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Summer
PAS 5441--PA Gross Anatomy
Study of basic gross and functional anatomy in an organ-system
approach. Course covers cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive,
urinary, reproductive, nervous, musculoskeletal, special senses,
lymphatic, endocrine and integument systems by lecture, laboratory and
independent learning activities. The laboratory utilizes anatomical
models, histology slides, prosected cadavers, radiographic images, and
virtual anatomy software.
PAS 5342--Clinical Physiology
Study of the physiological function of the cell and organ systems with
introduction to pathophysiology of disease in the systems. Systems
include cardiovascular, respiratory, digestive, urinary, reproductive,
nervous, musculoskeletal, special senses, lymphatic, endocrine and
integument. Course topics will correlate with the topics presented in PA
Gross Anatomy.
PAS
5591--Physical Assessment
An introduction to clinical medicine. Course includes eliciting a
medical history; performing physical examination; reviewing anatomy,
physiology and pathophysiology of common diseases; and differentiating
between normal and abnormal physical exam findings. A physical
examination skills laboratory will be held weekly to permit students to
practice history and physical exam techniques. Students will also
experience patient encounters throughout the semester in which they will
elicit a medical history from patients in an inpatient or outpatient
setting and then appropriately document and orally present the patient
findings.
PAS
5351--Clinical Pharmacology
Study of the physiologic and biochemical aspects of the major classes of
pharmacological agents. Brief overview of pharmacokinetic and
pharmacodynamic principles of pharmacology. Major concepts involve drug
classification, mechanism of action, absorption, distribution,
metabolism, elimination, and dose-response relationships of the
different drug classes. Major drug interactions and adverse effects of
specific classes will be covered.
PAS 5131--Patient Communication I
Course emphasizes interviewing techniques and interpersonal
communication skills across the life span with emphasis on cultural
diversity issues. Standardized patients will be utilized to enhance
student interviewing skills.
PAS 5121--Clinical Reasoning I
Introduction to critical thinking and application of medical knowledge
and skills in a case-based small group setting. Emphasis this semester
will be on eliciting appropriate medical histories, determining
appropriate physical examination techniques to perform, and formulating
a differential diagnosis. Cases will correlate with topics covered in
the Physical Assessment course.
PAS 5111--Professional Issues I
Application-based introduction to concepts of physician assistant
profession. Topics to include history of physician assistant
profession, physician assistant organizations, accreditation, the health
care team, documentation, oral presentations, professionalism, and
ethical issues.
Fall
PAS 5892--Principles of Medicine I
Foundational principles of clinical medicine covered in a discipline
based approach. Each module will review anatomy and physiology of
specific systems. Instruction will cover pathophysiology, etiology,
incidence, signs and symptoms, differential diagnosis, diagnostic
techniques, diagnosis, prognosis, and management of specific common
diseases. This course will include a brief overview of the
microbiological and immunological aspects of medicine. Topics will
include normal flora, organism classification and transmission, and
pathogenesis of infection of microbial pathogens, cell-mediated and
humeral immunity, hypersensitivity reactions, and immune-mediated
diseases. A weekly clinical procedural laboratory will correlate with
the medical topic being covered in the lectures. Students will
experience clinical patient encounters in outpatient or inpatient
settings several times during the semester and then appropriately
document and orally present the patient findings.
PAS 5361--Diagnostic Assessment I
Study of ordering and interpreting laboratory, imaging and diagnostic
tests utilized in current medical practice. Course includes indications,
contraindications, precautions, complications, techniques,
cost-effectiveness, patient preparation, and ordering and interpretation
of specific labs and tests. Course will correlate with the topics being
addressed in Principles of Medicine I course.
PAS 5252--Pharmacotherapy I
Addresses the pharmacotherapeutic principles of specific medications
utilized in disease management. Course includes drug identification,
indications, contraindications, adverse effects, drug interactions,
cost, routes of administration, therapeutic monitoring, patient
education and pertinent mechanism of action of specific drugs. Course
topics will correlate with topics being presented in Principles of
Medicine I course.
PAS 5371--Behavioral Medicine
Study of psychological and behavioral medical conditions. Course
addresses the signs and symptoms, etiology, diagnosis, differential
diagnosis, and treatment of behavioral disorders. Also includes
conducting a psychiatric interview, classifying disorders, substance
abuse, eating disorders, sleep disorders, abuse and neglect, death and
dying, childhood disorders, psychological testing, psychological
therapy, and pharmacological agents.
PAS 5143--Clinical Nutrition
Study of the nutritional care of the primary care patient with topics
including geriatric, pediatric, diabetic, renal and cardiac patients and
pregnant and lactating patients. Course also covers vitamin and mineral
deficiencies, proper dieting, nutritional supplements, herbal
supplements, nutritional medical disorders, enteral and parenteral
nutrition, and patient nutritional assessment.
PAS 5132--Patient Communication II
Course builds on concepts covered in Patient Communication I with
emphasis on interviewing techniques and interpersonal communication
skills across the life span and emphasis on cultural diversity issues.
Standardized patients will be utilized to enhance student interviewing
skills.
PAS 5122--Clinical Reasoning II
Continuation of the utilization of critical thinking skills and
application of medical knowledge through small-group case discussions.
Focus will shift from medical history taking and physical examination to
placing more emphasis on laboratory and diagnostic test
ordering/interpretation and patient management. Cases will correlate
with topics covered in the Principles of Medicine I course.
PAS 5112--Professional Issues II
Continuation of professional issues in physician assistant profession.
Topics include documentation, safety, patient education, disease
prevention, cultural issues, ethical issues and specific health care
settings.
Spring
PAS 5893--Principles of Medicine II
Foundational principles of clinical medicine covered in a
discipline-based approach. Each module will review anatomy and
physiology of specific systems. Instruction will cover pathophysiology,
etiology, incidence, signs and symptoms, differential diagnosis,
diagnostic techniques, diagnosis, prognosis, and management of specific
diseases. A weekly procedural laboratory will correlate with the
discipline topic being covered in the lectures. Students will
experience clinical patient encounters in outpatient or inpatient
settings several times during the semester and then appropriately
document and orally present the patient findings.
PAS 5362--Diagnostic Assessment II
Study
of ordering and interpreting laboratory, imaging and diagnostic tests
utilized in current medical practice. Course includes indications,
contraindications, precautions, complications, techniques,
cost-effectiveness, patient preparation, and ordering and interpretation
of specific labs and tests. Course will correlate to the topics being
addressed in Principles of Medicine II course.
PAS 5253--Pharmacotherapy II
Addresses the pharmacotherapeutic principles of specific medications
utilized in disease management. Course includes drug identification,
indications, contraindications, adverse effects, drug interactions,
cost, routes of administration, therapeutic monitoring, patient
education, and pertinent mechanism of action of specific drugs. Course
topics will correlate with topics being presented in Principles of
Medicine II course.
PAS 5372--Emergency Medicine
Presentation, diagnosis, and management of trauma and acute care
patients who present to the emergency department. Topics involve
multiple trauma, shock, wound management, environmental injuries,
toxicology, orthopedic injuries, acute general medical and surgical
diseases, pain control, emergency procedures, bioterrorism, and disaster
medicine. Course also covers emergent conditions in cardiology,
respiratory, pediatrics, gynecology, obstetrics, endocrinology, and
hematology and oncology.
PAS 5281--Introduction to Evidence Based Medicine
Introduction to utilizing the best available evidence in current
medicine in addition to clinical experience to more effectively manage
patients. Topics will include a brief overview of clinical
epidemiology, research design, biostatistics, formulating a clinical
question, database searching, and interpretation of medical literature.
PAS 5123--Clinical Reasoning III
Continuation of the utilization of critical thinking skills and
application of medical knowledge through weekly small-group case
discussions. Emphasis on laboratory and diagnostic test ordering/
interpretation and patient management. Cases will correlate to topics
being covered in the Principles of Medicine II course.
PAS 5113--Professional Issues III
Continuation of professional issues in physician assistant profession.
Topics include documentation, health care systems and policy, patient
education, cultural issues, ethical issues and specific health care
settings.
Summer
PAS 5394--Principles of Medicine III
An advanced medicine course that emphasizes pediatric, geriatric and
rehabilitative medicine. Pediatric and geriatric modules emphasize
etiology, signs and symptoms, differential diagnosis, diagnosis,
prognosis, and management of medical conditions specific for the
life-span. The rehabilitative module involves an overview of
rehabilitative medicine, assistive devices, gait assessment, and stroke
and cardiac rehabilitation. Laboratory includes infant evaluation,
child evaluation, geriatric evaluation, functional assessment, and the
use of assistive devices.
PAS
5273--Surgical Medicine
Course involves the evaluation, diagnosis, and management of the
surgical patient. The course addresses pre and post-op management,
common surgical procedures and complications, indications and
contraindications, surgical techniques and instruments, sterile
technique, operating room protocol, anesthesia, and an introduction to
the surgical subspecialties.
PAS 5282--Foundations of Evidence Based Medicine
Study of utilizing the best available evidence in current medicine in
addition to clinical experience to more effectively manage patients.
Course builds on the foundation established in first EBM course and
utilizes a journal club approach to emphasize the application of EBM
principles.
PAS 5144--Medical Genetics
Introduction to medical genetics. Topics include rules of inheritance,
human pedigrees, chromosomal abnormalities, genetic disease, genetic
screening and counseling, and genetic pharmacotherapy.
PAS 5233--Medical Ethics
Introduction to ethical issues that occur in clinical medicine. Topics
include informed consent, confidentiality, nonmaleficence and
beneficence, patient decision-making capacity, futile intervention,
advance directives, end-of-life issues, assisted suicide, abortion,
human research, and health care provider issues. Special topics in
surgery, pediatrics and women’s health are also covered.
PAS 5114--Professional Issues IV
Continuation of professional issues in physician assistant profession.
Topics include practice and prescriptive laws, reimbursement,
malpractice, certification and licensure, health care resources, HIPAA
guidelines, and specific health care settings.
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