ones that will keep your energy up, like granola bars, oatmeal/overnight oats, fruits like bananas, berries, apples and peanut butter. If you like veggies, that’s great, too. I find I do better when I do nothing but snack all night rather than have an actual meal.

Once you’re home:

  • Pee one more time before bed

  • Shower if you need to (in a viral pandemic this is a good idea, advice may not apply if stumbling across this in 2025)

  • Brush your teeth

  • Read for 15-30 minutes – not on your phone! If you have blackout curtains, read with a lamp instead of sunlight. No electronic devices. If you’re going to take melatonin, do so now. When you get that wave of sleepiness, you need to sleep right then and there or it will pass and not work.

  • Black out curtains or an eye mask to block the sun

  • Ear plugs or a white noise machine to block out daytime noises, such as your husband talking on the phone while working from home, or your neighbor deciding 8am is a fab time to mow their lawn.

Schedule

If I have a stretch of 3-4 nights in a row, I treat that very differently than if I have one random night shift. Night shifts are any 8-12 hour shift that starts after 5pm. So this could be 5pm-3am, 6p-4am, 9p-7a, or a true 7p-7a. I consider the 5 & 6pm shifts “evening” and 7 & 9pm true graveyard shifts. If you have both available to you, it is of course easier to do a 6p first then a 9p to work yourself up to the 9p. You may not make your own schedule, though, so this is easier said than done.

Let’s say your stretch is 9pm for four days straight. This is how I typically tackle it:

Day 1

(Before your stretch, you do not work this night) – Go to bed when you usually would and you get a good, normal nights rest. This might mean you wake up at 8am or 11am. Let your body wake you up when you’ve had enough sleep, don’t force yourself to stay up late and try to sleep late. You’ll just rob yourself a good nights rest. I also would advise not drinking alcohol this night, as it will severely impact your sleep quality even if it’s just a glass or two of wine.

Day 2

(Your first night shift) – around 4 or 5pm, you’re going to try to take a nap. Ideally this is a 1.5 or 3 hour nap as a sleep cycle is about 90 minutes. If you have trouble sleeping (which I sometimes do, I’m not a great napper), then you’ll want to make this time restful. Read a book, color, watch TV. Don’t interact with anybody, don’t scroll your social media – just something mindless and quiet. Then eat a full meal around 7pm and head to work. If you are the type of person to work out, I usually do so around 2pm-ish.

Day 3

(Your second overnight shift) – you’re getting home around 8am. You’ll simmer down by showering, brushing your teeth, and reading in bed for a bit. Black out the room, turn on your white noise. Then you’re going to sleep as long as you can. If you’re me, that will be around 4 hours and then you’ll wake up starving. No problem! Get up, eat a meal (no caffeine yet), and now you work out, you watch TV, whatever it is you like to do. Now here’s the most important part: you nap again. Same as before, around 4-5pm, you take a 1.5-3 hour nap. Now you have successfully slept about 7 or 8 hours total.

Note: I know others who prefer to stay up in the morning when they get home, like you would do after a normal 8a-5p job. Eat a meal, hang out with their partner, exercise, walk the dog, whatever it may be, and then sleep around 11am-7pm. That’s fine, too, but I find the biphasic schedule works best for me because I am terrible at sleeping during the day.

Days 4-?

(However many more are in your stretch) – same as day 3. On your last day, to “flip back,” I typically wake up after that 4 hour mark and just stay up. I’ll go to bed around 12a that evening and feel hungover most of the day, but the following day I can wake up around 9am and feel much better rested and now can be a functional human going forward. Rinse and repeat indefinitely.

Alternative advice: never flip back and forth, embrace being a creature of the night and change your wardrobe to match your new vampire personality. Might I suggest something like this?

Sleep Aids

Let’s talk briefly about safe over-the counter medicated sleep aids.

First, a disclaimer, is that I typically do not use these because they make me feel like garbage. If I do, it is usually a melatonin on the day after my last night working so I can fall asleep around that 12am mark as desired. I don’t like the grogginess that many of these others bring.

Melatonin 1-3mg is sufficient. More melatonin =/= more sleep. To be taken about 1 hour before you want to fall asleep and when you feel sleepy you must let yourself fall asleep. If you fight it and keep reading or watching TV, it will pass and it won’t work. I have learned from poison control that it’s pretty much impossible to OD on melatonin, but again, you don’t really need a lot for it to be effective if you use it correctly. As a fun side effect, it can cause nightmares and exacerbate sleep paralysis.

Antihistamines  – medications traditionally used for allergies with a strongly sedating side effect. Unisom is used off-label for nausea in pregnancy, Dramamine for motion sickness. These will help you fall asleep, but frequently cause that “next day grogginess,” especially doxylamine due to its long half-life.

Dimenhydrinate – AKA Dramamine (shortest ½ life at 3-9 hrs)

Diphenhydramine – AKA Benadryl (moderate ½ life at 4-8 hrs)

Doxylamine – AKA Unisom (longest ½ life at 10-12 hrs)

Ask your doctor before taking if you are pregnant, have seizures, angle-closure glaucoma, enlargement of prostate gland, asthma, emphysema, or acute hepatic insufficiency.

And there you have it, folks. A comprehensive guide to how I survive night shift and flip-flop back and forth to do things during the day on my days off. This only works if you are able to have waves where you do 3-4 on and 3-4 off. If you have 1 on-1 off or other variations, you may have to try several schedules before you find the right thing for you. Hopefully you at least gleaned a few tips from this blog. If you have any other helpful tips, reach out – I’d love to hear ‘em!


Follow Jaime on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jamienicole_pa/

Dermatology Physician Assistant Q&A

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A few weeks ago, I posted a question box on my Instagram stories what questions you have about being a dermatology PA. I received well over 100 questions and I some of them in my Instagram Stories (check out my Derm PA Life highlight) and in a podcast episode over on The Pre-PA Club.

A little bit about me, I am a PA and I have been practicing for a little over 5 years now. I have only ever worked in dermatology but this is my second practice I have worked at. You can read more about my journey to becoming a PA here. I absolutely love my job.


How did you get into dermatology?

When I was in college, I was looking for shadowing hours because I knew I wanted to be a PA. The only place that I could get to call me back when I was in undergrad at UGA was a dermatology office. There was an amazing PA there who let me shadow here. I went in a few times a month for an afternoon to get my shadowing hours. My mindset at first was that shadowing was going to be a long and boring process. I was under the assumption that all dermatology was was acne and naked old people — (which there is a lot of!) but I found dermatology to be very interesting.
One thing I didn’t realize until I started working/shadowing in medicine is that dermatology is unique in the sense that you get to see visibly what is happening. you get to see the pathology rather than guessing from looking at numbers. There is a little bit of instant gratification when you can see someone getting better.

Do you ever get squeamish when with a patient?

The very first time I saw a punch biopsy (right above the knee) when I was shadowing I had to excuse myself from the room because I felt sick. I didn’t expect the skin to be as deep as it was. The way a punch biopsy works is you numb the area and then you take what looks like a cookie cutter and push it and spin it into the skin with a little bit of pressure. Once you pull it out, you can see all of the layers (the epidermis, the dermis, and the subcutaneous fat). It really freaked me out! The PA I was shadowing looked over at me and asked if I need to take a minute or sit down. Now I do punch biopsies all day and they no longer bother me. If you are squeamish, I definitely think it is something you can overcome during rotations.

What Does the Work Schedule Look Like? Is it like office hours?

i have always had a clinic schedule because i work in a private office. In September switch to part time so I only work Mondays and Tuesdays right now — I may add Fridays in the future. I get there around 8 and leave by 5. I always have a lunch break (unless I am running behind) where sometimes a drug rep will take us out or I will run to the store or even swing by the house. I try to plan surgeries or cosmetic procedures right before lunch incase I run over.

At my old job I worked 4 1/2 days with a rotating Fridays. I have heard of Derm offices that either open earlier or later or work on weekends, sometimes two.

How do you keep up with charting when you see so many patients in a day?

I want to preface this by saying that every PA and every office has a different procedure for charting. You will see this when you are shadowing.

The office I am at right now is very unique. They have found a way to have a hybrid paper chart and EMR system. They haven’t quite given up on the paper chart because it is really easy to file and find what you are looking for. At my old office, we had an EMR system and I would literally sit in front of a computer all day. Now I hardly ever touch a computer. It was a huge change but I don’t really mind it.

How charting works in my office is:

  • The patient checks in and they bring us the chart

  • The medical assistant will take the patient back and get their history and update the chart as needed

  • They will let me know the patients ready when the chart is outside of the door

  • I will go in and talk to the patient. I will do my physical exam and decide what I want to do

  • The MA is taking notes in the chart during that time

  • I come out and I try to dictate right away. I dictate with my phone and I essentially read my note

The nice part about dermatology is that a lot of stuff is pretty repetitive. I can speed through and add in any details that I need to. There are a few templates that I can use but I typically dictate, send off and then a few days later I will get the paper chart back where I can sign off on my notes and make sure everything is correct. It is kind of an interesting system but I never take my work home with me and I never leave anything for the next day.

How many patients do you see per day?

At my old office (when I was full-time), I was seeing around 35 patients per day. I saw a lot of those patients for several years. When I started at my new office, I am essentially building up my practice from scratch. Now I see about 25 patients per day which I expect for it to increase as time goes one.

What type of patients do you see?

I recently saw a patient who is 103! She was the oldest patient I have ever seen. I see patients of all ages — babies and infants all the way to elderly people — with all different kind of issues and conditions.

What types of procedures do you do?

At my new practice, I am getting to do my surgeries and procedures such as cosmetic fillers, botox and peels. I also get a lot of incisions and skin cancers. I do all of my diagnostic procedures as far as biopsies and shaves, punches, and freezing things.

Do you see most patients for routine skin checks or specific skin issues?

I see a huge variety. Definitely some skin checks, surveillance for skin cancer or weird spots and also a lot of triages and being the newest person I see a lot of new patients with acne, psoriasis, eczema and weird spots.

What is your favorite and least favorite part about working in dermatology?

My favorite - I love treating teenagers and acne. It is really rewarding to see them improve, get better and regain their confidence. Acne is fairly straightforward. There are only so many options and it is like a puzzle trying to put them all together. Sometimes teenagers can be a little reluctant to talk to their provider and give details but deep down, they are cool kids and I like getting to help them with their skin. Even as an adult and a derm PA, I still deal with breakouts and thinking back to high school, I wish someone would have validated the fact that it makes you self conscious when you break out.

My least favorite - draining cysts. i am not Dr. Pimple Popper — they smell.

Did you have a difficult time diagnosing when you first began?

Yes and no. In PA school, I had two weeks of dermatology. I got hired at my first job in April and graduated in August so I was able to set up my last two elective rotations in derm at my job in June and July. I’ll be honest, the first six months, when I would get home, I was exhausted from how much I was learning. It was difficult at the beginning and I just didn’t feel completely comfortable which has obviously changed as I have practiced more.

The first thing was psoriasis — it can be overwhelming and there are a lot of medicines plus it can look different for different patients. It took me a while to be comfortable with it.

Pediatrics is something that I would say I struggled more with because we don’t see babies and kids all of the time and their skin can be so different.

What you will find, though, in rotations and at your job is that you’re not going to know everything at the beginning and it will take a while to figure out what you do need to know. You will eventually feed comfortable. I think it took me about six months and I started to feel pretty confident.

What do you tell your patients if your unsure of the solution to the problem?

Going off the previous question, after working in derm for 5.5 years, I know what I don’t know. If there is ever a question, even if something doesn’t seem straightforward or if I have a little bit of doubt, I will ask for another opinion.

How much autonomy do you get?

This is also related to the previous question. I will say I get as much autonomy as I want. In my practice there is the physician and then another PA. The physician is usually there when I'm there. On Monday morning she goes to the prison and does clinic there but she's always reachable by phone if needed. We all consult each other. I have no shame and if I see something weird or that I am unsure of, I will ask my phsician to come in and take a look. She is more than happy to! She jokes that she loves the weird stuff and she never gets to see it which is so true because I am seeing all of the new patients and all the triage. A lot of times, I am pretty sure of what I want to do as far as a plan or diagnosis but I like to have that confirmation.

Working two days per week, I would say I only bring her in a few times per month. As a PA it is important to be confident in what you know but also know what you don’t know and be willing to ask for help.

What would you change about the Derm PA specialty if anything?

When you look at jobs or specialties, one thing to keep in mind is the type of lifestyle you want to have. There are two different types of work for PAs — clinical scheduled work and shift work.

As a dermatology PA, I can be fully booked 3-6 months out with patients so that can make it difficult to plan things. If you are full-time, working in a clinic Monday - Friday, you are probably going to have a limited about of vacation that you have to plan 6 months in advance. Things do come up but out of respect for patients and the office staff, you really have to be a planner. Trying to find a new spot for 35 patients is very difficult for the office staff.

Alternatively, is to work as like a hospitalist or shift work. My husband, for example is a hospitalist and his schedule is 7 days on and 7 days off which is nice because he always has these big breaks. If you are someone who likes to get up and go, being in a job like a hospitalist, in an emergency room or urgent care where you have shifts and not necessarily a schedule of patients expecting to see specifically you may be a better fit.

Not necessarily something I would change, just something to be aware of when looking for a job.

One thing that I wish I could change is that I wish patients understood their insurance more — I am sure every one in the medical field wishes this but especially in derm. A lot of times, patients come in and thing we can just cut off all of their moles or fix this spot because they hate it but it doesn’t work like that. Health insurance is there if something is harmful or malignant, not because you hate it. It can get a little old saying it over and over again to patients.

How do you manage being a PA while being a mom of a little one?

It's hard to be a PA, a mom, and a wife. What has really helped me is balancing and time blocking. When I am home I try really hard to be present. In the morning, we all hang out as a family and have breakfast together. My baby understands that I have to go to work but I live pretty close to my practice so I try to come home at lunch sometimes. When I get home from work, again I try to really be present and put my phone down. Once she goes to bed, I will work on emails, record podcast episodes and work on things for The PA Platform.

If you have any other questions, leave them in the comments below! If you liked this post let me know!!


A Day in the Life of a Neurohospitalist PA - Guest Post by Brie Marks of @BetweenTwoStethoscopes

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My name is Brie Marks and I’ve been a practicing PA for 5.5 years. I graduated from DeSales University in eastern Pennsylvania in 2014 and am currently loving my job in Inpatient Neurology/ Neurological Acute Care. As a Neurohospitalist PA, I work in the hospital only. I actually haven’t spent any time in an outpatient office since I was doing my clinical rotations! Our health network is comprised of multiple hospitals, so I spend some of my time at our main hub, which is an academic center, and some of my time in our community hospitals.  I’ve always been fascinated by the brain and neuroscience, and Neurology is a perfect fit for me because it is both very specialized (one body system) and also covers so many topics. Common illnesses and injuries that I see on the inpatient service include stroke, seizure, intracranial hemorrhages, spinal cord injuries, infections of the brain and spinal cord, auto immune diseases and neuro-degenerative diseases like Parkinson’s Disease and ALS.

A “typical” day for me is based on my location.

  • If I’m at our main hospital, I meet with my team for rounds at 8am, where we discuss all of our patients for that day and divide them up between the Advanced Practitioners (PAs and NPs) and the Attending Physicians. 

  • I then go see new consults and follows ups, trying to prioritize the sickest patients or who may be being discharged that day.  On our service, the Advanced Practitioner (AP) generally does all of the chart review, touches base with the primary team, looks at all of the imaging, performs the history and physical and comes up with a diagnosis and plan and then discusses or “staffs” that patient with the attending physician.  I truly have the most amazing team of APs and docs – its an incredibly supportive environment for learning and growth!

  • If I’m at a community hospital, I “run the list” (decide which patients need to be seen) by myself, assess patients and either meet up with the attending physician later that day in person or speak with them over the phone. 

I work 40 hours a week, roughly 8am-4.  I take my turn working holidays and weekends, which is standard for an inpatient job. I finish my day at 4, though as with any inpatient job, there are occasional emergencies that need to be handled right away.  Some of my colleagues work 4 - 10 hour shifts and are scheduled until 5 pm, so I leave late fairly rarely.  I work 1-2 holidays a year, and when I work on a weekend, I get 1 weekday before and 1 weekday off after that weekend.  I do not take any “call” – meaning that once I leave the building, I am not contacted after hours or have to respond to emergencies.  I am a salaried employee, so I do not get paid extra for staying late, but there are times I leave early for an appointment or another obligation and it all generally evens out. 

A common question that I am asked is – how much autonomy do you have as a Neuro PA?

On my team, I am quite autonomous, but definitely feel that I have the support of my fellow APs and physicians.  We frequently meet as a team to discuss difficult cases, both as a brainstorming session as well as a learning opportunity. At our main hospital, the Attending Physician will generally speak to the patient after I have examined them, which gives the patient an opportunity to ask any questions that have come up in the meantime.  If there is an emergency or a stroke alert when I am at a community hospital, I respond to the emergency independently and then contact my attending with my assessment. As a PA on the Neuro service, I feel very heard and respected as a provider in my own right, but always have my team of docs to ask questions to and learn from.

Neurology is an incredible field.  I would encourage students not to be intimidated by the neuro exam or the complexity of the neuro material that’s covered in PA school. If someone is passionate about the topic, it is absolutely possible to master it while on the job. There are so many opportunities, including as a neurohospitalist, general outpatient neurology, or even to further subspecialize in areas like epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, movment disorders, headache, etc. 

Thank you to the PA Platform for allowing me to share some of my experiences as a Neuro PA. I feel so fortunate to have become a PA and would choose this career 100x over.  The struggle to get there is definitely worth it! Please feel free to reach out with any questions- I’m always happy to help. I can be found at Betweentwostethoscopes on Instagram, where I share insights into my life as a Neuro PA, as well as exam tips, neuro imaging and case studies.  


My Decision to be a Part-Time PA, Full Time Mom

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As you may have heard, I recently made the decision to go part time at work and I wanted with  you how and why I decided to go part time, what life looks like now and how I’ve been transitioning this week into this new role. 

My Background

Before I start, I want to back track and share a little bit about my experience. After graduation, I went straight to working in dermatology. My husband was in medical school at the time, so he didn’t get any time off. I couldn’t take a vacation or anything I just had to get out there and start making money. I went straight into my dream job and I loved it. I started off working four days per week, Monday - Thursday, which was awesome. It was a pretty good schedule and I was either home or leaving the office by 5pm. They eventually asked me to start coming in on Fridays also which worked out because I figure, if I’m not making money, I was probably out spending it plus my husband was so busy with med school and wasn’t home a lot. I started working Friday mornings and it was great. I did that for a while and as you may know, dermatology is a very busy speciality. A lot of times, I would be seeing 30-35 patients all day long which I was fine with. I like working hard and staying busy -- I’d rather be busy than bored. 

Then Comes Baby

Everything changed once I had my daughter last year. I always knew that when I would be pregnant and have a baby, I would go back to work and not cut down on hours. I have friends who are PAs, who work in other jobs and who are stay-at-home moms so I have seen all sides of it. I always thought that stay-at-home moms had it so easy and I just knew I would never be able to stay at home all day but then I had my baby. Once I had her, it’s hard to explain unless you have had a child, just how much everything changes. I know that everyone says it, and yes it is cliche, but it’s so true. I took 11 weeks of maternity leave, which I highly recommend to use as much as you can. I had some postpartum complications and had to go back to the hospital for a week. By the time I got over all of that, I really only had about 9 weeks with her. 

Time to go Back to Work

When the time came for me to go back, I felt like we were finally getting our groove. I was breastfeeding which is NOT easy! No one teaches you how to do that so it was hard and now (TMI) I had to pump at work. A lot of transitions at once. At this point, my husband is in residency and his schedule is all over the place. I did ask to go back to four days a week while I was pregnant. My work and I came up with a compromise and I worked one Friday per month which then made things complicated with child care. 

It’s very difficult to find someone to trust with your child, if you’ve never done that before. Luckily, I had my mother-in-law helping. We found a great nanny who was with her two days a week as well. When it came time for me to go back to work, I was a mess. I was crying and losing my mind. The day I was supposed to go back, I just remember I stood at the door sobbing and begging my husband not to make me go, to not leave her. This feeling was so strange to me because that is not who I thought I would be. I thought that after four weeks, I would be like, get me back to work, I’m bored, I don’t want to sit around this house all day . Now, I literally wanted to sit on the couch with my baby on me. 

Adjustment Period

I went back to work and everyone told me that I would adjust and get used to it but for the first six months, I was balancing a lot. I was working full time trying to figure out this mom thing, and still doing PA Platform stuff, it sometimes kind of felt like being a single parent with my husband in residency. We had a lot of conversations usually with me crying about just how overwhelmed I was. I read a bunch of books, a really great one, Stretched Too Thin, was really helpful. I talked to my working mom friends who have had kids, my stay-at-home mom friends and my family and they all knew that I was struggling with balance. 

We hear a lot about the flexibility of the PA profession and the great work life balance but I found that there is no balance. You’re never going to have everything equal. If you’re trying to equalize it, there’s always going to be something that is pulling more of your energy or attention. You have to decide what if a priority or not. So it became going to work, coming home, being exhausted and not being able to give my family the energy that I needed. Also, if you have ever had a kid, there is this thing called the witching hour and it happens right around 5pm. I just wasn’t getting the best time with my baby. In the morning, I would get up, get her ready, get her food going, leave, come home, and then she is exhausted, tired, angry and crying which makes me want to cry. It wasn’t a good system that we had. It did get better. After about six months in, I was having these weekly anxiety driven fits but my husband was like, I don’t know how else to help you but something has to change.

Turning Point

We started talking about if we could make it work if I went part time, which was a long discussion. It wasn’t something that happened immediately. We had to look at finances, childcare, his schedule, my schedule...what would this actually look like? Would I be okay if I was home more? Ultimately what it came down to was my happiness. I don’t have a lot of hobbies outside of The PA Platform and shopping. At the time, I found the most joy and happiness when I am hanging out with my family, whether that was my husband or my baby or preferably both. That’s when I am happiest and when I came to this decision, I knew in no way could I see myself ever regretting spending more time with them. I could see myself regretting working more if I didn’t have to. 

It was just exhausting me to the point where I would get home on Thursdays couldn't get off the couch. Friday was a day to just recover, Saturday I'm actually trying to get stuff done and by Sunday is time to start over. It's just this constant grind, which I know everyone does and I admire everyone who does all this because it is not easy and I've learned that. 

We looked at it and decided it was probably possible. I was going to try to wait till the end of 2019 because my work was going through some changes and transitions which I wanted to try to help them through that. In June, my nanny quit.  She ended up being a full time job somewhere else which I totally understand because benefits and all of that. She gave us a month's notice and by then my husband finished residency, which his schedule as a hospitalist is seven on seven off. So when you look at that on a calendar with my schedule, if I'm working five days a week and he's not home until late, we really would only have like two to three days together every other week and that's not what I signed up for. That's not what works for my life, what works for me, when it comes to marriage, I want to see my husband and spend time with him. 

Telling My Employer

I went to them at work, which was not an easy conversation. I think leaving a job is kind of like a divorce and my situation was a little different because this is my only job I've ever had it been there for five years. There wasn't anything wrong, really and if there was it would have been a different situation. If you know you're feeling like you've been abused or used by a job and you're ready to leave. This wasn't that this was I wanted to stay but ultimately the job that they needed for a PA was a full time job. We tried to talk through some compromises, but it just wasn't working. Ultimately, I had to put in my resignation letter and that was really hard. I was really emotional about it even leaving, just because I had a great relationship with my supervising physician -- she was an amazing teacher, we had great communication, a great flow, and to leave that is hard. 

No Regrets

But like I said, I can never see myself regretting being home more with my baby. Another thing that I kind of told them is I could see the difference in her when I was with her more. If I had a longer break of four or five days, me and my baby had a much better relationship than when I, running out the door and running in the door to do bath time and dinner. She is a very strong willed one year old and likes to kind of push back and bump heads with me and she does it the most with me instead of anyone else. When we actually have more quality time, she tends to be a lot more sweet towards me. I felt like it was important for me to be there. I don't want to miss anything in her life --  I don't want to miss her events and I just as much as I can be there. This is not who I thought I would be, yet here we are. 

Finding a Part-Time Job

I had working parents growing up my parents were teachers. I think they were great examples for me and I don't ever see myself not working completely. I will always be a PA and I think I'll always practice clinically. What ended up happening was I turned in my resignation, and before I even turned it in, they had four resumes. I started pulling out some feelers with some drug reps and other PAs about jobs and within 24 hours, I had a new job in derm with the opportunity to make my own schedule, however I want it. That does show you the flexibility and the work and the desirability of a PA especially with experience. 

I'm very, very excited about my new job I started this week, I've only been one day. But next week I start seeing patients and it's different, they do things differently which isn’t necessarily a bad thing. I think getting to see different ways of how offices work will just make me a better provider overall. Overall, it's been a good transition, we'll see how it continues to go. 

Are You Considering Going Part-Time?

I would encourage you, if you think you might want to be part time, at least explore it. I mean, put numbers on paper, look at it. Go to your work, see what their thoughts are on you going part time. Also, always be looking for jobs -- that's something that I heard once at a conference, I think it's great advice, like never stopped looking for jobs, because you don't know what's out there. Another thing is, I was very surprised by how supportive my patients were. They were all very excited for me, even though I was leaving, and I couldn't tell them where I was going. I would tell them, But I mean, “next time, you're going to see someone else because I am leaving. I’m going part time to stay home with my baby more” They were all so supportive and told me how excited they were for me -- that was really sweet. I did feel you know that I'm abandoning them to some degree, but they were all very understanding of why I was making the change, and very supportive of it. 

Are you thinking about whether you should go part time or what that looks like? Feel free to send questions my way, because it was not an easy couple months going through that transition. I am very, very glad that I made that decision. I'm working two or two and a half days every week. I have a really great supportive practice who is very family oriented. So I'm really, really excited about that opportunity. Thank you so much for following along on this journey!




Informational Interview with Stephanie Howard OB/GYN PA

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Stephanie (S): My name is Stephanie Howard and I am a physician assistant. I live in Knoxville, Tennessee and I’ve been practicing obstetrics and gynecology since I graduated in 2010.

Savanna | The PA Platform (TPP): Has that been your only job?

S: Yes, I actually did a rotation with this physician, my supervising physician now, and I always knew I wanted to do women’s health. In undergrad I followed around an OB/GYN and so I kind of knew that’s what I wanted to do. I did my elective in women’s health also and I went back and did my elective with her and she offered me a job. So I’ve been with her, I guess, really since 2009 because I did 12 weeks of rotations with her.

TPP: Okay, cool. So I actually did something similar where I actually got hired before I did my electives. I was hired and then got to do 8 weeks of basically training before I jumped in my job so we kind of did the same thing there. 

S: Well I think that that’s awesome and I felt like I’ve recently picked up a lot of clinical year students. I try to tell all of them, “treat every rotation like a job” because you don’t know if people are going to have openings where you’re at, you don’t know who they know, and if you do a really good job like you could be offered a job. I think I was offered like five, I was offered 5 jobs during clinicals. Of course now you know in Knoxville where I’m at, its kind of a saturated area for PAs, but at the time when I did it wasn’t and so I always try to tell everybody like if there’s something that you like or want to do women’s health, like see if you can set up your own rotation or your own elective somewhere you may want to be and like prove to them and show them why they should hire you and how they could benefit from having a PA. 

TPP: That’s really good advice and something I wish someone had told me. (Let’s backtrack in a minute. I went into rotations with the mindset that I should tell everywhere I was working that that’s what I wanted to do. For example, let’s say I’m on family medicine, they would say “well what do you see yourself doing? What do you want to do?”, I would respond by saying “ oh, family medicine”. Even though, in reality, I knew I liked derm.  I knew I liked procedures, and when it came to rotations I actually really liked everything except for psych. It wasn’t until I actually about halfway through the year I started telling people when they asked. It was actually my surgery preceptor I first told, “You know I really think I’m interested in either surgery or maybe dermatology.” 

Once I started being honest about it and told him and my emergency medicine preceptor, that’s when people actually started seeking me out and saying like “I heard about this job, send your resume” and getting calls so it’s interesting that you give out that advice of “go into it thinking of it like a job interview because you don’t know who those people know”. It was my surgery preceptor that got me my job because he had that connection and he was able to make a phone call and say “you need to interview her and I think it would be a good fit” and so I was very appreciative of that.

S: They are more likely to take advice from a colleague who they respect and has been with somebody than like something that comes across on Indeed or an ad in the newspaper.

TPP: Exactly, I agree and that’s what I tell people with shadowing. Use all of your connections and when it comes to clinical I had a couple of preceptors who would tell me like “you seem like you want to be here and you are really participating” which I found to be a very strange comment. I felt as though all students should be like that, but apparently not.

S: I experience that also. If you ask the majority of people about their women’s health rotation there are so many mixed feelings -- you either want to do women’s health or have absolutely nothing to do with women’s health. It’s one of those things that I tell everybody, even if you don’t enjoy the rotation be interested and participate. We are trained as generalists, this is our only time in pre-PA to make the most out of our education and be the best most well-rounded PA that we can be. We really need to be all hands in and try. A lot of people have been on my rotation and they say “ooo I don’t really want to do this” and I think to myself, “well you’re here so you’re going to do pap smears until you’re comfortable with it”. A lot of people don’t and your preceptor can pick up if you don’t want to be there or not and it all goes back to how likely am I to refer somebody for a job or write a recommendation. It’s important to try and be present because they’re taking the time out of their day to teach you and obviously they enjoy their job or they wouldn’t have students and they wouldn’t be doing their job. 

TPP: That’s so true. I’ve seen the same thing shadowing. If somebody’s letting you shadow you need to act like you want to be there and pay attention. On clinicals that may very well be your only exposure to that area. You need to soak up as much as possible -- especially if you know you want to do something else because like I’ve found in derm, there are certain things that affect women in areas that would crossover with OB/GYN. I definitely see things and treat things that you guys see and treat. I get referrals from OBGYN offices so it’s important to have as much knowledge as you can even of other areas if possible.

S: Patients never understand, you know obviously there are different specialists but, they think that you know what their derm knows or what their internal medicine doctor knows so they’re going to talk to you about it so at least being familiar, and saying “well I don’t do that every day, but I do remember this from my rotation and this sounds familiar” because they’re going to ask you about stuff.

TPP: Let’s backtrack a little bit -- why did you decide to become a PA?

S: I think that I was kind of fortunate because my aunt and uncle are both PAs. I grew up knowing what a PA was. I was in high school and I was exposed to what PAs were and at that time it wasn’t as popular.  I’m not super old I graduated high school in 2003. When I went into undergrad I knew that I wanted to do something in the medical field and being a PA was always an option for me. I did that whole biology in undergrad and basically had to do the premed route because I would say “I want to be a PA” and people would say what’s a PA? Now they have pre-PA tracks that you can go through in school, but at that time, I graduated undergrad in 2007, nobody I knew, knew what a PA was. I got to shadow PAs, went around and I realized that that was something that I wanted to do as a female. I wanted to do something in medicine but I also wanted to be able to have a family and to be able to have a life. The balance of what the PA profession gives you, to have a life and a family and to be able to be a practitioner, it was just something that worked out really well for me. 

TPP: What did that look like? I graduated high school in 2008 and college in 2012 and I feel like there wasn’t much information out there and the same thing, I would go to my advisor and “you want to do what? What’s a PA?” so I can imagine you ran into that even more. What was your application process like? Did you get in your first time? How many schools did you apply to?

S: I don’t know when CASPA started or not but I had to apply through that. I applied to 4 schools. I’m from Alabama and I applied to two of them in Alabama and I applied to one in Arkansas, and then the one in Knoxville. I was a student in undergrad and knew what I wanted to do that right when I got out of school. My biggest challenge was really my patient care hours and trying to find something that I could get in without having tons of patient care hours was challenging.  I applied to those and got interviews at three places, was waitlisted at one, and then accepted into South here in Knoxville. The program was nice because it started in the fall and a lot of the other programs were starting in winter and so those things that just really lined up for me. 

TPP: Once you got to PA school was it what you were expecting? What was the most difficult part for you?

S: I remember our first day they told us the amount of information you’re going to get is like drinking water through a fire hose. I’m sure everybody tells you that analogy and so I knew that there would be a lot of studying going on and a lot of information. Honestly the hardest part really has to do with kind of like the fear of missing out. Not that you’re missing out on things, but people don’t understand how much time you spend studying and how your priorities have to change when you’re in school. I remember having friends and  I missed their weddings. It’s not so much in clinical but in didactic you were studying all the time. I remember I had some friends who came to Knoxville for the weekend because we had a wedding and I had like a peds test, an OSCE and like a pharm test on Monday and on Saturday they were inviting me to the pool and to have cocktails together and I had to tell them I had to go to the library. They just didn’t understand. I had to explain that I was basiclaly studying my life away and to go have fun without me.. 

TPP: I felt the same way. You have to make those decisions. I was living at home and my parents, I always felt so bad until I learned how to study. They would ask me to go to dinner and I would have to say “I can’t, I need that 30 minutes or that hour to study” which was a little bit dramatic, but you have to eat. 

S: You have to learn how to study and learn what’s important and what’s not important. Of course you’re not going to know everything but you have to get those basic concepts. At South, we had quarters so probably the first 2 quarters to try to like get in the groove and figure out studying.  It can be done, I got married the second quarter of PA school so it can definitely be done. More so time management and knowing that you’re not going to get to go out every night and there are some things that you’re going to have to miss, but it’s a small, small amount of time.

TPP: Plus, it goes by so quickly.  I felt as though it flew by -- small sacrifices. Once you got to the end of PA school you knew you wanted to do OB/GYN and you got lined up and did your electives. Did you interview for any other job or was that your only “this is the job I want”? 

S: Once she offered me that job, I knew that was what I wanted to do. During my rotations I had been offered other jobs and they were one of those things that they were getting in touch with me and it was more so if this falls through I’ll get in touch with you, but I knew that’s what I wanted to do and I really clicked with my supervising physician. She has taught me everything that I know about women’s health and has really trained me to do things the way that she wants them done. We have a great relationship and she values PAs in their role in medicine. She’s a very big supporter -- that’s so important as the PA to know that, who you’re working for really understands what you can do you and uses you to your full potential. 

TPP: What does a day at your job look like?

S: It differs from day to day. I do a lot of annual exams, birth control consulting, irregular periods, etc... I see everybody from adolescents to teenagers, pregnant women and menopausal women. I work up a lot of things such as dysfunctional uterine bleeding and pelvic pain. I deal with ovarian cysts, fibroids -- all of those things. We even do weight-loss counseling in our office, so there’s a lot of stuff. I am procedure-oriented, I love to do procedures so I do biopsies, such as endometrial biopsies. I manage abnormal pap smears, and do follow-ups with colposcopies. I do lots of ultrasound procedures like sonohistograms and hysterosalpingograms to look at the lining of the uterus and to make sure the tubes are open. We do a lot of bladder installations in our office for interstitial cystitis, and put birth control in and take birth control out. There’s a lot you can do in women’s health besides just pap smears all day long.

TPP: One question that I get a lot about specifically PAs working in OB/GYN is what can you do as far as pregnancy and delivering babies? Which I don’t know, I feel as though some of this varies by state maybe. What are your thoughts or role in that way? 

S: Yes -- I work with pregnant patients all day from conception -- trying to conceive and helping people conceive with Clomid and different medications -- to managing them throughout their pregnancy. Our hospital, or the hospital that I work at, currently doesn’t have any PAs, midwives or nurse practitioners that deliver. So I think really that it’s hospital-oriented and what the hospital wants you to do. I have delivered babies before with my supervising physician. You know it all kind of came down to what did I want to do? What lifestyle? And delivering babies is awesome, but babies do not wait on anybody and so if you get into the delivering thing you’re going to be on call on the weekends, you’re going to have to be getting up at 3 in the morning and go deliver a baby and that can be a rough lifestyle. For me, I don’t personally want to do that. I love managing my pregnant patients, I love managing gestational diabetes and hypertension and helping them throughout their pregnancies. When it’s time for babies to be delivered generally, my supervising physician, leaves the clinic and when she leaves the clinic it’s mine to run. I see her patients and I make sure that they are being taken care of so she can go do that. When she comes back she doesn’t have 15 patients still waiting on her before she can leave. I think it’s really a personal preference. I know that there are two residency programs now for post graduate OB/GYN and they do a lot of vaginal deliveries. I think more than anything it depends on hospitals systems because if the hospital is not going to let you deliver, it doesn’t matter where you’ve trained or what you can do. 

TPP: I remember in school we had a dermatology PA come in to do a talk and she had done one of those OB/GYN residencies I think in California. She said when she was out there she delivered about 300 babies and when she moved back to Georgia she could not get approved by the medical board to deliver babies. They just said no and even with the support of her supervising physician and proof that she had done all of these deliveries, in Georgia it’s just not considered part of a PA’s scope of practice. We do have a lot of midwives who deliver so I think that’s something for somebody who wants to deliver babies you have to look at that if you’re thinking about becoming a PA look at your state and figure out if that something you can do or not. 

S: Exactly because there’s definitely not a reason that we can’t deliver babies. We are trained adequately and obviously if you do post-residency it shouldn’t be an issue. A lot of states, unfortunately, have that rule and a lot of it could be that that’s a midwife thing in midwifery. A lot of times you have different organizations that maybe you don’t want PAs to get in there because that takes away job security as well.

TPP: Yeah I think that’s definitely part of it of why that kind of separation is there. How many patients do you typically seen in a day?

S: I see about 25 patients a day. Sometimes I can see more depending on if my supervising physician has to go do a delivery or what’s going on in the office. I have  slots in there too to work in but generally it’s about 25. 

TPP: Okay, and do you work full time?

S: I do. Full-time for us is four days a week. I have Tuesdays off which is nice so I can I spend time with my kids at home or kind of have a me-day. I always tell everybody working in medicine I love it and I would not trade it for anything, but especially woman’s health. We see a lot of psych stuff so there’s a lot of anxiety, there’s a lot of depression. I think because it’s such an intimate job, people are more likely to talk to me about things and tell me things that they should tell their primary care. Emotionally, it can be really exhausting some of the things that I hear so it’s nice to just have a me day to kind of decompress.

TPP: It is important to not take too much work home with you. Let’s talk a little bit about your Instagram account and now podcast. We first connected on Instagram in the little PA community that is there. What made you start now what was Teenage Female Health and is now the thegyn_pa? 

S: I see so many teenagers in my clinic and you know it’s just so crazy because half of the stuff that I hear from them is they’re not very well educated when it comes to the female body and I think a lot of that has to do with the fact that we grew up and we are told “girls have vaginas boys have penises those are very private things we don’t talk about them”. Then in fifth grade someone takes us in a room and they’re like you’re going to have a period. We watch a video and you’re like “what in the world is happening?” and so then parents are like  “well, she learned about it in school and we rely on the school system”, but living in the Bible Belt especially living where we are is an abstinence only education system, there’s a lot of misinformation out there and there’s a lot of information that these girls aren’t getting. I wanted to create a program where they could get information that’s correct because you can look up anything on the internet and you can make it say exactly what you want it to say. I wanted to like be a source of information that was correct for these young women and I actually have an online sex-ed and comprehensive health program for girls from seventh to twelfth grade. It’s online so I started my Instagram because I quickly found out that Facebook isn’t cool anymore.

TPP: Facebook is confusing.

S: Everybody has Instagram so I quickly noticed that my audience becoming a lot of PAs, so pre-PAs, adolescent girls, young women in their 20-somethings and then also nurse practitioners and different healthcare providers. I felt as though naming it teenage female health isn’t very inclusive so I think a lot of people felt like “this page isn’t for me because I’m not a teenager” so that’s why I changed it to thegyn_pa. 

TPP: Okay cool. You started your podcast which I love the name by the way, you want to tell us about that?

S: Yeah, so the podcast is called Britt and Steph At Your Cervix! Britt was one of my students and we went and got pedicures a few months ago before she moved to Texas to start her job in OB/GYN and she mentioned that we need to do a podcast. I thought. “I have no idea how we would even do that!”  We talked about it and she is a huge podcaster she was like “there’s just not like anything out there for women’s health to listen to. I think there maybe something but it’s kind of like dry”. Our personalities are very like laid-back and we both value education and think knowledge is power so we wanted to get material and present it to future healthcare providers and current practitioners in a way that just kind of seemed like having a glass of wine with your friend and make it easy to understand.

TPP: Well I listen to the first episode and I can say that you guys nailed it. I listen to it while I was taking my baby for a walk and it was a great refresher and as you said, it’s really easy to listen to. The concepts are really simple to understand, nothing crazy or conceptual. It was great. I’m excited to see where you guys take it. I’m sure there are plenty of topics to cover. I’m sure you will get lots of  questions. 

S: Oh yes, so we already have 42 topics planned.

TPP: That’s almost a whole year! I think we covered everything. Any other advice or tips that you’d like to throw out there? 

S: I think that you know definitely one thing is that if you were interested in women’s health don’t be scared. For some reason people have this misconception that women’s health you know isn’t for PAs. My question is why? We are trained as generalists, we have just as much training in women’s health as we do in general surgery and pediatrics. Most people are like “PAs are just not in women’s health” and that’s true. There’s less than 1% of us, but it doesn’t have to be that way and we shouldn’t have to be discouraged. I would just have to say that if women’s health is something that you want to do, it’s definitely an attainable goal. It’s a great career -- go at it and find your rotation and let people know that that’s what you want to do. Don’t be scared to do women’s health. Just like we mentioned earlier, if you want to do vaginal deliveries then look at the states and know where you can do that or hospitals that will allow you to do that. 

TPP: Just before you jump in, get all the details. Stephanie will help you answer any of the questions that she can about her job and it’s kind of nice to have the social media to get kind of more awareness about our role in different areas. I think you’re doing a great, great job.


The PA Job Search: Where to Find Jobs

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Earlier this week, I did a post on what to look for when first starting a job search, so here's a follow-up post about where to actually look for the jobs.  I promise they're out there!  Some areas are more saturated with PAs than other areas so it can be a little more challenging, but the more flexible you are, the better luck you'll have finding a job.

The Internet:  This is pretty obvious, but it's a good idea to start with Google to get an idea of what may be open in your area.  When I was first starting, I would just search "physician assistant job augusta ga," and it usually took me to indeed.com or some other job site.  Most of the results from these searches go through an agency or are hospital listings.  Looking at specific hospital websites that are in the area you are interested in can also be helpful.  The only issue with these is that they may not update the listings very frequently, but there are usually at least a few positions posted at each of the hospitals in my area.

Preceptors:  When you are on rotations make it well-known what areas you are interested in working in to your preceptors and staff at your rotation sites.  When I first started rotations, I thought I should act like I loved whatever area I was working in for the month, but once I started being honest and talking about my love for dermatology and surgery was when I started hearing about job opportunities.  I attribute to my job to my surgery preceptor for the most part.  He was a colleague of a doctor that I heard was hiring and gave her a call on my behalf.

It's sometimes said during rotation orientation that you should expect to get numerous job offers while on rotations, but that isn't always true.  If most of your sites are ones that have been used for a long time and always have students, it is not likely that they are looking to hire.  You're going to have a much better shot at a job offer if you are able to do rotations at sites that have not had students in the past.

Cold Calls:  One of my teachers recommended this and it was incredibly intimidating, but now I definitely recommend doing it.  The best way to do this is to call offices, ask to speak to the office manager, and then ask if they are looking to hire a PA.  The majority of offices I called said not currently, but asked me to send my resume anyway.  I felt like this was possibly a dead end, but I actually met 2 different PAs during the time I was looking that recognized my name from my resume, and then told me about jobs they had heard about.

Program Resources: Some programs are really great about helping their students to find jobs after graduation.  Ask your advisor and any faculty you feel comfortable with if they know of any open positions (if you want to stay where your program is).  Our program also has a job board and a Facebook page for alumni where jobs are posted frequently, so see if your program has this, and if not just start one yourself!

Staffing Agency: Some offices go through agencies to find PAs.  I've talked to a few of these, but I'm not sure how effective they are.  Two of my closer friends from my program applied to and interviewed for programs through an agent, but from what they said they had to follow up very frequently and ultimately didn't get anywhere.

If you are starting your job search, I highly recommend watching my three part video series on Youtube with Lianne Hahn! In this three part series we explore Resumes and CVs for PA School and Physician Assistant Jobs, Interviewing for PA Jobs, and Contracts and Negotiations for Physician Assistants. Make sure to check out the series and subscribe to The PA Platform on Youtube!

I hope this gives you some direction if you're job searching, and please comment with your tips for finding a job!


The PA Job Search: What to Look For

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About this time last year, I was nervously getting ready to start my final 2 rotations at the dermatology office that so graciously decided to take me on as a new grad.  Looking back, that job search was a bit exhausting and honestly there were some tears involved.  I love my job, and I feel very fortunate as this is my first position, but I thought it may be helpful to share some of the things I learned along the way.  As a new grad, you're excited and ready to get out into the working work, but getting there takes some effort.

So congratulations if you just graduated/are graduating soon, or if you are finding yourself looking for a new position and leave a comment below if you have any other tips!

What to Look For:

So when looking for a job, I've read multiple theories and recommendations about what you should focus on.  You have to decide what's important for you personally.  It seems to me the more essential aspects of a Physician Assistant job are - location, specialty, supervising physician, salary/benefits.

You need to rank these factors in order of importance to you.  A year on rotations should have helped to make it a little more clear what your priorities are.  I decided that having a great supervising physician and doing something I loved were more important to me than salary.  In my opinion, I would much rather wake up and want to go to work than dread my job or who I'm going to work with.

Location is important if you have an area you really love or family you want to be near. I was raised in Augusta and went to PA school in Augusta. My husband is still in medical school here, so that was an obvious choice for me. If location isn't as important to you, it may be a great opportunity to try out a new place and get some experience so later you can find your dream job in your dream location.

Rotations give you a good idea of what areas you do and don't want to work in. The main questions that came up for me were sick vs not sick and appointment vs walk-in and procedures vs no procedures and continuity of care. I'll explain that a little more because I didn't really get it until I was in the field.  When it comes down to specialty as well, I will mention that it seems any experience you have makes you very valuable for other fields, so I think it is much better to have an open mind when starting your job search.

Sick vs not sick - Some specialties you see "sick" patients, which I consider the ones that have things you could catch. This includes pediatrics, family medicine, internal medicine, urgent care, and ER. Other specialties like dermatology, pulmonology, cardiology, hem/onc, GYN, and lots of others have patients that may have diseases that make them very sick, but they aren't going to cough on you so you could catch it.  Personally, I didn't love seeing the flu and strep throat all winter long.  And when other students say you should plan on getting sick on your pediatrics rotation, it's absolutely true.  (And sidenote - go to the doctor or health clinic when you start feeling sick, and not the last day of your rotation, so maybe you can avoid being diagnosed with pneumonia like me.)  A lot of the patients I see in dermatology have very real, serious disease that affects their lives, so I definitely still feel like I'm helping patients even though I'm not seeing the acutely "sick" ones.

Appointment vs walk-in - If you're working in private practice, you will likely have a schedule of patient appointments that you are expected to stay pretty much on time with.  If you are good at time management and a fairly quick decision maker, this should be fine for you.  The frustrating thing about having a set schedule is that it can easily get thrown off by late or complicated patients.  It's personally very important to me to stay on time out of respect for my patient's time, but there are definitely days where it seems like everyone is complicated, so they need more time (and I'm becoming a little more okay with that.)  Areas like urgent care, emergency med, or being in the hospital will mean that your patients just show up or are already there.  This has it's advantages because you don't have to worry as much about the late patients or your own punctuality, and it's ok if you need to take longer with some patients.  The disadvantages to not knowing your schedule for the day mean it's a bit of a surprise, and you can't predict as well if your day will be slow or hectic.

Procedures vs no procedures - This is pretty straightforward, but if you loved surgery and getting to do things with your hands, then you probably want to do something where you can do procedures.  I would say in most specialties there's at least a possibility of being able to do some hands-on stuff.  Specialties that are more lab-based (ex - endocrinology) may not have as much going on there.  General or family practice is a bit of a toss-up because there are some that do their own injections and even biopsies, and then other practices that don't do any of this.  So that's just something to consider when looking for what field you want to be in.

Continuity of Care - It was really important to me that I know how my patients are doing after I treat them, and I wanted to be able to build relationships with my patients.  You may get a little bit of this in urgent care or emergency med, but usually when you recognize a name there it's not a good thing.

Now on to supervising physician(s).  It's much easier to work under one SP, but sometimes if you're looking at working for a large practice or hospital, that's not going to be the case. I cannot stress how much having a supportive SP who is willing to adequately train and teach you is important.  My SP will stop what she's doing, even if she's running behind, to come see a patient if I ask her to.  You also want a SP that will support your decisions, and although they may not agree and will tell you that in private, they should never throw you under the bus in front of a patient.  There's a saying that if a patient sees a bad doctor, they'll find another doctor, but if they see a bad PA, they'll never see another PA.  I think that's true because most patients still have a little bit of a difficult time understanding what a PA is and what we can do, so they are quick to lose faith if something happens.

Now for salary and benefits.  I have a much different opinion on this than other PAs from things I've read and discussions I've had.  I definitely believe in not being lowballed, but I also believe in being willing to accept a fair offer, especially as a new grad.  It is going to take both money and time, and probably mistakes, to train you to be a good PA.  And you have to weigh the worth of location, supervising physician, and experience you will gain.  So really look at everything involved, and not just the number.  Is there a bonus structure in place?  That can potentially make a huge difference.  There's a lot out there that says you should never take a job if it's less than the national average and that new grads should be making 90K+.  I think this is possible, but is not necessarily the norm, so you have to be realistic.  Also, consider vacation/sick time, CME days and money, insurance, retirement, and just quality of life.

I recently sat down with Lianne Hahn for a three part series on my Youtube channel where we discuss Resumes and CVs for PA School and Physician Assistant Jobs, Interviewing for PA Jobs, and Contracts and Negotiations for Physician Assistants. Make sure to check out the series and subscribe to The PA Platform on Youtube!

What are some of the things you are looking for in a job?  What helped you make the decision to take a certain job?