For instance, what I think PAs do is not what PAs do in practice. As with many jobs, what PAs can do is very different than what a PAs can do. There is more to being PAs than ordering tests and providing the medical treatments. Most PAs spend a significant portion of their time with patients in an effort of developing relationships and explaining disease processes and treatment plans. How PAs accomplishes these various tasks are a contingent of a patient’s age, the level of understanding, education, and compliance with the treatment. During PA shadowing, I notice that some patients are very difficult and ungainly, seeing how PAs handle a difficult patient, give me insight into what I should do and what I want to do the same. Moreover, If it is not off-kilter, Being PAs seem a dead end job. PAs are highly involved in patient care throughout their careers. This is unique to the profession. Even, physicians and nurses can choose to stay in patient care, but often career advancement for a physician or nurse means an increased administrative role. I assert that this is not the case for …show more content…
The vast majority of PAs likely continue to practice clinically. Thus, I postulate that being a PA is not a launching pad for the next step, it is the final step. For the same reason, I am sure to be ready for this. In the end, I am sure to be one of these people and to focus on patient