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How to Explain Physician Assistant vs Physician Associate to Your Boss

One of the greatest issues facing physician assistants (PAs) is that of a name change. But this isn’t a new dilemma. A vigorous debate has taken place for at least the last 10 years, but in reality, it has been a constant in the profession since PAs really started to gain acceptance in the 1970s. Why is a name change for PAs so important? Because the word “assistant” is deceptive at best and grossly inaccurate at worst. 

Once an Associate, Always an Associate

Many know the story of the PA profession and can recite it by heart: Dr. Eugene Stead conceptualized a clinician who was trained in the same way as a physician but who could build on real-world experience rather than waste time and money in repeating basic courses in biology and chemistry that ultimately have little influence on the practice of medicine.

PAs were created to solve a very specific problem, i.e. that of a physician shortage. This was 60 years ago yet we continue to lament a shortage of physicians, especially those front-line primary care physicians, and the gap is expected to grow wider. 

Though PAs have been autonomously providing medical services to the most underserved for over half a century, public perception in some areas is that PAs somehow offer lesser care. Some patients are concerned about whether or not they should entrust their health to an “assistant”. 

Referring to PAs as physician associates, as they were once called, is not an effort to elevate status for the sake of status alone. It corrects a false notion that PAs provide inferior care. Outcome studies have shown that PA-led care is equivalent to physician-led care in many circumstances. Seeing the validity and utility of the PA model in the US, other countries are developing their own physician associate programs.

Why a Name Change for Physician Assistants is Required

But it’s not just public awareness. Without a name change to properly reflect their role in medicine, PAs and their patients suffer the effects of outdated and uninformed policies. For example, a PA can care for a patient their entire life and diagnose a terminal illness but current Medicare policies do not allow the PA to order hospice and palliative care because “that’s something physicians do.” This hurts patients and a name change can help. 

To me and many others, going back to the name Physician Associate makes the most sense. It maintains the PA moniker that patients have come to trust and more accurately reflects the collaborative relationship between PAs and physicians. The Yale PA program recognizes this and has continued to train “physician associates” since its inception in 1971.

The Title Change Investigation

In 2019, the AAPA acquired the services of marketing company WPP/Landor to conduct an informal survey of PA and PA students’ feelings on the need for a name change. The response was overwhelming. Nearly all of the 30,000 practicing PAs and PA students surveyed felt there was a disconnect between the current title and the reality of PA practice. 

Prior to WPP/Landor publishing the survey, 150 alternative names were considered, including original creations such as “praxician” (which quickly became the butt of many jokes). One of the most popular alternative names for physician assistants was “medical practitioner” but this was rejected after legal review. The results of the Title Change Investigation, as it’s called, were to be presented at the 2020 AAPA Conference in Nashville. But due to COVID-19, those results are temporarily on hold.

Carrying the Baggage of Self-imposed Misery

Re-creating the professional identity of 150,000 PAs is no easy task. It will be impossible to achieve 100% consensus even among PAs, not to mention the rest of the medical establishment and the public. A puzzling, but not altogether surprising, and vocal opponent of a name change are physicians. Dr. Marya Zilberberg, MD the founder and CEO of EviMed Research Group, seems to share this opinion. She writes: “how society may view PAs, whether they are called assistants or associates, should have absolutely no bearing on how physicians are perceived.” 

Yet, physicians are “seething”. Physicians (largely MDs as DOs were once the subject of MD scorn themselves) have “a history of major turf battles and occasional demagoguery.” The physician assistant name change debate appears to be another potential battlefield.

With our healthcare system in disarray and heading for financial ruin, Dr. Zilberberg wonders whether a name change for PAs, a seemingly innocuous event, should really be cause for so much concern among physicians. She writes, “Under the circumstances, do MDs and their organizations really feel that this is an important dagger to fall on? In the current atmosphere of public distrust rightly or wrongly bestowed upon the profession, such indiscriminate issue picking will rightfully appear self-serving.” 

Physician Assistant Name Change is Inevitable

I agree with Dr. Zilberberg. A physician assistant name change is in no way an affront to physician education or status as the pinnacle of medical care. I also agree with Eleanor Roosevelt: “No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.” Deciding between Physician Assistant vs Physician Associate (or some other yet undetermined title) is not about feeling inferior, it’s about reassuring patients that the care they receive from PAs is not inferior. 

AAPA 2021

In May of 2021, the American Academy of PAs House of Delegates voted, once and for all, to change the name of the profession back to Physician Associate. It wasn’t exactly a close call with 198 voting to make the change and only 68 voting to maintain the status quo. And honestly, it’s unlikely many of those 68 delegates actually prefer the name Physician Assistant. One of our contributors, for example, testified in support of remaining Physician Assistants but only until the entry-level degree becomes the Doctor of Medical Science. With a new degree comes a new and unmistakable title: Doctor.

“Physician Associate” may not be a bad way to go, though. Opponents of Physician Associate argued that we needed to stand alone and that they didn’t want anything to do with physicians. They said that associate denotes a lesser individual, such as an associate professor versus a full professor. But who else falls under the umbrella of a physician associate? Other physicians! The surgeon is an associate of the internist, and the specialist an associate of the generalist. Doctors associate with other doctors. Doctors of Medical Science can still be Physician Associates.

14 thoughts on “How to Explain Physician Assistant vs Physician Associate to Your Boss

  • One would have to “walk a mile in our shoes” to understand the real issue. Below is a brief synopsis.

    A. 90% of patients do not have a clue what PA stands for.
    B. The scheduling department will more often than not, refer to us as the “physician’s assistant”. All patients hear is the “assistant” part and that commonly conjures images of a medical assistant. This results in a number of patients experiencing a delay in care, rather than wasting time and money to be seen by someone who barely graduated high school.

    This is not a PR stunt, or a power grab, it’s an error correction. Our scope of practice is roughly 80% of an MD, that’s not an assistant, it’s an associate. It’s time to stop misleading the public and start using terms that accurately reflect the level of care that they can expect.

    Reply
    • Great line: “Not a PR stunt, it’s correcting an error”.

      Depending on the setting, the PA scope is 100% of the MD.

      Thanks for commenting.

      Reply
    • Marcos

      Well said!

      Reply
  • S. Fleit

    My 1978 certificate from Emory says “Physician Associate”. The name change is long, no real long overdue. I as well as many other PAs have functioned or are functioning at a level that goes way beyond the word assistant. e.g.: When I worked in cardiac surgery, the Chief of Cardiac Surgery described our responsibilities as that of a Chief Surgical Resident. In spine surgery, during my time in orthopedics, I did my side of the case and the surgeon did their side of the case. And there are many other PAs out there who are similarly performing beyond the realm of what would be construed as assistant type duties. I have been retired for four years and I say congratulations and good luck to PAs on the name change.

    Reply
    • Marcos

      I echo the same view too with this post.

      Reply
  • Georgia

    Try being a Nurse Practitioner. I do the same things as a PA (by any name they chose to use). But those in the public who are not savvy to the education and roles of an NP only hear “nurse”. So hospital patients just ask me to bring their medicine to them. My response: The nurse can bring your medicine, but I’m the one who prescribes it.”

    Reply
  • Richard

    Regardless of profession, those who get so hung up on titles are invariably the ones who often make it a miserable environment for everyone else. So go ahead, ruminate and focus on your and others’ titles, and know that your attitude shows and ruins what could be a truly collaborative team.

    Reply
    • We don’t disagree, Richard. Titles are far from the most important aspect of practicing medicine. But surely you don’t object to speaking out against mischaracterization.

      Reply
      • Marcos

        Right on the money!

        Reply
  • Richard

    Mischaracterization of a job title is most assuredly “in the eye of the beholder”. The medical professions are rife with workers who are substantially dissatisfied with how they are treated, especially by coworkers. A Physicians Assistant who is treated with respect, will be infinitely happier than a Physicians Associate who is not.

    Reply
    • Again, we don’t disagree. But words matter. Language matters. How we communicate with patients, the public, and the media matters. To suggest that accurate and appropriate professional titles are irrelevant is myopic. Thanks for commenting.

      Reply
  • Marcos

    Again, I don’t disagree with Richard’s opinion. And again would have to agree with the author that words matter & Language matters. How can you understand something if you can not describe or characterize something as accurately as you can linguistically to patients, the public, and the media?

    Couldn’t agree more, to suggest that accurate and appropriate professional titles are irrelevant is myopic. Perhaps, it comes that to under nd this semantic dilemma you have to be or have been a PA yourself, otherwise to understand this would be “foreign” to someone. Sadly many folks follow in this category…even highly educated ones @ times. I have lived this myself for 35 years as a practicing PA.

    Reply
  • Vernon Mcbroom

    Great info. Lucky me I recently found your blog by accident (stumbleupon). I’ve saved it for later!

    Reply

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